Neely did receive help and he was not left to fend for himself?
The system is good and it worked, Neely was just too perverse to take advantage of it? Help me out here, @jonathanchait, what's the narrative you fellas are trying to stand up as you knock down the "dominant narratives"?
Pretending that the White House's message that the pandemic is over was an isolated one-off quote from a single interview that has since been recanted is where moral injury meets traumatic brain injury
Does Elaine Swann of the Swann School of Protocol in Carlsbad, Calif. not understand that there are also human beings (more of them!) sitting in the other parts of the airplane?
Of course this story is designed to make everyone angry but it's amazing how it's completely organized on the baby/anti-baby axis while just taking it for granted that extra discomfort and suffering would naturally be dumped onto the people in coach nytimes.com/2022/12/27/tra…
Both in terms of how easy it is to comfort the baby and in terms of how many people will be exposed to the baby's yelling, it's clearly better for a baby to fly in first class
"Even Google searches," imagine, like before deciding if something was or wasn't bullshit they went and searched the World Wide Web for information about it, how dare they
This shtick is so weirdly snotty and tendentious! Look, he "ghosts" federal agencies to deal with [two other fairly important sounding pieces of business]!
Sorry, deleted this b/c the denial here was *user DMs*; presumably it's the internal Slack DMs the reporters are reading, unless Twitter does internal business on Twitter DM, which—
But the questions still apply to the workflow described here: how were internal DMs screened from the reporters to protect personally identifying information, while still giving reporters access to the DMs?