. . ." but one cannot make a logical and persuasive case to support her, because the facts don’t support it. Democrat voters almost universally despised Harris until legacy media outlets told them it was time to pretend she was competent and cunning."
"It looks like the billionaire business mogul who owns the Los Angeles Times may have been red-pilled.
"According to a report from the New York Post, Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, who made his wealth in biotech, is in the process of transforming his media empire by shifting resources away from the LA Times, which he bought in 2018 for half-a-billion dollars, and pouring them into a new venture…a conservative press.
"The same article reveals that Soon-Shiong was the man behind the decision to withhold an endorsement for Kamala Harris just as the editorial board was prepared to publish it shortly before the November 5th election, which set off a wave of cancelled subscriptions from progressive readers and preceded a handful of resignations in the office.
"Now here’s where it gets really interesting (and vindicating), because if I had to guess, I’d say this was probably the “straw-that-broke-the-camel’s-back” moment for Soon-Shiong; from an LA Times piece:" . . .
. . ."It’s also especially offensive since even the “news” section of LA Times has seemed almost entirely opinion-based, again, without the facts to even present the opinions as compelling and reasonable positions.
"As Dr. Lifson observed, it’s almost like there’s an emerging “red-pill” trend among self-made billionaires, and that it’s mostly the inheritors who go and stay woke—Soon-Shiong’s daughter is a radical, progressive activist." . . .
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