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The AP stealth-edits story to note that Native American tribes used scalping against each other rather than just being a "gruesome practice taken up by white colonists" against Native Americans as the original article stated.https://t.co/RvFlnSxYVF https://t.co/6vQMlWlsF7 pic.twitter.com/47C6jocT28
— Jeryl Bier (@JerylBier) January 3, 2024
Before white supremacy gets its grubby way
AFTER HITLER LITERALLY REWRITES HISTORY
I honestly thought they just had one of those moments where they mixed it up and had a shitty editor. Nope.
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Again, I'm so baffled by this. Sarah is a professional journalist. She works at New York Magazine. She could have spent five minutes sending an email to The Atlantic and the magazine would have shared what it shared with me. What is the point of this? https://t.co/XTKry8Fmfu
— Jesse Singal (@jessesingal) February 28, 2024
!chuds you'll never hate journos enough
edit: lol she responded to jesse
https://twitter.com/onesarahjones/status/1762937597641273831
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Woah. Wtf.
— Linus (●ᴗ●) (@LinusEkenstam) December 13, 2023
All anchors in this 21min news clip and numerous other things are AI powered.
Holy smokes, things are going to get wild
pic.twitter.com/OJaITjeaDe
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It just didn't happen.
— Chris Cillizza (@ChrisCillizza) January 24, 2024
And, again, no journalist said "learn to code." And neither did Biden. https://t.co/Tkd6lpvEnt
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Should've chose a better career path dork. Don't let me catch you on the street, cute twink.
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Candace, if you feel that taking money from The Daily Wire somehow comes between you and God, by all means quit. https://t.co/qachKhAuHo
— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) November 15, 2023
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Once when I was a kid I happened upon a dead frog on a trail in the woods. I flipped it over and was horrified to see worms burrowing in its entrails. For some reason that same feeling of horror, pity and disgust surfaces in me whenever I read this dude's tweets
— Lo-fi Republican (@LoFiRepublican) January 26, 2024
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JUST IN - Sports Illustrated's entire staff has reportedly been told they are being laid off in an email on Friday — Daily Mail
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) January 19, 2024
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100 Ways White People Can Make Life Less Frustrating For People of Color https://t.co/dMGvAq9Y2N
— VICE (@VICE) November 25, 2023
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this is on the NYT front page today pic.twitter.com/xzD4YElUNn
— normality (@getnormality) January 23, 2024
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About 750 Washington Post staffers walked off the job Thursday in a historic 24-hour strike.
Why it matters: It is one of the biggest labor strikes in D.C. in recent memory, and Posties are asking readers to not cross the picket line; in other words, to not read or engage with any Post content.
What's happening: The strike comes after 18 months of contract negotiations, and last week's warnings that layoffs could be imminent if more staffers don't take voluntary buyouts.
- The Washington Post is dealing with a $100 million loss this year by aiming to eliminate 240 jobs, including many local positions, but only about 120 employees have taken buyout offers.
What they're saying: The Post Guild says that "management has refused to bargain in good faith." The union's concerns also include pay equity, raises in the face of record inflation, and remote work policies.
The other side: "We respect the rights of our Guild-covered colleagues to engage in this planned one-day strike. We will make sure our readers and customers are as unaffected as possible," said a Post spokesperson in a statement.
- "The Post's goal remains the same as it has from the start of our negotiations: to reach an agreement with the Guild that meets the needs of our employees and the needs of our business."
Yes, but: The strike is worrying some leaders inside the 24/7 global newsroom as they try to fill a homepage and print newspaper.
"We have nothing in the cupboard," one section head told staff in an email on Monday, as told to Washingtonian. "If there is a sentencing, a bill introduction, an appointment --- anything that even whiffs of news -- do it. I'm serious. We need to hoard."
All the newspaper designers are expected to walk, according to leaders of the guild.
Context: Like other major publishers, the Post has struggled with an advertising slowdown over the past year.
The company has also lost hundreds of thousands of digital subscribers since its peak of three million subscribers during the Trump era.
The buyouts aim to trim the metro section by a quarter.
What's ahead: Former Wall Street Journal publisher Will Lewis will become the Post's new CEO and publisher on Jan. 2.