Pete Hegseth's Acceptance to West Point Is a Story
When bureaucrats mislead you, expose them.

When is a news story not a news story? Perhaps when it is disproven prior to publication. Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for secretary of defense, lashed out at ProPublica earlier this week after the investigative journalism organization started asking questions about whether Hegseth had ever been accepted to the United States Military Academy in West Point.
The outlet ultimately decided not to publish the story.
Here's what happened. On Wednesday, Hegseth posted on X that ProPublica—which he described as a "Left Wing hack group"—was planning to publish a bombshell report contradicting Hegseth's account that he had been accepted to West Point in 1999.
We understand that ProPublica (the Left Wing hack group) is planning to publish a knowingly false report that I was not accepted to West Point in 1999.
Here's my letter of acceptance signed by West Point Superintendent, Lieutenant General Daniel Christman, US Army. pic.twitter.com/UOhOVZSfhJ
— Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) December 11, 2024
Hegseth set the record straight by publishing his letter of acceptance, signed by West Point's superintendent, Lieutenant General Daniel Christman of the U.S. Army.
But that article never materialized.
ProPublica's editor Jesse Eisinger thus defended his organization's behavior.
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"We asked West Pt public affairs, which told us twice on the record that he hadn't even applied there," explained Eisinger. "We reached out. Hegseth's spox gave us his acceptance letter. We didn't publish a story. That's journalism."
Eisinger is correct. ProPublica's report did his job: He checked and double-checked a story. The mistake was made by West Point's communications department, which twice contended—falsely—that Hegseth had never applied to the military academy.
In a tweet thread, Eisinger explained what happened. First, his reporter contacted the West Point public affairs office to inquire about Hegseth's claim that he was accepted there. The reporter was told by West Point, in no uncertain terms, that Hegseth had never even applied there.
After being presented with unequivocal evidence to the contrary, West Point backpedaled.
"A review of our records indicates Mr. Peter Hegseth was offered admission to West Point in 1999 but did not attend," said the school in a statement.
At this point, ProPublica killed the story.
"This is how journalism is supposed to work," Eisinger said.
The organization does indeed deserve praise for its dogged reporting. Ultimately, ProPublica didn't fall for the lie, and they didn't repeat it. Great.
But here's my question: Why not publish the story anyway? To be clear, the story is not that Hegseth lied about getting into West Point—the story is that West Point lied (or was at least mistaken) about Hegseth not getting into West Point.
If ProPublica published that story, then the outlet could have taken a real victory lap: They tracked down the truth of a rumor about Hegseth's record and found out it wasn't true, despite a prestigious educational institution actively misleading them. Isn't that a story? Or is the story only important if it's damaging to Hegseth?
Politico's Josh Gerstein seems to think so. Replying to criticism from conservative pundit Hugh Hewitt, Gerstein wrote on X: "Are you really saying we should do a story every time what a government spokesperson tells us turns out not to be right? I mean, it would take up perhaps half my time."
The answer to this question would appear obvious: Emphatically, yes.
If bureaucratic mouthpieces were held responsible by the media for spreading mistruths with greater regularity, perhaps they would feel more incentivized to tell the truth.
This Week on Free Media
I am joined by Reason funnyman Andrew Heaton to discuss leftists swooning over Luigi Mangione, Trump's advice for TV journalist Kristen Welker, former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki attacking former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D–Hawaii), and Morning Joe's reaction to the Daniel Penny verdict.
Worth Watching
Wicked was pretty good! I say that as a fan of the source material—the book series by Gregory Maguire, not the Broadway musical. The books are much darker than either the musical or the film; Maguire's Oz is fraught with peril, intrigue, and ultimately war. The subsequent adaptation, unfortunately, spent very little time on world building, and instead focuses on the personal journeys of the two main characters, Elphaba (the titular witch) and Glinda. The Wicked film is much the same, but it's a fun viewing experience, nonetheless.
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“Or is the story only important if it's damaging to Hegseth?”
You have to ask?
Ya, my thoughts ed zachary.
But here's my question: Why not publish the story anyway? To be clear, the story is not that Hegseth lied about getting into West Point—the story is that West Point lied (or was at least mistaken) about Hegseth not getting into West Point.
C'mon, Robby, you know better than this. The purpose of journalism is not truth seeking, but to attack and destroy anything or anyone perceived as being right-of-center. The process is this:
1. Find any crack or point of weakness.
2. Prepare an attack.
2a. If doing good journalism, make sure story is solid.
2b. If story turns out to be not solid, fall back, regroup, go back to 1.
3. Launch attack.
Over the next four years, we will be treated to a raft of stories about sexual misconduct, lies or fibs about background, questions about propriety, statements which don't appear to align with facts.
I'm sorry if everyone got used to the just-the-facts-ma'am reporting that was done with the Biden admin over the last four years, but that's gone now.
I'm sorry if everyone got used to the just-the-facts-ma'am reporting
That ended before Biden first ran for office. It MAY be coming back.
The real attempt here, As it always seems to be...
1) tell liberal newspaper negative about conservative X
2) get anonymous stories or do light digging to verify
3) give conservative X 2 hours to respond
4) post article
5) find out article is wrong
6) issue correction weeks later after the lies spread.
Who told ProPublica to look into this? Not mentioned here, why did West Point tell ProPublica Pete did not get accepted twice?
Uhm...
FIFY
And if Pete didn't save his acceptance letter, ProPublica would have ran with the story. Sarc or Jeff would have posted it. We would then all laugh at them.
Eisinger is correct. ProPublica's report did his job: He checked and double-checked a story. The mistake was made by West Point's communications department, which twice contended—falsely—that Hegseth had never applied to the military academy.
Why was a story of not attending a school because he went to another school ever a story?
Because when people state or brag about a military record which doesn't match with reality, the press will doggedly follow that story until 100% of the truth in every aspect is known and reported.
See Tim Waltz... John kerry... etc.
Hey, he said "people", not "mannequins".
"And if Pete didn't save his acceptance letter, ProPublica would have ran with the story."
100% this. The only reason they didn't publish the story is because Hegseth preempted them.
For a damaging story about a Trump associate to be true, nothing has to be true at all. Third-hand hearsay about hookers and pee, a smile on a face, or a sarcastic tweet or phrase taken out of context can make even the most absurd conclusion be portrayed as fact and conveyed as truth in perpetuity. If the bad guy is associated with Trump, no proof is needed.
How did it become a story before it was a story?
Ignorant question: Do people actually apply to the military academies? They are nominated by Congress critters, no? Do people apply to them? Who screens out the ones that would never make it? They can't just take every doofus nominated by some other doofus like Bernie or Lizzie.
Yes you apply. You application is selected by a US congressperson from those received for endorsement (5 per congressperson over 4 years), then passed on the the military school you asked for (West Point, Annapolis, Air Force Academy, and Coast Guard Academy; not sure if Space Force has one yet).
For the space force, you just submit your high scores from video games - - - - -
ASS
BRA
TIT
DIX
Are we talking about, in a 'Last Starfighter' sort of way? Or more of a 'Stargate: Universe' scenario?
You submit an application. A congressional (or senatorial) nomination is necessary, but not sufficient.
This is based on my recollection from 30 years ago when I considered applying, and started to collect the application materials.
Not being a high school athlete, the physical testing and the nomination requirement (and the military career), really put a damper on my enthusiasm.
Ignorant question: Do people actually apply to the military academies?
How else would they be admitted?
ProPublica was the outfit that published the pre-election hit piece on the woman who died in Texas after a miscarriage.
So yeah they are a "left wing hack group."
As a reader of the original "Famous Forty", LOL -
Robby: Propublica should've published. Why not have the whole story?
Also Robby: Maguire wrote the source material for Wicked (the movie(?), not the musical).
I appreciate your insights, Robby. I would have just been cynical about their intentions, but you saw the greater idea.
his reporter contacted the West Point public affairs office to inquire about Hegseth's claim that he was accepted there.
Why? This reminds me of Sarah Palin's biography publishing. For those who don't remember the media sent something like a hundred reporters to Alaska to fact check it seeking something to discredit her. By contrast those same outlets lie to cover up, or if not possible to minimize, mistakes by left wingers. The media functions as a massive oppo-research operation for left wingers.
Pre-cisely.
Allow me to add a few words on the front of the quote you put in italics :
In a tweet thread, Eisinger explained what happened. First, his reporter contacted the West Point public affairs office to inquire about Hegseth's claim that he was accepted there.
No. The reporter contacting West Point was not "First." It was second, or much more likely third.
First was Hegseth claiming (somewhere, somehow) that he had been accepted by West Point.
Second was someone at ProPublica thinking "Oho ! That looks like a story worth checking." And mostly likely the "Oho !" was provoked by someone whispering a suggestion in the reporter's ear that Heggie was lying.
Always suspect a journalist who begins a story in the middle.
Sorry that's unnecessarily complicated.
Always suspect a journalist. Period.
“When is a story not a story?”
Oh I know, when it’s about hunter’s laptop, o Ashley biden’s diary.
Apparently, the original source for the whole Wonderful Wizard and Land Of Oz is the book Maguire wrote in the 90s.
The 50+ some novels, the 1925 movie, the 1939 MGM movie, the half-dozen or so musicals that L. Frank Baum himself wrote decades before Maguire was even born, laying out all the characters, history, culture, and geography of Oz... none of that is/was worth mentioning with regard to Wicked, the movie, which is based on the musical that Maguire didn't write.
This is an excellent point. Everybody who is fed up with partisan reporting to should hold the press to account. I don't object to ProPublica pursuing a story about Hegseth lying about West Point, but they only learned that the story was a lie because Hegseth had proof. Suppose Hegseth had instead decided to humiliate ProPublica by holding back his proof until after ProPublica published the false story? What other sources would they have consulted. Also, why isn't this considered at least another piece of evidence of the existence of the 'Deep State'? This was the Army saying multiple times Hegseth never even applied, then getting shown his acceptance letter, then saying "Oh yeah, he did apply". Does anybody believe they would have corrected their story if he didn't have the letter?
Are you really saying we should do a story every time what a government spokesperson tells us turns out not to be right?
When the information that the government spokesperson tells you impugns the character of candidate put forth by a reform administration to run the very organization of the government spokesperson? I'd say even more emphatically yes.
It's not a story because no one cares about the press contact at West Point.
Email the ProPublica writer sent to Hegseths lawyer shows it was always a hatchet job.
https://x.com/JohnEkdahl/status/1867293628584067550
The writer tried giving them a full hour to respond.
Sorry Robbie. ProPublica was not in the right in any manner. They only held back because of Pete's actions.
I disagree that Pro Publica should have published the story -- that was not what they were investigating. As a lawyer for over 45 years, I know to focus on the issue. Then one looks for relevant facts and disregards irrelevant facts to THAT issue. If one finds out that some important agency is providing false information, that goes into a separate file on that agency. It could be relevant to a later issue.
What would the article have been -- One guy as West Point misinterprets a request for verification and provides the wrong answer? Is that news worth? Did ProPublica have evidence that the false answer was intentional or malicious? Suppose it was intentional or malicious, would that justify a story about West Point as an institution? Yo creo que No! Perhaps Pro Publica should have reported the guy to West Point and sought an explanation. With the gazillions of vital issues to be investigated would that one guy's mistake merit hours of Pro Publica's time?
Perhaps after hours of effort, Pro Publica would have found that West Point as an institution loaths Pig Hegseth. That would be a news worthy story? Yo creo si. Ten to one, West point despises an alcoholic and possible embezzler of funds for veterans as head of DOD.
Wow. What an insane BlueAnon rant at the end.
Breaking news: 51 former intel officials release letter claiming Pete Hegseth's acceptance letter has all the hallmarks of Russian disinformation.
Needs to be 150.
50 = Hunter's laptop
100 = Tulsi Gabbard
150 = Hegseth's acceptance letter
A certain Joseph Biden claimed again this year (USMA graduation) that Sen Boggs had shortlisted him for Annapolis. Fine, but a physical occurs early in the process, and a history of asthma is disqualifying.
Why do we care? Because at age 25, Biden claimed that his history of "childhood asthma" should keep him from being drafted.
So, did Biden lie to his draft board, or did he lie to the cadets? And why doesn't Pro Publica care about Joe's service academy lies?
Yes. And it’s (D)ifferent in Biden’s case.
"Are you really saying we should do a story every time what a government spokesperson tells us turns out not to be right?"
"Or every time a government spokesperson resigns after being caught lying?"
It should be part of the canon of journalistic ethics, such as it is, that a source that lies leading to a correction, should be named in that correction.
If bureaucratic mouthpieces were held responsible by the media for spreading mistruths with greater regularity, perhaps they would feel more incentivized to tell the truth.
You get that they work hand in glove, right? The goal was a narrative. Had Hesgeth not intervened, I guarantee they would have ran with it.
Hesgeth himself dropped a MOAB on it before they could, so they wisely retreated before being exposed as fools.
Which is why Twitter (X, whatever) is now more trusted than places like ProPublica. They offer us information straight from the horse's mouth.
>>"We asked West Pt public affairs, which told us twice on the record ..."
that's not two sources confirming that's one source confirming twice and really one liar at West Point isn't a story anymore.