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Brimruk
Jun 5, 2009
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2022/11/22/why-cant-the-dod-get-its-financial-house-in-order/

quote:

“I would not say that we flunked,” said DoD Comptroller Mike McCord, although his office did note that the Pentagon only managed to account for 39 percent of its $3.5 trillion in assets. “The process is important for us to do, and it is making us get better. It is not making us get better as fast as we want.”

Just $2 trillion of assets unaccounted for no biggie, bing-bong

The fact that Krugman wasn't laughed out of society after, in addition to everything else he says, posting a graph claiming we defeated inflation by showing the CPI metric with everything except shoes excluded is absurd. Just shut the gently caress up old man

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The Oldest Man
Jul 28, 2003

Ghost Leviathan posted:

Yeah but they're too stupid to even know that

You think the guys who are actively fund-raising, on a daily basis, from the billionaires who profit from the shovelfuls of money they appropriate for procurement programs once elected don't know what their role is in the complex?

Maya Fey
Jan 22, 2017


cool angle

From 9/11 to Benjamin Netanyahu: The world is learning that toxic masculinity can't keep us safe
Feminists have long warned about men who hide incompetence with belligerence — Israel proves them right
By AMANDA MARCOTTE - Salon.com

The Oldest Man
Jul 28, 2003

Maya Fey posted:

cool angle

From 9/11 to Benjamin Netanyahu: The world is learning that toxic masculinity can't keep us safe
Feminists have long warned about men who hide incompetence with belligerence — Israel proves them right
By AMANDA MARCOTTE - Salon.com

we need competent girlboss genocidaires

Eason the Fifth
Apr 9, 2020

The Oldest Man posted:

we need competent girlboss genocidaires

Golda Meir, your time is now

Dr. Killjoy
Oct 9, 2012

:thunk::mason::brainworms::tinfoil::thunkher:
been reading her for 15 years and I can confirm amanda marcotte got pickled in 2014

damn horror queefs
Oct 14, 2005

say hello
say hello to the man in the elevator

The Oldest Man posted:

we need competent girlboss genocidaires

Eason the Fifth posted:

Golda Meir, your time is now

1glitch0
Sep 4, 2018

I DON'T GIVE A CRAP WHAT SHE BELIEVES THE HARRY POTTER BOOKS CHANGED MY LIFE #HUFFLEPUFF

Maya Fey posted:

cool angle

From 9/11 to Benjamin Netanyahu: The world is learning that toxic masculinity can't keep us safe
Feminists have long warned about men who hide incompetence with belligerence — Israel proves them right
By AMANDA MARCOTTE - Salon.com

As someone who read many, many Amanda Marcotte posts way back during the peak blogging days and rarely ever hear about her since there's something comforting but also perverse that she has continued to poo poo out thousands of words every week for the last 2 decades.

Maya Fey
Jan 22, 2017


1glitch0 posted:

As someone who read many, many Amanda Marcotte posts way back during the peak blogging days and rarely ever hear about her since there's something comforting but also perverse that she has continued to poo poo out thousands of words every week for the last 2 decades.

i remember thinking she was an evil dumbass for something specific but it's been so long i forgot all about her and salon dot com. time heals all wounds..

Grey Fox
Jan 5, 2004

https://twitter.com/snorukous/status/1720436290389250523

F_Shit_Fitzgerald
Feb 2, 2017



https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/11/02/speaker-mike-johnson-tlaib-santos-votes/

quote:

On Wednesday, the House voted to table an effort to censure Tlaib over her comments and actions related to the Israel-Gaza war. Tlaib continues to insist that Israel deliberately bombed a Gaza hospital, and that U.S. intelligence indicating Israel didn’t do it is falsified, long after the allegation has been dispelled by objective outside observers.

Not content to merely cheerlead genocide, corporate press in our demon nation has resorted to lying through their loving teeth and insist that we not believe our lying eyes.

Par for the course for a rag like the Post, but they succeeded in making me furious - on the internet!

SardonicTyrant
Feb 26, 2016

BTICH IM A NEWT
熱くなれ夢みた明日を
必ずいつかつかまえる
走り出せ振り向くことなく
&




What in the goddamn.

Some Guy TT
Aug 30, 2011
Probation
Can't post for 5 hours!
A writer and editor at The New York Times Magazine has resigned after signing a public letter protesting Israeli actions in Gaza, breaking the outlet’s rules for its journalists. “She and I discussed that her desire to stake out this kind of public position and join in public protests isn’t compatible with being a journalist at The Times, and we both came to the conclusion that she should resign,” editor Jake Silverstein wrote in an announcement about Jazmine Hughes’ exit. Hughes, who has won several awards, had worked at the Times since 2015.

Centrist Committee
Aug 6, 2019
lol make them fire you come on

Some Guy TT
Aug 30, 2011
Probation
Can't post for 5 hours!
if bari weiss couldnt get herself fired from the new york times what makes you think anyone else can

mawarannahr
May 21, 2019

Some Guy TT posted:

A writer and editor at The New York Times Magazine has resigned after signing a public letter protesting Israeli actions in Gaza, breaking the outlet’s rules for its journalists. “She and I discussed that her desire to stake out this kind of public position and join in public protests isn’t compatible with being a journalist at The Times, and we both came to the conclusion that she should resign,” editor Jake Silverstein wrote in an announcement about Jazmine Hughes’ exit. Hughes, who has won several awards, had worked at the Times since 2015.

https://nytletter.com

Precambrian Video Games
Aug 19, 2002



Gonna find the editor of the Spelling Bee game and give him a wedgie for being such a BIMBO with today's pangram.

Some Guy TT
Aug 30, 2011
Probation
Can't post for 5 hours!
The Washington Post on Saturday named news media veteran William Lewis as its new publisher and CEO at a critical time for newspaper, as it contends with financial trouble, a rapidly shifting media environment and a looming presidential election.

Lewis will assume the role on January 2, 2024, the Post said in a statement.

“Leading this bold media brand means building on my commitment to championing high-quality journalism and safeguarding our democratic values, while growing The Post’s business and advancing its impact to the next generation and beyond,” Lewis said in the statement.

Lewis will take the helm of one the nation’s most storied media properties at a time of change for American journalism in general and for the Washington Post in particular, where layoffs, declining readership and high expenses have dented morale.

Lewis, the founder, CEO and publisher of Gen-Z focused The News Movement, is a former CEO of Dow Jones and publisher of the Wall Street Journal.

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post in 2013, and the paper’s traffic surged in the years immediately after, particularly after former President Donald Trump took office.

But the paper of record in the nation’s capital has struggled to maintain readership in the post-Trump era. As with much of the news industry, the Washington Post has faced a reckoning as Americans’ reading habits have shifted in recent years.

Interim chief executive Patty Stonesifer previously told employees that the paper had “overshot on expenses” under former CEO Fred Ryan.

She also disclosed that the publication’s readership has plummeted since Trump’s White House exit, with its digital audience sinking by a staggering 28% since 2021. Digital subscriptions, Stonesifer added, had dropped 15%.

Previous publisher and chief executive Fred Ryan announced in June that he was stepping down after nearly a decade heading up the Washington Post.

While he helped lead the paper to more than a dozen Pulitzers and industry-wide acclaim, he also alienated much of the newsroom late last year when he abruptly announced layoffs.

“Ten years ago, I made a commitment to the future of The Washington Post, inspired by its ambitious and consequential journalism,” said Bezos in a statement. “Today, I stand confident in that future knowing it is in the hands of Will, an exceptional, tenacious industry executive whose background in fierce, award-winning journalism makes him the right leader at the right time.”

Eason the Fifth
Apr 9, 2020

Some Guy TT posted:


Lewis, the founder, CEO and publisher of Gen-Z focused The News Movement, is a former CEO of Dow Jones and publisher of the Wall Street Journal.


Wapo going tik-tok only in 2024

Some Guy TT
Aug 30, 2011
Probation
Can't post for 5 hours!
I wake up on October 7 to a text from my brother-in-law: “Thoughts are with your family in Israel. I hope everyone is safe.”

I check the news. Hamas has entered southern Israel. They’re in a kibbutz. My partner’s family is in that kibbutz. His cousin is nine months pregnant. He’s in contact with them; they’re in the safe room. Terrorists are outside.

I check social media. Reports of hostages, maybe three. I check again; perhaps ten.

There has been a massacre at a music festival. I look at the video. Who do I know there? I check social media again; there are videos of hostages. I look at their faces. Do I know them?

We lose contact with family in the kibbutz. I tell myself that the phone lines are down because the IDF are there. I watch Hamas footage as it is coming out. I go on Telegram for the first time in my life and I see a room full of bodies covered in blood. I see children gunned down. I see the bodies of raped women. I see families holding each other as Hamas livestreams atrocities. I look for people I might know.

My partner and I walk 30,000 steps. There’s nothing we can do. Late that evening we hear that his family is safe but their house is gone, neighbors are dead.

I don’t understand. I could have easily been there and part of me thinks I was.

I look at the papers the next day. The newspaper I work for has a tank on the front page: ‘Hundreds die and hostages held as Hamas assault shocks Israel’—victorious terrorists hold a Palestinian flag. The subheading reads ‘Netanyahu declares war as 150 Israelis die. 230 Palestinians killed in air strikes.’

I don’t understand. I know people, Israelis, who were murdered. They did not “die,” as if in some kind of accident. I saw footage of terrorism. It was not an “assault.”

On Sunday, we get more information about what happened to my partner’s family, about how Hamas set the family’s house on fire when they thought it was empty, how my partner’s cousin screamed for her life when the room filled with smoke, how her husband had to pin her down to stop her cries, how Hamas laughed when they realized the family would need to crawl out of the room, how they refused to leave the burning building. We hear that they somehow survived and walked out through pools of their neighbors’ blood, pieces of dead children littering the street; kids who’d been playing on a Saturday morning.

I’m safe, I’m fine, but I can’t comprehend the color of the sky or the rustle of the trees. I look around at people enjoying their Sunday and I think: Do they not know what is happening? I check the news again and see there are more hostages. I look through the names.

There are still terrorists in Israel.

I listen to the radio, one Israeli interviewee and then one Palestinian. I can hear that the interviewer is struggling as defenders of Hamas justify terrorism. I don’t understand. Is this how they reported the Russian invasion of Ukraine? Did they platform Putin’s people?

I check social media. A friend has posted: “They’ve broken out of jail.” Another has said: “Today is a day of celebration,” and someone else has shared an infographic of “Settler colonialism for beginners.” My old flatmate tells her followers she will be at the demonstration outside the Israeli embassy and she invites people to join her.

On Monday I go to work. How are your family, a colleague asks. When I answer, she squirms. Can’t they just leave, my colleague says. No, they can’t actually.

I look at the morning newsletter for the newspaper I work for. It breaks down the number of dead Palestinian children. It does not mention dead Israeli children.

My group chats are exploding as family and friends work out what has been happening, who is alive. I go back to the news. I type the name of the kibbutz into the wires. Nothing. I read how Hamas invaded “settlements.” They’re not settlements! They’re small, pre-state kibbutzim.

I find out that a friend of a friend was at the music festival and is missing. I’m shaking at work.

I see a colleague who had posted about “decolonization” all over social media over the weekend. They’re laughing with the rest of their team. They’re having a great day. I used to love their podcast, full of hot takes and celeb gossip. Now they’ve evolved into an expert on the Middle East. It doesn’t look like their family is in the middle of it, though.

No one else at work speaks to me about it. I nod my way through conversations about fonts and I stumble home.

I go back the next day. I look at the front page. A photo of Gaza and “violence escalates.” Israelis “dead” but Palestinians “killed.” If they can’t empathize with the Jews now, they never will.

I email the editors. I tell them that my newspaper’s coverage has been upsetting. They tell me that their thoughts are with my family but they stand by the paper’s reporting.

I hear colleagues complaining about the newspaper’s “American readers. They’re always accusing us of antisemitism.” They’re laughing.

I leave work early to go to a vigil outside Downing Street. People quietly weep. Everyone there is Jewish.

I’ve seen on social media that I know people going to a demonstration. Later, I see photos of it: people on lampposts, red flares, Jews hiding inside, the Israeli embassy boxed in. All kinds of people are united in the chant, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.” In Sydney, they are shouting: “Gas the Jews.”

On Tuesday, I find out that my friend’s friend at the music festival is dead. I remember the day I’d spent with him on the beach in Tel Aviv last month. He’d gotten back from South America and was excited to travel again. He had been gentle and sweet. I don’t understand.

On Wednesday, I go to work again, and the next day, and the next day. Finally, the pictures from the kibbutz come out. I look at all of them. I rewatch the footage. I bear witness. No colleague asks me how I am again that week.

I go to synagogue at the weekend and cry with my community. The rabbi holds space for pain. I say Kaddish for the boy at the music festival I will never talk to again.

Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, “This is my favorite picture.”

I remember telling my family that when I next went to Israel I’d lie to my colleagues and tell them it was Spain. I’d lie because my colleagues had said to me of Israel: “You gotta go while you still can.”

Now another colleague asks me what I think of Netanyahu. Do I hold him responsible? I explain that I have protested against Netanyahu but the only people responsible for October 7 are Hamas. She keeps asking me about the settlements. I tell her they’re bad but she won’t stop. “Don’t you think Bibi has a lot to do with this?” I ask her if she has family in the region. She does not.

I’m on social media again. Friends share infographics from Jewish Voice for Peace and heavy-hitting images from the Gaza Health Ministry. I don’t disagree with what they’re posting but they said nothing when October 7 happened. I start unfollowing decades-old friends.

In the days that follow, my synagogue receives a bomb threat, my local rail station has photos of missing children ripped off, I hear of more friends of friends who have been killed. I hear of others who are now enlisted. I hear that a synagogue president in America has been stabbed to death and synagogues all over the world have been vandalized and destroyed.

The newspaper I work for is covering the bombardment of Gaza and I watch in horror. I think that Israel must defend itself. Yet when I say this, people will tell me I am justifying the murder of children. They will tell me it is a genocide.

As the events of October 7 draw on collective Jewish memory of pogroms and the Holocaust, the newspaper I work for will dispel that myth, publishing a piece entitled “Israel must stop weaponizing the Holocaust.” Am I wrong to connect our grief today with that of our past?

In the weeks that follow, I will apply for other jobs and speak exclusively to Jewish friends and family. I will hide myself away from the streets of London and the waves of social media.

I will not forget the photos and videos I saw on October 7, but I start to think about how this day will be marked; how my children’s children will take part in a new commemoration, where we will remember not the Romans or the Persians or the Nazis but Hamas, and how we survived.

Intergenerational trauma has been retriggered but now is not the time to dwell on our historical violent oppression. Now is the time to rise up, speak out, and defend our right to exist. Now is not the time for colleagues to dismiss Jewish pain or publish inflammatory op-eds that will spark more violence.

I will keep applying for other jobs.

EDITOR’S NOTE: On November 2, it came to our attention that the statement in this piece, “Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, ‘This is my favourite picture,’” relates to a comment made by a visiting schoolchild at the Guardian, not by a Guardian staff member.

Wraith of J.O.I.
Jan 25, 2012


https://twitter.com/jerusalem_post/status/1721119290311528701

Some Guy TT
Aug 30, 2011
Probation
Can't post for 5 hours!

fizzy is banned but fortunately we still have plenty of good news

Ytlaya
Nov 13, 2005


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_C._Perry

Orange Devil
Oct 1, 2010

Wullie's reign cannae smother the flames o' equality!

Stress and anxiety are markers for a long and healthy life.

Palladium
May 8, 2012

Very Good
✔️✔️✔️✔️

if an AI wrote this it would go biologically insane even if it isn't physically possible to

F_Shit_Fitzgerald
Feb 2, 2017



Some Guy TT posted:

I wake up on October 7 to a text from my brother-in-law: “Thoughts are with your family in Israel. I hope everyone is safe.”

I check the news. Hamas has entered southern Israel. They’re in a kibbutz. My partner’s family is in that kibbutz. His cousin is nine months pregnant. He’s in contact with them; they’re in the safe room. Terrorists are outside.

I check social media. Reports of hostages, maybe three. I check again; perhaps ten.

There has been a massacre at a music festival. I look at the video. Who do I know there? I check social media again; there are videos of hostages. I look at their faces. Do I know them?

We lose contact with family in the kibbutz. I tell myself that the phone lines are down because the IDF are there. I watch Hamas footage as it is coming out. I go on Telegram for the first time in my life and I see a room full of bodies covered in blood. I see children gunned down. I see the bodies of raped women. I see families holding each other as Hamas livestreams atrocities. I look for people I might know.

My partner and I walk 30,000 steps. There’s nothing we can do. Late that evening we hear that his family is safe but their house is gone, neighbors are dead.

I don’t understand. I could have easily been there and part of me thinks I was.

I look at the papers the next day. The newspaper I work for has a tank on the front page: ‘Hundreds die and hostages held as Hamas assault shocks Israel’—victorious terrorists hold a Palestinian flag. The subheading reads ‘Netanyahu declares war as 150 Israelis die. 230 Palestinians killed in air strikes.’

I don’t understand. I know people, Israelis, who were murdered. They did not “die,” as if in some kind of accident. I saw footage of terrorism. It was not an “assault.”

On Sunday, we get more information about what happened to my partner’s family, about how Hamas set the family’s house on fire when they thought it was empty, how my partner’s cousin screamed for her life when the room filled with smoke, how her husband had to pin her down to stop her cries, how Hamas laughed when they realized the family would need to crawl out of the room, how they refused to leave the burning building. We hear that they somehow survived and walked out through pools of their neighbors’ blood, pieces of dead children littering the street; kids who’d been playing on a Saturday morning.

I’m safe, I’m fine, but I can’t comprehend the color of the sky or the rustle of the trees. I look around at people enjoying their Sunday and I think: Do they not know what is happening? I check the news again and see there are more hostages. I look through the names.

There are still terrorists in Israel.

I listen to the radio, one Israeli interviewee and then one Palestinian. I can hear that the interviewer is struggling as defenders of Hamas justify terrorism. I don’t understand. Is this how they reported the Russian invasion of Ukraine? Did they platform Putin’s people?

I check social media. A friend has posted: “They’ve broken out of jail.” Another has said: “Today is a day of celebration,” and someone else has shared an infographic of “Settler colonialism for beginners.” My old flatmate tells her followers she will be at the demonstration outside the Israeli embassy and she invites people to join her.

On Monday I go to work. How are your family, a colleague asks. When I answer, she squirms. Can’t they just leave, my colleague says. No, they can’t actually.

I look at the morning newsletter for the newspaper I work for. It breaks down the number of dead Palestinian children. It does not mention dead Israeli children.

My group chats are exploding as family and friends work out what has been happening, who is alive. I go back to the news. I type the name of the kibbutz into the wires. Nothing. I read how Hamas invaded “settlements.” They’re not settlements! They’re small, pre-state kibbutzim.

I find out that a friend of a friend was at the music festival and is missing. I’m shaking at work.

I see a colleague who had posted about “decolonization” all over social media over the weekend. They’re laughing with the rest of their team. They’re having a great day. I used to love their podcast, full of hot takes and celeb gossip. Now they’ve evolved into an expert on the Middle East. It doesn’t look like their family is in the middle of it, though.

No one else at work speaks to me about it. I nod my way through conversations about fonts and I stumble home.

I go back the next day. I look at the front page. A photo of Gaza and “violence escalates.” Israelis “dead” but Palestinians “killed.” If they can’t empathize with the Jews now, they never will.

I email the editors. I tell them that my newspaper’s coverage has been upsetting. They tell me that their thoughts are with my family but they stand by the paper’s reporting.

I hear colleagues complaining about the newspaper’s “American readers. They’re always accusing us of antisemitism.” They’re laughing.

I leave work early to go to a vigil outside Downing Street. People quietly weep. Everyone there is Jewish.

I’ve seen on social media that I know people going to a demonstration. Later, I see photos of it: people on lampposts, red flares, Jews hiding inside, the Israeli embassy boxed in. All kinds of people are united in the chant, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.” In Sydney, they are shouting: “Gas the Jews.”

On Tuesday, I find out that my friend’s friend at the music festival is dead. I remember the day I’d spent with him on the beach in Tel Aviv last month. He’d gotten back from South America and was excited to travel again. He had been gentle and sweet. I don’t understand.

On Wednesday, I go to work again, and the next day, and the next day. Finally, the pictures from the kibbutz come out. I look at all of them. I rewatch the footage. I bear witness. No colleague asks me how I am again that week.

I go to synagogue at the weekend and cry with my community. The rabbi holds space for pain. I say Kaddish for the boy at the music festival I will never talk to again.

Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, “This is my favorite picture.”

I remember telling my family that when I next went to Israel I’d lie to my colleagues and tell them it was Spain. I’d lie because my colleagues had said to me of Israel: “You gotta go while you still can.”

Now another colleague asks me what I think of Netanyahu. Do I hold him responsible? I explain that I have protested against Netanyahu but the only people responsible for October 7 are Hamas. She keeps asking me about the settlements. I tell her they’re bad but she won’t stop. “Don’t you think Bibi has a lot to do with this?” I ask her if she has family in the region. She does not.

I’m on social media again. Friends share infographics from Jewish Voice for Peace and heavy-hitting images from the Gaza Health Ministry. I don’t disagree with what they’re posting but they said nothing when October 7 happened. I start unfollowing decades-old friends.

In the days that follow, my synagogue receives a bomb threat, my local rail station has photos of missing children ripped off, I hear of more friends of friends who have been killed. I hear of others who are now enlisted. I hear that a synagogue president in America has been stabbed to death and synagogues all over the world have been vandalized and destroyed.

The newspaper I work for is covering the bombardment of Gaza and I watch in horror. I think that Israel must defend itself. Yet when I say this, people will tell me I am justifying the murder of children. They will tell me it is a genocide.

As the events of October 7 draw on collective Jewish memory of pogroms and the Holocaust, the newspaper I work for will dispel that myth, publishing a piece entitled “Israel must stop weaponizing the Holocaust.” Am I wrong to connect our grief today with that of our past?

In the weeks that follow, I will apply for other jobs and speak exclusively to Jewish friends and family. I will hide myself away from the streets of London and the waves of social media.

I will not forget the photos and videos I saw on October 7, but I start to think about how this day will be marked; how my children’s children will take part in a new commemoration, where we will remember not the Romans or the Persians or the Nazis but Hamas, and how we survived.

Intergenerational trauma has been retriggered but now is not the time to dwell on our historical violent oppression. Now is the time to rise up, speak out, and defend our right to exist. Now is not the time for colleagues to dismiss Jewish pain or publish inflammatory op-eds that will spark more violence.

I will keep applying for other jobs.

EDITOR’S NOTE: On November 2, it came to our attention that the statement in this piece, “Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, ‘This is my favourite picture,’” relates to a comment made by a visiting schoolchild at the Guardian, not by a Guardian staff member.

"Won't someone think of the colonizers?" :qq:

Pieces like this feel desperate. Few people are buying what Israel is selling and they have to constantly invoke October 7th to guilt people into sympathy for them.

Pistol_Pete
Sep 15, 2007

Oven Wrangler
How loving tone-deaf do you need to be to publish pieces like: "People keep waving Palestinian flags and it's making me feel awkward and uncomfortable: I'm a victim!" when there's an ongoing massacre of Palestinians happening right now.

F_Shit_Fitzgerald
Feb 2, 2017



Israel bombs a hospital
"But October 7th!"

3,700+ Palestinian children indiscriminately killed
"But October 7th!"

Israel drops white phosphorous on civilians
"But October 7th!"

Israel disallows food, water, electricity and fuel into Gaza and bombs water lines
"But October 7th!"

Jewish people and non-Jews alike come out of the woodwork to protest Israel's genocide
"But October 7th!"

They're far worse for basking in their perpetual victimhood by continually invoking that "terrorist" attack than we were with 9/11, and that's saying a lot.

Best Friends
Nov 4, 2011

Pistol_Pete posted:

How loving tone-deaf do you need to be to publish pieces like: "People keep waving Palestinian flags and it's making me feel awkward and uncomfortable: I'm a victim!" when there's an ongoing massacre of Palestinians happening right now.

it’s easy if you consider yourself a person who is owed empathy and Palestinians neither people nor owed anything but terror.

ikanreed
Sep 25, 2009

I honestly I have no idea who cannibal[SIC] is and I do not know why I should know.

syq dude, just syq!

F_Shit_Fitzgerald posted:

Israel bombs a hospital
"But October 7th!"

3,700+ Palestinian children indiscriminately killed
"But October 7th!"

Israel drops white phosphorous on civilians
"But October 7th!"

Israel disallows food, water, electricity and fuel into Gaza and bombs water lines
"But October 7th!"

Jewish people and non-Jews alike come out of the woodwork to protest Israel's genocide
"But October 7th!"

They're far worse for basking in their perpetual victimhood by continually invoking that "terrorist" attack than we were with 9/11, and that's saying a lot.

Nah, 9/11 was exactly the same. We just already committed all the mass murder, hospital bombings, torture, and suppression of dissent we could on that one tank of gas

Wraith of J.O.I.
Jan 25, 2012


https://twitter.com/_pem_pem/status/1721546761888518159

my bony fealty
Oct 1, 2008


nice to see the Baileys getting some r&r

Precambrian Video Games
Aug 19, 2002



Some Guy TT posted:

EDITOR’S NOTE: On November 2, it came to our attention that the statement in this piece, “Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, ‘This is my favourite picture,’” relates to a comment made by a visiting schoolchild at the Guardian, not by a Guardian staff member.

There is also now:

quote:

• An earlier version of this column on Apple News attributed authorship to a member of staff entirely unconnected to the real author. This error, which was no fault of Apple News, has been rectified.

• Responding to this column, the Guardian told Jewish News: "We do not believe this article bears any resemblance to the workplace culture at the Guardian. We do not recognise the events described and are seeking to ask the individual concerned to share specific information about any incidents so we can investigate the facts fully. The Guardian and Observer’s coverage of the conflict continues to be expert, thorough and fair. At this distressing time, and we have offered support and assistance to staff personally affected."

But no author listed that I can see anymore, so I may have some doubts about some of the specifics here.

Arsenic Lupin
Apr 12, 2012

This particularly rapid💨 unintelligible 😖patter💁 isn't generally heard🧏‍♂️, and if it is🤔, it doesn't matter💁.


quote:

Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, “This is my favorite picture.”

I'll take "things that never happened" for $100, please.

Groovelord Neato
Dec 6, 2014



mawarannahr
May 21, 2019

Arsenic Lupin posted:

I'll take "things that never happened" for $100, please.

quote:

EDITOR’S NOTE: On November 2, it came to our attention that the statement in this piece, “Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, ‘This is my favourite picture,’” relates to a comment made by a visiting schoolchild at the Guardian, not by a Guardian staff member


– "...do you hear what they are saying?”
– Yes. Have you never read, ‘Out of the mouths of children and nursing infants you have prepared praise for yourself’?”

mawarannahr has issued a correction as of 17:54 on Nov 6, 2023

gradenko_2000
Oct 5, 2010

HELL SERPENT
Lipstick Apathy



Additional context: Churchill was actually way more racist in the original quotation

spacemang_spliff
Nov 29, 2014

wide pickle

Some Guy TT posted:



EDITOR’S NOTE: On November 2, it came to our attention that the statement in this piece, “Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, ‘This is my favourite picture,’” relates to a comment made by a visiting schoolchild at the Guardian, not by a Guardian staff member.

lol

Al!
Apr 2, 2010

:coolspot::coolspot::coolspot::coolspot::coolspot:

Some Guy TT posted:

EDITOR’S NOTE: On November 2, it came to our attention that the statement in this piece, “Back at work I see someone pointing to a photo of the Israeli flag burning in the newspaper. They laugh, ‘This is my favourite picture,’” relates to a comment made by a visiting schoolchild at the Guardian, not by a Guardian staff member.

lmao

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RandolphCarter
Jul 30, 2005


gradenko_2000 posted:




Additional context: Churchill was actually way more racist in the original quotation

good god

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