@KLoeffler@sendavidperdue 2. In 2017, Zieve was sued by Washington State for discriminating against minority applicants and imposing his racist views on his employees.
3. The case describes Zieve's outrageous conduct. Zieve allegedly screened applicants by race, hired a nearly all-white staff, and offered employees a $1000 bonus for getting married and another $1000 bonus for having children.
4. The stated purpose of the "procreation bonus" was to prevent the country from being overrun by minorities.
5. Zieve in a 2/6/15 email: “When [we] choose to not repopulate & allow our wonderful country to be backfilled with rubbish from the desperate and criminal populations of the 3rd world, I find that to be disgusting and I find those persons to make these decisions to be repulsive”
6. In 2018, Zieve donated the maximum to Cindy Hyde-Smith three days after the publication of a video in which Hyde-Smith says she'd be willing to attend a lynching.
I also know from employees that it is being raised internally.
They've already decided that previous versions of THE EXACT SAME AD violate its rules.
So there is no reason for delay.
3. According to Facebook's own metrics, these ads, which should never have been approved, have already reached hundreds of thousands of Georgia voters.
1. I wish I didn't have to do this but this is going to be a new thread about how Facebook is STILL permitting Republican Super PACs to REPEATEDLY VIOLATE FACEBOOK'S RULES and run ads with false attacks on Raphael Warnock.
Follow along if interested.
2. The story began on December 17, after Facebook begins allowing political ads in Georgia.
American Crossroads, a Super PAC run by Karl Rove and financed by Mitch McConnell, starts running a brutally dishonest ad against Raphael Warnock
3. The American Crossroads ad tells Georgia voters on Facebook that Warnock said "God Damn America."
As if he was expressing his own views.
But he wasn't. He was quoting Jerimiah Wright in a speech he delivered on 7/11/13.
1. A new @NewYorker article about Substack suggests that the subscription newsletter model "might not be in the collective interest" because it's not possible to "hold powerful people and institutions to account" via a newsletter.
@NewYorker 2. Today, I published a year in review of the reporting in my newsletter, Popular Information, which is dedicated to accountability journalism.
I think @tesszeeks and I were able to get some stuff done.
3. In March, as the COVID took hold, we published an expose on how Darden, parent of Olive Garden, was endangering staff & customers by not providing paid sick leave
Within 24 hrs, the company announced it would provide paid sick leave for all employees
3. I made calls and spoke to several people who worked there.
"Decisions are made to benefit Republicans because they are paranoid about their reputation among conservative Republicans, particularly Trump," one former Facebook DC employee told me