Somewhat lost over the Thanksgiving holiday was that new evidence makes clear that Hamas was using Al Shifa hospital as a military command post.
The media spent weeks disputing this. I want to walk you through some examples. @FreeBeacon ⤵️ freebeacon.com/media/video-of…
First, the evidence. The Israeli military took @FoxNews and other outlets into a massive terrorist complex under Al Shifa hospital, complete with weapons, a full kitchen and blast doors, where Hamas had been coordinating military operations.
It dashed a media narrative where outlets stressed that there wasn’t evidence of Hamas co-opting the hospital—often citing Hamas as a disinterested party—and suggesting “the credibility of Israel…could be at stake.”
So said @CNN at least
As ever, it wasn’t just CNN. @NBCNews suggested this was part of the “information missteps” that have raised “questions about Israel’s credibility.”
NBC didn’t mention whether Hamas’s “credibility” faced similar concerns.
I think it’s probably time that @guardian updated this one, given the new evidence obviously doesn’t “fall far short” of what Israel alleges.
@washingtonpost updated their piece—it was worse before, believe it or not—but even the updated version relies on Hamas and the health ministry they control to rebut the claims.
Seriously.
Here’s @nytimes giving voice to a conspiracy theory voiced by Hamas’s spokesperson to support its “pressure mounts” narrative against Israel.
Maybe the lies pushed by the media have something to do with that “pressure”?
@Reuters did the same, relying on denials from a terrorist group to downplay the claims that the terrorists were acting like terrorists.
Sometimes I feel like I’m losing it reading this stuff.
Speaking of corrections, I think it’s high time that @AP corrected this piece that claimed Israel was accusing Hamas “without providing visual evidence.”
That obviously isn’t accurate. But it’s still online.
I think it’s worth pointing out that none of what Hamas is doing is new. In 2006, @PBS included the use of hospitals by Hamas in a documentary. @nytimes did the same in a piece in 2008.
Can the media not even believe itself about Hamas?
If they can’t, should anyone?
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There’s another media hoax from Minnesota. Legacy outlets churned out headlines about a 5-year-old child used as “bait” by ICE.
The reality? The kid’s father, an illegal immigrant, abandoned him when he saw the agents. As even these outlets later concede.
Look ⤵️
Here’s how these hoaxes start. @washingtonpost alleges ICE used a 5-year-old kid as “bait” to arrest his father.
Not until five paragraphs into the piece do they acknowledge what really happened: the child’s father, an illegal immigrant, abandoned him when he saw ICE.
But this allegation was everywhere. We saw the same thing from @AP.
Explosive claim in the headline: “used as ‘bait’” (from the school, no less)
Reality: six paragraphs down, father abandoned child.
Do you remember, all of four weeks ago, when democracy was imperiled by CBS News, under new management, delaying a 60 Minutes segment about a prison in El Salvador?
The segment aired last weekend.
Democracy survived. The takes haven’t.
Just look. Screenshots ⤵️
I usually start with the media but I’ve gotta flip that here, because the dumbest voices came from the halls of Congress.
@ChrisMurphyCT, as someone “warning about democracy’s potential disintegration” (his words) called it proof that the media has been “coopted by the regime.”
For @SenMarkey, delaying a segment was “what government censorship looks like.”
With an ambitious new health care plan proposed by the Trump administration, you should read some of the recent pieces on the subject at @commonplc. Quick 🧵👇
And out this week is @Chris_Griz on why market concentration looms over the health care industry, undercutting more a more hands-off approach: commonplace.org/p/chris-griswo…
For a real and much-needed alternative to Obamacare, dive into @ChrisEmper’s explanation of community health centers, and why they could unlock better outcomes for patients: commonplace.org/p/chris-emper-…
With the news that Walz’s reelection campaign won’t survive the spiraling child care center fraud scandal in his state, I wanted to reup some of the worst legacy media efforts to put lipstick on this particular pig.
Follow along: ⤵️
I have to start with @nytimes, who seemed positively incensed that a video from @nickshirleyy caught fire, accusing him of being “in search of politically charged footage,” while burying whether there were any kids at these child care centers in the first place.
This from the same @nytimes who a few weeks ago wrote an extensive piece about “how fraud swamped Minnesota’s social services system on Tim Walz’s watch.”
The legacy media didn’t miss the Minnesota Somalian fraud story.
They actively dismissed it as made up, racist, or xenophobic.
Before the stories are quietly edited, I’ve got screenshots. ⤵️
I can’t believe this is real, but @AP basically did the Somalians-founding-America meme as a straight reported piece on how beneficial the community has been in Minnesota.
“Minnesota Somalis are as Minnesotan as tater-tot hotdish,” @CNN (Dec 7)