Once again, I expect him or someone to address this story in some way on the show this Sunday.
60 Minutes is typically in repeats from the week before Christmas until mid-January.
Once again, I expect him or someone to address this story in some way on the show this Sunday.
No I'm not. We all have a choice.
Regardless, we all have a choice. At one time I had a job working for a big company, making a big salary, and I walked away. I made a choice. I can find other ways to get fed. And I did. I was much happier.
Were you ever a journalist? Being a journalist for some is not like selling insurance or working retail. It's also a choice.
No. However, I did take journalism classes when I was an undegraduate.
You're wrong! She didn't "kill" the story. She didn't "cancel" it. She postponed it. It will air. We can compare the new version with the producer's version. We will see if it was worth it. But none of that changes the fact that we all have a choice.
She didn't "kill" the story. She didn't "cancel" it. She postponed it. It will air.
As I pointed out in an earlier post, this administration is *absolutely* determined that the truth about how prisoners are treated in El Salvador is not made known to the general public in the U.S. Therefore, I'll stand my ground until the segment has aired (if it does).
60 Minutes is typically in repeats from the week before Christmas until mid-January.
Kinda early to be predicting that, isn't it?
It already has been made public. Many times. By many people. I posted one of them here from April. If they want it to be a secret, it's too late.
Bari herself said it will air.
What appears to be new here, though, is the careful and detailed corroboration and verification of the testimonies of the men who were detained regarding their abuse at the hands of CECOT officers. The administration has tried various forms of hand-waving to detract from the detainees' credibility. That has become much harder to do now.It already has been made public. Many times. By many people. I posted one of them here from April. If they want it to be a secret, it's too late.
So, all stories are equal? All platforms have the reach, impact and credibility 60 Minutes has had for 57 years (until...y'know...this week)?
You have been so maddeningly obtuse about what most of us seem to understand as a deliberate move to spare the Trump administration any embarrassment, scrutiny and potential criminal charges while attempting to pull off a hostile takeover that you'd think we were offering cash prizes for the margin by which the point can be missed.
I'm just putting that quote there so everyone can stare at it.
What appears to be new here, though, is the careful and detailed corroboration and verification of the testimonies of the men who were detained regarding their abuse at the hands of CECOT officers. The administration has tried various forms of hand-waving to detract from the detainees' credibility. That has become much harder to do now.
www.advocate.com
And now there are more credible stories to add to the compendium. A case is built up through the steady accumulation of evidence.A reminder of a previous story:
And now there are more credible stories to add to the compendium. A case is built up through the steady accumulation of evidence.
"The court of public opinion". That's the best a journalist can do.My question is: Evidence for what?
"The court of public opinion". That's the best a journalist can do.
during the Super Bowl on NBCI'd make it the subject of their next town hall...hosted by Bari Weiss. Put her in front of a live audience.
That and $10 will get you a Starbucks latte.Bari herself said it will air. Not me. A lot of people will be watching how they handle this.
Come on. Pretending this isn’t semantic nonsense? If some version airs, ever, it won’t be the version originally produced and carefully vetted. Don’t try shoveling the manure that Bari is peddling as sincere.