"Did you get what t[CNN's Don Lemon] is saying? Because "anti-fascist" is in its name, Antifa, the group can pretty much beat up whomever it wants, destroy as much property as it wishes. Because "no organization is perfect."
Holy mother.
"The left immediately praised Lemon for his "rational" defense of violence." . . .
. . . "Besides, Antifa's loose definition of who is a "fascist" includes just about anyone it disagrees with politically. That Lemon doesn't point out that basic fact of Antifa's existence – its misidentification of political opponents as "fascists" – proves that he, too, is unable to grasp opposition as legitimate.
"I would say this would ordinarily disqualify any journalist from holding a job, but this is CNN we're talking about. He'll probably get a promotion and a raise."
Who's coordinating the sudden loony leftist lionization of Stormy Daniels?
. . . "But following the Times, the lionization spread to CNN, which is praising Daniels in its broadcasts with a straight face. Look at this gush:
. . . "But following the Times, the lionization spread to CNN, which is praising Daniels in its broadcasts with a straight face. Look at this gush:
Washington Post uses despicable old MSM trick to falsely impugn TrumpThe pair spent over five minutes dubbing Daniels as merely a "fun," "working mom" who posed for Vogue "like you have never seen her" as she grapples with "the psychological and personal toll" of being President Trump's "perfect adversary" but a "beacon of The Resistance."
. . . Thanks to eagle-eyed Mike Brest, writing in the Daily Caller, we have a classic example of this technique in the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post:
"Everyone in the news business knows that a large portion of readers never make it nine paragraphs into a story. Many glance only at the headline and a subhead or two. Another big group reads the first few paragraphs. These two groups account for a big majority of newspaper readers, unless the topic in question is of highest concern – say, an epidemic breaking out locally." . . .The Washington Post published an article about the U.S. government choosing not to renew the passports of people born near the border, as they are skeptical that those people were actually born in the country. It's not until the ninth paragraph that the article begins to address that the policy began under the Bush administration and continued under Obama.
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