1. As the 2022 games near, the International Olympic Committee (@Olympics) are in "active collaboration with Chinese authorities" to coverup the censoring and disappearance of Peng Shuai, the tennis star who accused a top Chinese politician of rape
@Olympics 2. Complicit in all of this are the 14 primary Olympic sponsors. Despite requests for comment, all the sponsors have remained silent on the IOC, the Chinese government and Peng.
4. But now Osaka is speaking out about an important societal issue — the treatment of Peng by the Chinese government — and @Panasonic, which has considerable sway with the IOC as a primary sponsor, is remaining silent.
UPDATE: A representative from @DowNewsroom says that, while the company is still listed as a sponsor on the Olympic website, its sponsorship ended in 2020.
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3. In deleted tweets from August 2020 obtained by popular.info, Steenman said she would "never" send her kids to public schools and described public school teachers as "brainwashing assholes."
A Tennessee chapter of "Moms for Liberty" filed a complaint with the Tennessee Department of Education alleging that assigning 2nd Graders a book about MLK Jr's March on Washington violated the state's new law banning Critical Race Theory
The Tennessee Department of Education declined to "investigate" but for a technical reason. The complaint dealt with curriculum during the 2020-21 school year and not the current school year.
So Moms for Liberty could refile the complaint and they might be successful next time. Their issue with the MLK book are two images that are historically accurate.
1. America is a country where if a man steals thousand of dollars in merchandise from a store it’s front page news but if a corporation steals millions in wages from its employees it’s basically ignored
2. In June, a reporter tweeted a cellphone video of a man in Walgreens filling a garbage bag with stolen items. According to San Francisco's crime database, the value of the merchandise stolen in the incident was between $200 and $950.
3. This single incident generated 309 media stories between June 14 and July 12. It continues to garner coverage today, including in the New York Times, USA Today, and CNN