Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #PostForThePress

Most recents (4)

Throughout 2020 I reported a series of pieces on a story that flew under the radar: Sect of State Mike Pompeo's radical remaking of USAID as an extremist evangelical operation.
#PostForThePress

Pompeo Continues Assault on LGBT+ Abroad Via USAID epgn.com/2020/08/26/pom…
As the US was voting to oust Trump, Pompeo was continuing his extremist policy-making at State. He coalesced dozens of rogue nations to create a "pro-family" agenda for the US abroad.
#PostForThePress

U.S. signs anti-abortion, anti-LGBT declaration epgn.com/2020/11/04/u-s…
The work Pompeo was doing via USAID was increasingly far-reaching, yet largely ignored at home due to focus on Trump's excesses. Biden and Blinken have yet to undo any of this.
#PostForThePress

Pompeo’s Human Rights Panel Subverts LGBT and Women’s Rights epgn.com/2020/06/23/pom…
Read 4 tweets
The Post's coronavirus tracker has become one of our most visited pages, with tallies of infections and deaths that tell the story of this pandemic. And there’s one person who deserves a lot of the credit for that. #PostForThePress

wapo.st/3tgwRm1
Meet Jacqueline Dupree. Before the coronavirus, @JDLand was preparing laptops for reporters and maintaining The Post’s internal website. But as the virus took off, she started counting infections and deaths.
In the months that followed, Jacqueline chased infection data in her spare time and kept a spreadsheet to keep track of it all. It was a messy process, but she wanted answers.
Read 7 tweets
Washington Post journalist @LizSly has been referred to as “the dean of Middle Eastern correspondents.” Here’s what you should know about Liz and some of her most recent work. #PostForThePress
She’s had a front row seat to the pro-democracy uprisings of the Arab Spring and how those historic protests — and efforts to silence them — have influenced everything from war in Syria to the rise of the Islamic State.
It’s been 10 years since the uprising of the Arab Spring and @LizSly, along with other Washington Post foreign correspondents, revisited the results in a series called The Lost Decade. wapo.st/336dm4G
Read 10 tweets
Last September, The Post published a story about how many women had been fatally shot by police since 2015. At the time, it was nearly 250 women. Now it’s at least 277. #PostForThePress wapo.st/3vASY7V
The story and reporting started when Post reporter and journalism professor @JohnSullivanAU showed grad students The Post’s Fatal Force database, which aims to count every fatal police shooting in the U.S.

Sullivan’s students @marisa_iati and @smbrugal had questions.
According to the data, people killed by police are overwhelmingly male, disproportionately Black and usually armed with a weapon. But @smbrugal and @marisa_iati wanted to know about the women in the database. wapo.st/3eMpGwj
Read 11 tweets

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