Your source for mainline mainstream media misdeeds and malarkey.
Ah, the myriad ways the press continue to unravel like a sweater knitted by an arthritic ADHD blind person suffering from withdrawal tremors. Trump has been named “Time Magazine’s Person of the Year,” and they made sure to say he achieves this honor “for better, or for worse.” We looked back to see if they have ever inserted this qualifier with prior recipients, and you’ll not be shocked by what was found.
We have the New York Times forgetting that the press spent years denying and combatting claims there is a border crisis, coming out with a report that declares we experienced the largest border surge in history. How about that?
Then, we look over a pair of stunted fact-checks. Politifact rushed to defend Joe Biden for issuing relief aid to Africa while people in the Carolinas are still in need of relief. That money comes from different government agencies, so…we have to guess taxpayer money is NOT being misprioritized. Then CBS News fact-checks Tom Homan’s claim that a quarter of a million people have died from fentanyl by…proving there were actually more deaths?
Then there was the big non-story from ProPublica on Pete Hegseth that the outlet ended up spiking because they began with a premise that was 100 percent incorrect. After their editor attempted to praise the publication for committing proper journalism, it was revealed how they spent days crafting the hit piece and gave Hegseth just one hour to respond before publishing.
Now, crack one open and savor some mainstream media malpractice and misinformation.
LINKAGE PARK
Donald Trump is Time Magazine’s Person of the Year.
That qualifier of “for better, or for worse” has been used for the POY prior – and it was Trump that time as well.
The New York Times comes out with an admission that things were actually bad down at the border.
Politifact disputes that Biden spent taxpayer money in Africa, somehow.
CBS News proves Tom Homan is incorrect by…proving he was actually rather accurate.
ProPublica killed a story because Pete Hegseth proved their pre-built premise was completely bogus.
It was revealed that ProPublica completely built the hit job on Hegseth and gave him a brief window to respond.