Internet trolls serve as a constant irritation for political reporters, and most of us simply grin and bear it. But it became apparent this week that journalists, when facing snarky criticism from a professional colleague, can throw a hefty punch.
A verbal donnybrook broke out Monday on Twitter between two fairly high-profile Michigan writers, Susan Demas of Inside Michigan Politics and Steve Neavling of Motor City Muckraker. It quickly got out of hand, with Demas writing a column to defend herself and her husband, Democratic political consultant Joe DiSano, aggressively entering the fray.
What started out as Neavling questioning Demas’ objectivity on the subject of Bernie Sanders erupted into a full-on assault from the Muckraker writer.
Neavling questioned Demas’ professional ethics and called her a “capitalist, not a journalist.” When DiSano, an outspoken Sanders critic, began to fire back on Twitter and Facebook, spouting a few F-bombs in the process, Neavling called him a “sick pervert” and a “sick son of a bitch”.
Before it was over, Neavling mocked DiSano for defending his “wifey” and concluded that Demas, too, was “sick.”
As Demas began to post Neavling’s harsh insults online, he responded that she should “read slowly” when discerning his meaning and that her retorts indicated that she “argue(s) like a 5-year-old.”
Because I know all three of the participants involved in this debacle, and because a story I had written played a key role in this tit-for-tat, I weighed in online, trying to play the role of referee – with limited success.
(Full disclosure: I recently began writing for one of Demas’ publications, Inside Michigan Politics, as a contributor.)
Several years ago I reported that Macomb County Commissioner Phil DiMaria apparently engaged in an erotic photographic hobby of capturing nude women on film. A few years later, when the Eastpointe Democrat ran for state House, DiSano, as the campaign consultant for a competing candidate, hammered DiMaria on this topic in robo-calls that went too far. DiMaria sued; a settlement was reached.
Here’s what I wrote on Facebook in two Tuesday night posts:
Good Lord — what is going on here? Stop it with the emotional outbursts and the Trump-like rhetoric.
Listen, I broke this story years ago and it centered on Macomb County Commissioner Phil DiMaria extending his photography hobby to allegedly taking pics of nude women — not children. I captured the website before it was abruptly taken down.
Joe DiSano perhaps took things a bit too far in a 2012 robo-call campaign attacking DiMaria, when he was running for state rep ….… This is just way out of control.
Let’s just agree that Steve has engaged in some good journalism over the past year or two and Joe has served as a forceful Democratic campaign advocate.
OK? End of story.
In her column, Demas pointed out that she and Neavling, both of whom express a liberal-leaning political persuasion, are simply trying to make a living in the new online journalism territory in which countless websites and bloggers compete with newspapers that enjoy a long legacy.
But Neavling now threatens to write an expose on DiSano — a Macomb County native, an instigator, an agitator — who treats politics like a full-contact sport. His hardball campaign tactics are not necessarily news.
But at a time when the overall media’s reputation is suffering, what would be news, regrettably, is for fellow journalists to act like vengeful trolls rather than watchdogs who seek the truth.



Susan Demas is not a journalist. She is a publisher and semi-regular practitioner of opinion journalism. In fact, she has always been much more outspoken with her biases than even say Nancy Kaffer or Nolan Finley, both of whom do a much better job maintaing some journalistic objectively on the opinion pages of the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News respectively. What also troubles me is Demas now runs a business doing writing for fee-paying clients, which means she’s also a publicist. I think the public also has a right to know if her husband has any financial stake in Inside Michigan Politics.
Susan Demas is most certainly a journalist. I first met her in in 2005 or 2006 when we were both covering a township board meeting; me for the Detroit News, and her for the Livingston County Daily Press & Argus, my former employer. When I wrote for the Michigan Messenger, I did a story on the most biased journalists and asked who was the most biased. Only Frank Beckman was voted more biased than Nolan Finely.
I have no financial or editorial control over Inside Michigan Politics. Susan makes the decisions for her businesses. I make the decisions for mine. Thanks for playing. Please try again.
LOL! DiSano I don’t share my wife’s abundant bounties. I am but a poor pauper, bicycling amid valleys and large mounds, a sheep, amongst the wolves. Won’t Sweet Jesus accept me for a supplicant who demands a shit load of money for crap in return? Love your neighbors as I love me…
Selweski is owned by Disano. That’s what you get with “brown” money, Proof? Selweski deleted the last three posts, calling him out as a dick.
I did not delete any posts.
And, I have been called worse.
Then who owns Inside Michigan Politics? Did DiSano not put any money toward it? How did Demas afford it?