As a young lawyer, she says, she was often at the office before anyone else — and then she'd stay until everyone else had gone home.
Did NPR independently verify any of this article or just take her sales pitch as gospel? I've noticed NPR become very inconsistent in what requires rigorous fact-checking
The Atlantic contacted multiple people to verify this hilarious and inconsequential sentence about New York Times employees
So I blurted out, "The spicy chicken sandwich from Chick-fil-A," and considered the ice broken.
The HR representative leading the orientation chided me: "We don't do that here. They hate gay people." People started snapping their fingers in acclamation
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Did NPR independently verify any of this article or just take her sales pitch as gospel? I've noticed NPR become very inconsistent in what requires rigorous fact-checking
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Lets be clear most lawyers that make it into the supreme court were probably like this.
Any of them that worked in big law most certainly would be.
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Would NPR have uncritically repeated this claim for someone they don't like? I doubt it.
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chuds on reddit
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I'm not a chud
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We fact checked this NPR sentence and found 9,375 lies
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The Atlantic contacted multiple people to verify this hilarious and inconsequential sentence about New York Times employees
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It is a basic part of journ*lism and a completely fair question to ask
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