Infowars Website Shuts Down Amid Legal Battle With The Onion
Infowars Website Shuts Down Amid Legal Battle With The Onion Infowars’ abrupt shutdown after 27 years leaves a paradox: a flagship of conspiratorial right‑wing media is dark, yet its legal and political battle with satire outlet The Onion is very much alive.
Conservative‑leaning coverage frames the moment as both a defeat and a rallying point. The Blaze casts the closure as the “end of an era” but also as Alex Jones “begin[ning] the next step in his fight,” stressing that he has already funneled his audience to a new network, Alex Jones Live. This narrative emphasizes resilience and continuity rather than accountability or the harms associated with Infowars’ content.
Infowars’ own account is more combative and conspiratorial. One article warns that “today could be Infowars’ LAST SHOW” and celebrates that the Texas Court of Appeals blocked what it calls The Onion’s “shady Infowars takeover” and attempt to “wear its skin.” The deal is portrayed as a “Democrat-backed” hijacking effort, reinforcing Jones’s long‑standing storyline of persecution by political enemies.
By contrast, more conventional conservative reporting at the Washington Times centers on the legal mechanics rather than existential drama. It notes that The Onion’s plan “to take over the Infowars platforms … and turn them into parody sites was in limbo … after a Texas court paused a proposed deal,” describing the bid as “in limbo again” amid “new court battles.” Here, The Onion is treated primarily as a litigant facing procedural setbacks, not as a villainous usurper or a heroic cleanser of misinformation.
Similarities and differences
All three perspectives agree on core facts: Infowars’ site is offline after 27 years and The Onion’s acquisition effort is stalled in Texas courts. But where Infowars dramatizes the pause as the righteous defeat of a partisan “takeover,” The Blaze softens that language into a personal comeback story for Jones, while the Washington Times strips away most of the ideological framing, treating the same events as a procedural limbo with an uncertain endgame.
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