Meet the Transsexual Hijabis Welcoming the Muslim New World Order Nov 9
muslim immigration in the west has become a hot button issue. for some, it's just hot.
River PageDemocracy dies in darkness (Iâm sorry, itâs never getting old). Over the past few weeks, as news surrounding Elon Muskâs Twitter coup evolved, overwhelming opposition from the institutional press itself became part of the story. But there were, and continue to be, a few outliers in terms of their total, delirious, and frankly confusing levels of rage. Perhaps most notably, even beyond the toxic waste dump op-eds, the Washington Post coordinated a month-long partisan assault on Elonâs ambition, tactics, and character. At first, I found the behavior confusing. What did these editors have to gain in so obviously abandoning neutrality? Then, I remembered the Post was Twitterâs official âfact checkâ on the Hunter Biden laptop fiasco, a crucial bit of history lost to recent noise. With censorship of that story now a central focus of the broader conversation surrounding Twitterâs political bias in âcontent moderation,â criticism of Twitterâs platform integrity is likewise a criticism of the press outlets the company relies on for truth arbitration. In other words, Elon represents a powerful critique of the social media status quo, which by extension includes the Post. In this way, heâs not only challenging the concept of political censorship on social media, heâs challenging the privileges our largest social media companies afford the press; yes, editors are frustrated at the thought of people they donât like talking, but they also correctly perceive a threat to the unearned, undeserved, top-down amplification of their own voices.
Letâs take a quick look at their least favorite story.
In October 2020, just weeks before our last presidential election, the New York Post reported on a laptop they claimed belonged to Hunter Biden. A number of emails saved on the laptop were framed by the Post as smoking gun evidence of then Democratic presidential candidate Joe Bidenâs corruption. Roughly, the dots connected like this: Hunter sat on the board of a Ukranian energy company called Burisma, where he made around $1 million a year until 2017, problematically spanning his fatherâs time in the White House. In emails obtained from the laptop, there was indication, but not confirmation, that Joe Biden, while serving as the vice president, met with a Burisma executive at the request of his son. Later, Joe Biden pressured the Ukranian government into firing a prosecutor who was targeting the company. Biden only did so because the prosecutor was declining to target corruption in the Ukranian government, his team argued, but we see the uncomfortable picture this begins to paint.
There were a torrent of âfact checksâ when the story broke. But much of the analysis, including an important piece of analysis from the New York Times, remained somewhat neutral, correctly noting there was a lot about the laptop we didnât know, while never directly calling into question the New York Postâs reporting on the emails, and only barely addressing the New York Postâs opinion on their relevance. In apparent response to Bidenâs Kremlin defense, the Times even went so far as to include the note âNo concrete evidence has emerged that the laptop contains Russian disinformation.â
The Washington Postâs fact check was more suspicious. Among several points of contention with the New York Postâs story, it cast doubt on the authenticity of the Hunter Biden emails, and further argued the emails didnât paint a damaging picture â âthese are almost certainly not real,â Glenn Kessler seemed to say, âbut if they are real they donât matter.â It was more a very lengthy difference of opinion than it was a debunking, as no essential facts of the story were proven incorrect. But the New York Postâs story was nonetheless censored across the internet. While Twitter cited now-defunct platform rules against publishing hacked material as their official reason for the censorship, they plastered the Washington Postâs âfact checkâ on trending topics as proof the story contained misinformation, and possibly disinformation given a connection to Russia (that never materialized). The Russia story was then pushed by multiple mainstream media outlets, and amplified across the internet.
All together now: Silicon Valley executives, many of our most powerful media outlets, and the Biden campaign all worked in tandem, if unofficially, to not only suppress a damaging story, but to produce and disseminate actual misinformation heading into a presidential election. One massive social media hellstorm, several Senate hearings, and a Joe Biden victory later, and Hunter Bidenâs emails were reported as authentic by the New York Times. I leave the question of their relevance to the reader.
Among professionals in media, thereâs a great deal of frustration over the laptop story â not that it was censored, but that we all keep bringing the censorship up. Yes, the argument goes, it happened, it was a mistake. Move on. The problem is the people who made the mistake â Twitter executives, editors at the Washington Post, âexpertsâ in the intelligence community â are not satisfied with the role of mere opinion people online, for whom natural human error can only be expected. Rather, after having decisively proven themselves unworthy of the privilege, they continue to fight for the power to arbitrate truth across the internet.
Concerning this power, Elon gave it a quick think and said âthank you for your service, but this is probably not for me.â For this, he had to be destroyed.
It has been four weeks since Muskâs intentions to take Twitter private became clear, and in that time the Post has published over 75 stories on the subject â a mix of analysis, opinion, and further opinion masquerading as hard reporting. Thatâs more than two stories a day. Many of them are op-eds, including such bangers as Ellen Pao, the failed former Reddit CEO, arguing on behalf of government platform control. But it was in hard reporting where the Post truly ceded credibility.
Out of the gate, the Post framed Elonâs bid for Twitter as a âshowdown,â with coverage of allegedly widespread concern among Twitter employees that Elonâs intention was to âharmâ users. Editors carried on like this for weeks, rarely breaking down the storyâs actual timeline of events, focusing instead on âoutcryâ from a panicked staff of heroes, trying as they could to thwart the violence of words. Meanwhile, at the New York Times, the story was reported in a manner that was basically sober. It was Musk joining the board, his pivot, strategy at play, counter-strategy, and finally endgame.
âExperts are concerned,â reported the Washington Post.
âTucker Carlson likes this,â the Post somberly continued. Social media is impossible without political censorship, we were reminded. There was no word on board strategy, or monetization in âanalysisâ from Will Oremus, but we did get a positively-undergraduate critique of the Great Man theory â these were the most important details of the day according to the team that once broke Watergate.
But no piece of Post reporting was so embarrassing as its defense of the Twitter executives in part responsible for, you guessed it, censorship of the Hunter Biden laptop story.
Last week, Saagar Enjeti, co-host of the podcast Breaking Points, tweeted about a pro-censorship Twitter executive by name, linking her to the New York Post catastrophe, and Elon replied he felt the decision â which everyone agrees was inappropriate â was inappropriate. The Washington Post likened this to Musk launching a harassment campaign targeting an essentially powerless âworker.â That âworkerâ is Vijaya Gadde, a public-facing executive with the power to silence presidents who by the way just took home a 17-million-dollar salary.
The argument that such people cannot be publicly criticized is reminiscent of what weâve heard for years from Taylor Lorenz, the Postâs new star âtechâ reporter. Recently, and infamously, she discussed this topic on MSNBC. Lorenzâs tearful account of what itâs like to disagree with Glenn Greenwald, a man with many more Twitter followers than her, directly preceded her doxing LibsOfTikTok, who was until this month an unknown Brooklyn-based real estate agent running a popular meme account. Post leadership defended the reporting, and lied about the dox.
While writers for the Post memed and fought and made their poor defenses for such obviously tribal standards online, I noticed reporters for the New York Times were quiet by comparison. Reporters for the New York Times have been quiet for a while, actually, due to the companyâs now strictly-enforced social media policy, with pressure from leadership not to post. Their public position on the retreat from Twitter focusses on social mediaâs tendency to distort a journalistâs view of the world, and to expose journalists to âharassment.â But obviously the more important thing in play here is the parasitic relationship that exists between loud reporters on Twitter and the institutions where they work.
Social media is, well, social, and social dynamics reward personality. Likable personality is often vulnerable, because vulnerability is relatable. Legacy media brands are, by design, the opposite of relatable â they are serious, timeless things that evoke a sense of history, tradition, and power greater than the individual. Juxtaposition of the deeply human writer with the deeply serious institution produces a goofy kind of portrait of a clown, in a suit, demanding we respect him. Mockery has been endless.
Perhaps Timesâ coverage of Elonâs bid for Twitter has been less unhinged than what weâve seen from the Post because Twitter is less central to the goal of the Times, which seems to understand there can be no âvictoryâ on Twitter for any would-be âpaper of recordâ that isnât Pyrrhic. Sure, The Times will also likely lose its position of privilege and power on the platform under Elonâs leadership, but their presence on the platform undermines their value proposition.
When it hired Lorenz, the Post made clear it has a very different goal than the Times â not to be an entity of respect so much as something that works well on social media. The Postâs coverage of Elon, which fundamentally comes from a place of attention insecurity, has further proven out the Postâs new orientation. But this is a dangerous game.
In the quest for popularity, rather than prestige, media brands lose distinction in a flatter world of meme accounts and journalists and congresswomen all reduced to one thing: dramatic people, who we love and hate, competing for favs and followers. With no more artificial boost from the platform, increasingly the meme accounts will win. Such a loss will not just look like second place to the New York Times, in which there is still some shred of dignity. It will look like the Washington Post knocked out in one corner of a cartoon battle royale, and SexyFish69 in another, laughing her ass off, before a crowd of millions.
The Postâs motto is âdemocracy dies in darkness,â but on the internet illumination burns in every direction, and the more we learn about a person the less we see them as the voice of God. For political despots and would-be truth arbiters alike, exposure to such humanity is an existential threat.
Enjoy the attention.
-SOLANA
0 free articles left