Between this and Gingrich’s comments today, it’s clear that “using the judicial system as a cudgel against my perceived enemies” is increasingly one of the pillars of modern movement conservatism
It’s okay though because the press has its eye on the big picture: the people trying to stop fascism are, actually, just as bad as the fascists themselves
Anyway I’m sure everything will turn out fine
I mean, it’s not like there are any disturbing historical parallels
Inspired by Jorts, the lovable orange doofus who caused an HR crisis, I've got some cat personality data showing that people rate orange cats as friendlier and more outgoing than cats of any other color! thewhyaxis.substack.com/p/the-special-…
There's a more detailed orange cat personality chart in there but I'm not giving that one away -- suffice it to say it fits Jorts to a tee, with one big exception. thewhyaxis.substack.com/p/the-special-…
As the guy who originally made this chart I periodically get asked to update these numbers, which only go through 2014. So it brings me no pleasure to report the following: Cops are still taking more stuff from people than burglars do thewhyaxis.substack.com/p/cops-still-t…
One thing that needs clarifying: the figures in this chart are *federal* only. State cops take a lot of stuff too, although probably not as much as federal. We don't really know, because states are all over the place in how they report this stuff. thewhyaxis.substack.com/p/cops-still-t…
This is all in response to the story of the $100,000 cash seizure in Dallas, which local press framed as a feel-good story about a dog, but which involved cops taking money from a woman currently not accused of any criminal wrongdoing.
The more I think about this the more egregious it gets. The paper of record letting its flagship podcast be sponsored with a message of blatant climate misinformation during a major climate summit. I would love to know what @mikiebarb makes of this
My guess is he has no idea who's running ads on any given day, because that's how it usually works with this stuff. The industry tells itself that this strict wall of separation is sufficient, but to a reader it's all part of the same package.
My general assumption is that a place like the Times or the Post has stricter ad standards than like, Infowars or whatever. And that they won't try to sell me brain pills or scams or flat-out lies.
Why does the White House continue to allow a deranged conspiracy theorist into the press briefing room? It lends the legitimacy of the White House to this nonsense.
Also where is the White House Correspondents' Association on this? Just a complete failure to live up to industry-wide rhetoric about "facts" and "truth"
WHCA: We exist to promote excellence in journalism. Now, let's hear from member in good standing Emerald Robinson about how Satan put a bioluminescent tracking device in the Covid vaccine.
Peters could have avoided this simply by giving the dude an accurate label, like "never-Trump Republican." Instead he tried to pass the guy off as a centrist liberal, which is inaccurate and misleading. People are rightly calling bullshit on that.
Peters is also the article of the NYT's 2019 Tea Party retrospective that failed to mention President Obama's race as a motivating factor for a large part of the movement. yahoo.com/now/wesley-low…
None of this is particularly complicated. I grabbed the numbers from the NYT: since August 1 (roughly the start of the Delta death wave), Florida's Covid mortality is easily the worst in the nation -- more than double the national average. thewhyaxis.substack.com/p/floridas-del…
A Lancet study estimates that if vaccinations in Florida kept pace with leading states like Vermont and Massachusetts, DeSantis could have avoided 600,000 cases, 60,000 hospitalizations and 16,000 deaths through August 31. thelancet.com/journals/lanin…