" @uhyeah9243: We used to build pools. That does not happen in 1 week. I smell Dems."
“CNN’s idea of journalism: write a sensational headline, let people rage-share it, then admit 3 paragraphs later it’s just residual algae from dormant supply lines and a normal startup process.”
. . . "Leave it to CNN’s intrepid reporters to spare no effort in pursuit of answers. What they ultimately uncovered, however, was not a major scandal or systemic failure, but a routine algae bloom — the sort of maintenance issue familiar to countless pool owners. Yet because the issue occurred in a high-profile Trump administration project, it was treated as though it were a matter of national consequence.
The result was an investigation that seemed wildly disproportionate to the subject matter. Rather than exposing wrongdoing or uncovering a significant public-interest story, the network devoted substantial journalistic resources to explaining why algae appeared in a recently refilled pool. The exercise ultimately said more about CNN’s editorial priorities than it did about the reflecting pool itself.
Which raises an obvious question: If the network can marshal this level of effort and manpower to investigate a routine algae problem, why doesn’t it devote the same energy to uncovering the fraud, waste, and corruption that affect millions of Americans and cost taxpayers billions of dollars each year?" . . .
Trump said law enforcement is “actively investigating” the vandalism.
This renovation project is part of the president’s beautification efforts in Washington, D.C. — an initiative headed by the Interior Department (DOI).
“We’ve cleaned, renovated, and beautified over 45 Monuments and Memorials, 28 Statues, and 22 Fountains in Washington, D.C.,” Trump wrote in the post, adding that “things are looking really good” in the capital city since his initiative began. " . . .
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