Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters faces backlash for wearing Nazi-like uniform at Berlin concert, comparing Anne Frank with George Floyd and Palestinian journalist



Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters is facing backlash to imagery at his concert in Germany that some critics are calling "anti-Semitic." During his recent concert in Berlin, the controversial rocker was dressed in garb resembling a Nazi uniform, and there were comparisons of Anne Frank with George Floyd and a Palestinian journalist.

Waters' concert at the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Berlin last week has recently garnered attention after video clips were posted to social media.

The enormous screen at the concert highlighted numerous names during the show, including Anne Frank – the German girl who was forced to go into hiding because the Nazis were hunting down Jews.

Other names included U.S. victims of deadly police encounters, including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Philando Castile.

Also broadcast on the screen was Sophie Scholl, an anti-Nazi political activist murdered by the Nazis; Mahsa Amini, a protester who died in the custody of Iranian "morality police" under suspicious circumstances in 2022; and Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian journalist for Al Jazeera who was shot and killed during a firefight between Israel Defense Forces and Palestinian militants in the West Bank in 2022.

Also during the concert, Waters was dressed in a uniform that resembled that of a Nazi SS soldier. He is seen on video wielding a replica rifle and firing off rounds.

A large pig balloon floated over the crowd that reportedly had the logo of Elbit – an Israeli defense company.

\u201cjetzt hat sich der roger offenbar als waffen-SS verkleidet samt roter armbinde und er\u00f6ffnet das feuer mit einer gewehr-attrappe\u201d
— Nicholas Potter (@Nicholas Potter) 1684347686
\u201cHere is video footage of Roger Waters dressed in facist SS Nazi garb, shooting the machine gun at the show:\u201d
— Ari Ingel (@Ari Ingel) 1684879937

On Wednesday, the Israeli Foreign Ministry wrote on Twitter, "Good morning to every one but Roger Waters who spent the evening in Berlin (Yes Berlin) desecrating the memory of Anne Frank and the 6 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust."

\u201cGood morning to every one but Roger Waters who spent the evening in Berlin (Yes Berlin) desecrating the memory of Anne Frank and the 6 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust.\u201d
— Israel Foreign Ministry (@Israel Foreign Ministry) 1684913341

"Roger Waters compares the tragic death of a Palestinian journalist covering a firefight between Israeli forces & Palestinian militants to the death of Anne Frank who was led to the slaughter with over 6 million other Jews at the hands of the Nazis," said Ari Ingel – director at Creative Community for Peace, a self-described "non-profit entertainment industry organization comprised of prominent members of the entertainment community who have come together to promote the arts as a bridge to peace, to educate about rising antisemitism within the entertainment industry, and to galvanize support against the cultural boycott of Israel."

Waters' concert opened with a statement that read: "On a matter of public interest: a court in Frankfurt has ruled that I am not an anti-Semite. Just to be clear, I condemn antisemitism unreservedly."

At a concert in Belgium in 2013, Rogers also donned a Nazi-like uniform and had a floating pig with the Star of David emblazoned on it.

The Times of Israel reported in 2013:

Waters, who recently urged other performers to boycott Israel and compared Israel to apartheid South Africa, was singing on stage on July 20 under the balloon while toting a machine gun replica and wearing a long black leather jacket with a red-and-white arm band, reminiscent of a Nazi uniform. The former Pink Floyd member was singing “get him up against the wall, that one looks Jewish and that one’s a coon, who let all of this riff-raff into the room” – the lyrics of the song “In the Flesh.”

"In the Flesh" is from Pink Floyd's 1979 album "The Wall." The song is about a jaded rock star named "Pink," who "hallucinates himself as a Nazi-like dictator ordering his audience to attack ethnic minorities."

The song ends with Waters as Pink declaring, "If I had my way I'd have all of you shot!"

Waters – who turns 80 in September – is currently on his farewell tour, called "This Is Not a Drill."

YouTube moves to further squelch criticism of transgender agenda, demonetizes Sara Gonzales, Matt Walsh, and Tim Pool



YouTube has demonetized prominent conservatives and other dissenters in an apparent campaign to squelch criticism of the transgender agenda.

Sara Gonzales, the host of BlazeTV's "The News & Why It Matters," podcaster Tim Pool, and Matt Walsh, the recently hacked conservative commentator behind the film "What Is a Woman?", have each reportedly seen their revenue streams dammed in part or in full on the platform in recent days.

Gonzales noted on Thursday, "My YouTube channel had 3 videos removed today and received a strike for telling the truth about transgenderism. @Timcast just had 2 videos removed on his channel. They demonetized @MattWalshBlog's entire channel."

\u201cMy YouTube channel had 3 videos removed today and received a strike for telling the truth about transgenderism. \n\n@Timcast just had 2 videos removed on his channel.\n\nThey demonetized @MattWalshBlog\u2019s entire channel. \n\nThey want to censor us out of existence.\u201d
— Sara Gonzales (@Sara Gonzales) 1682036292

"They want to censor us out of existence," said Gonzales, adding in a subsequent tweet, "We will never surrender."

The BlazeTV host indicated that the demonetization has prompted her to explore "the avenue of Rumble."

Matt Walsh spoke Wednesday at a Young America's Foundation event at the University of Iowa, revealing that his entire YouTube channel had been demonetized due to his discussions of Bud Light's transvestite spokesman Dylan Mulvaney.

"We received word from YouTube that I had committed a series of alleged violations of their terms of service and also of their ad partnership guidelines, which will now lead to my demonetization and potentially being banished forever from the platform," said Walsh.

A spokesman for YouTube confirmed the action in a statement to Media Matters, writing, "We suspended monetization on Matt Walsh’s channel due to repeated violations of our YouTube Partner Program policies, which include our Advertiser-Friendly Guidelines. These policies apply equally to all creators, regardless of political viewpoint, and channels that repeatedly violate these policies are demonetized."

Daily Wire CEO Jeremy Boreing suggested in a Twitter post that Walsh had violated "some opaque, arbitrarily applied standard or another related to speaking the biological truth about Dylan Mulvaney."

YouTube's hate speech policy prohibits content promoting "hatred" against anyone on the basis of various attributes, including sex or gender. It is not clear from the policy what precisely constitutes hate.

The policy further indicates that content can be removed and/or accounts penalized when a creator "repeatedly encourages abusive audience behavior"; "repeatedly targets, insults and abuses a group based on the attributes noted above across multiple uploads"; or "creates content that harms the YouTube ecosystem by persistently inciting hostility against a group with attributes noted above for personal financial gain."

Walsh indicated that YouTube had been intentionally vague about its guidelines and even vaguer about how offenders ran afoul of them "because they want to afford themselves the latitude to demonetize and deplatform you whenever they feel like it."

While keen to shut down undesirable speech, the speech police at YouTube could allegedly be appeased with various concessions.

"If I simply respect the preferred pronouns and stop accurately gendering people, then I can likely continue to do my show on the platform, get it remonetized after a short probationary period, and continue making over $100,000 a month on YouTube ads, which is a huge part of how we produce and pay for the show," explained Walsh.

Walsh indicated that this boiled down to YouTube asking him to "just give up your integrity and your soul."

"And to that I say: hell no. Hell no. No way," said Walsh. "There is nothing to even think about. I would rather be demonetized than use someone's preferred pronouns one time. I would rather you kick me off every platform and banish me to Mars than used someone's preferred pronouns."

\u201cSpeaking at University of Iowa, Matt Walsh confirms that his YouTube channel was demonetized for repeatedly attacking Dylan Mulvaney, says that he was making over $100,000 a month \u2014 and that he can get it back if he stops misgendering Mulvaney.\u201d
— Ari Drennen (@Ari Drennen) 1681949962

Later on Twitter, Walsh announced he would no longer be uploading his show to YouTube, but instead posting videos elsewhere, including on Rumble and Twitter.

Oli London, the ambassador of Gays Against Groomers, reiterated Gonzales' report that Tim Pool had also seen his videos demonetized on YouTube.

While a number of her videos have been demonetized, Sara Gonzales' "The News & Why It Matters" is still on YouTube. You can watch it here:

BuzzFeed News Is DONE! Will More Woke Media Outlets Follow Its Demise? | 4/20/23 youtu.be

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Twitter begins suspending users for using the term 'groomer' after pressure from the left; cultural critic James Lindsay locked out of his account



Twitter has instituted a new policy of suspending users for using the term "groomer." One of the first victims of this new censorship guideline is cultural critic James Lindsay.

The Daily Dot — a left-leaning millennial-focused online publication — reported this week that Twitter would begin suspending users who use the term "groomer" against transgender or nonbinary people. A Twitter spokesperson claimed the word violated the social media platform's "Hateful Conduct" policy.

Lauren Alexander — Twitter’s health product communications lead — said, "We are committed to combating abuse motivated by hatred, prejudice, or intolerance, particularly abuse that seeks to silence the voices of those who have been historically marginalized. For this reason, we prohibit behavior that targets individuals or groups with abuse based on their perceived membership in a protected category. Use of this term is prohibited under our Hateful Conduct policy when it is used as a descriptor, in context of discussion of gender identity."

RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network) — self-described as "the nation's largest anti-sexual violence organization" — defines grooming as: "Manipulative behaviors that the abuser uses to gain access to a potential victim, coerce them to agree to the abuse, and reduce the risk of being caught. While these tactics are used most often against younger kids, teens and vulnerable adults are also at risk."

The usage of the term "groomer" recently spiked when conservatives began using it when discussing high-profile cases of small children being exposed to sexualized drag queen shows and teachers determined to discuss sexuality with their students.

Leftist organizations such as the Daily Dot and Media Matters launched campaigns this week to persuade Twitter to ban the word "groomer."

On Wednesday, the Daily Dot ran a post claiming that "people on the internet are calling on Twitter" to ban the word "groomer" — despite not offering any evidence that people are indeed calling for the term to be censored.

Far-left Media Matters demanded Twitter "take action against the 'groomer' smear." The piece targeted BlazeTV's Steven Crowder for using the term. Media Matters then accused BlazeTV's Dave Rubin and guest James Lindsay of promoting the "groomer slur" on YouTube.

By Thursday night, Lindsay had been temporarily suspended for the crime of saying "groomer."

\u201cHi all, @ConceptualJames has been locked out of his Twitter account. Stay tuned...\u201d
— New Discourses (@New Discourses) 1658447924

Lindsay — a mathematician, author, and critical race theory detractor — was suspended for calling a Media Matters employee a groomer.

Lindsay replied to a tweet by Ari Drennen — LGBTQ program director at Media Matters — by saying, "Ok, groomer."

Lindsay had to delete the tweet, and he was locked out of his account for 12 hours.

Drennen claimed that Lindsay called her a "groomer" on four occasions, and she reported him to Twitter's safety team.

She reacted to Lindsay's suspension by writing, "James Lindsay got suspended from Twitter for calling *me* a groomer lmaooo."

\u201cJames Lindsey got suspended from Twitter for calling *me* a groomer lmaoooo\u201d
— Ari Drennen \ud83c\udff3\ufe0f\u200d\ud83c\udf08 (@Ari Drennen \ud83c\udff3\ufe0f\u200d\ud83c\udf08) 1658452053

Lindsay told the Daily Caller, "I call people who engage in either of these grooming behaviors 'groomers' because it’s wrong to do and because that’s what they’re doing: grooming."

Seattle elementary school students forced to eat outdoors during COVID-19 — and some say it's child abuse



A Seattle-area elementary school is making headlines after a policy regarding outdoor lunch periods due to the COVID-19 pandemic circulated on the internet.

What are the details?

According to a Tuesday report from PJ Media, administrators at Queen Anne Elementary school have decided that their students will be eating outdoors during the winter months amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Seattle-area radio host Ari Hoffman tweeted the school's newest policy and captioned it, "Queen Anne Elementary in Seattle is forcing kids to eat lunch outside in freezing temperatures. Sadly, that's nothing new. What is new is when they go inside because it is too wet/cold they: have their own 'eating spots,' slide their mask on & off between bites, 'eat silently'[.]"

A majority of people commenting on Hoffman's tweet railed against the practice and said it was nothing short of child abuse.

Queen Anne Elementary in Seattle is forcing kids to eat lunch outside in freezing temperatures. Sadly, that's nothing new.\nWhat is new is when they go inside because it is too wet/cold they: \n-have their own 'eating spots'\n-slide their mask on & off between bites\n- 'eat silently'pic.twitter.com/IfkoTDZ6bd
— Ari Hoffman (@Ari Hoffman) 1641830401

What else?

A portion of the guidelines states that all students "will continue to eat outside whenever possible to ensure everyone's health and safety."

"We are continuously refining our processes in partnership with staff and families," the guidelines continue. "Thank you to parent volunteers who are helping with lunch, children are bringing yoga mats and towels to sit on, and staff and I have marked off 6 ft. distances so students know their 'spots.'"

During sunny days, students are permitted to eat on the school's basketball court, while during rainy days, students are allowed to sit under covered areas such as "outdoor alcoves" and the school's "covered gym entrance."

Students are ultimately allowed to eat inside — but only if rain is coming down "sideways" during a torrential downpour — and so long as their parents sign a virtual permission slip allowing their children to eat indoors.

The form states:

For health and safety reasons, SPS elementary schools are holding lunches outdoors in 2021-22 for the foreseeable future. We eat outdoors rain or shine, and we make the best of it as we practice our flexibility and resiliency. QAE is fortunate to have several covered outdoor eating areas which accommodate all students in each lunch cohort. (K-1, 2-3, and 4-5). All areas are supervised by adults.In the rare event that an extreme weather occurance (ex. torrential downpour), students whose parents have given permission to do so may be offered the option of eating inside the cafeteria if weather conditions are so severe that it prohibits them from eating their lunch. This determination is made by administration. Eating in the cafeteria would require students to sit separately, silently unmask as they take each bite and re-mask in between bites. Students would be expected to eat quickly and silently, remask and then go to a supervised location on site. Cafeteria would be supervised by administration. Even with parental permission, if a student chooses to wait a few minutes to eat their lunch until a covered area becomes available, their choice will be honored and supported.

Elizabeth Warren just called the filibuster racist. She used ​it last year against Tim Scott's police reform bill.



Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) may have just inadvertently cast herself as a racist.

The progressive senator told Axios in an interview Thursday that the legislative filibuster — a rule that dates back to the 1800s and requires 60 votes for most legislation to pass in the Senate — is rooted in racism and should be removed because it effectively gives the minority party veto power.

"The filibuster has deep roots in racism, and it should not be permitted to serve that function, or to create a veto for the minority. In a democracy, it's majority rules," she argued amid renewed debate over the potential elimination of the parliamentary procedure.

Warren noted that the filibuster was not included in the founders' original framework, but was "a later creation that was designed to give the South the ability to veto any effective civil rights legislation or anti-lynching legislation."

Leaving any subsequent parliamentary debate aside, the more relevant subject is that Warren herself, despite decrying the rule, has utilized it within the last year while in the minority party — and against a black senator, no less.

Last June, Democratic lawmakers in the Senate voted to block police reform legislation put forward by Republican Sen. Tim Scott in the aftermath of George Floyd's death. The legislation failed to surpass the 60-vote threshold assigned by the filibuster. Only three Democrats in chamber voted to advance the bill, and Warren was not one of them.

After his bill was stymied, Scott called out his Democratic colleagues for their shameful decision to play partisan political games with such an important issue.

"Unfortunately, the Democrats really want to hold on to this issue," Scott said. "They believe they're going to win in November, so they'd rather write their own reform bill without any input from the Republican Party."

"Was it racist then?" asked CNN's Scott Jennings about the revelation that Warren used the filibuster in June 2020.

lol. she filibustered tim scott's police reform bill just last year. was it racist then? https://t.co/kpCfw7ykTK
— Scott Jennings (@Scott Jennings)1616075997.0

Fox News contributor and former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said, "Given how often Warren filibustered when she was in the minority, does this make her a racist? Anyone who covers this without mentioning her record is not telling the full story."

Given how often Warren filibustered when she was in the minority, does this make her a racist? Anyone who covers th… https://t.co/z08ftLcMoi
— Ari Fleischer (@Ari Fleischer)1616089247.0

Warren announced her support for ending the Senate filibuster in 2019, and now she is calling it racist in 2021. That places her use of the filibuster to block Scott's bill smack-dab in the middle of her outspoken opposition to it.

She probably would rather people just overlook her blatant hypocrisy, but it's hard to ignore.

(H/T: Daily Caller)

Winner of Food Network show charged with child abuse murder of white 3-year-old foster child. She criticized 'white privilege' on social media.



A woman who criticized "white privilege" on social media was charged with the child abuse murder of her 3-year-old foster child, who was white.

The disturbing story unfolded in Simpsonville, South Carolina.

Police allege that Ariel Robinson, 29, and her husband, Jerry Robinson, 34, inflicted a "series of blunt force injuries" on their adopted child, Victoria Rose Smith.

The parents called 911 on Jan. 15 to report that the child was unresponsive. When medical professionals arrived, they immediately suspected child abuse, according to the heavily redacted police report.

Smith was taken to a hospital where she was pronounced dead, WYFF-TV reported.

The two were charged with homicide by child abuse, the TV station reported.

Ariel Robinson is best known for winning Season 20 of the Food Network show, "Worst Cooks in America" in August 2020. The network deleted the season where she won after she was charged with murder of her adopted child.

She was also a local comedian and aspiring television personality who posted a large amount on content on social media to seek a following.

Among those posts were entries decrying "white privilege" while talking about her three adopted children, all of whom were white.

"In my house, my black children get treated the same as my white children, and my white children get treated the same as my black children. It's a shame that when they go out into the real world, that won't be the case," she tweeted on Jan. 6, adding hashtags for "white privilege" and "black lives matter."

In my house, my black children get treated the same as my white children, and my white children get treated the sam… https://t.co/2iAnnYM7WK
— Ari- People Lover 💗🌍🥰✊🏿✊🏾✊🏽✊🏻✊ (@Ari- People Lover 💗🌍🥰✊🏿✊🏾✊🏽✊🏻✊)1609975876.0

Tiffany Huggins and her husband Cameron spoke to WYFF-TV about Victoria, who had been their foster child for 10 months before being adopted by Robinson.

"She had the best personality, and I'm not just saying that because I was her momma, but, she was just our light," said a clearly emotional Tiffany Huggins.

Here's a local news report about the insidious case:

2 charged with homicide by child abuse in Simpsonville, SLED sayswww.youtube.com

Journalist Glenn Greenwald resigns from The Intercept claiming censorship of Biden-critical article — Intercept fires back



Claiming "trends of repression, censorship and ideological homogeneity" have overtaken the publication he co-founded and the mainstream media at large, journalist Glenn Greenwald resigned from The Intercept on Thursday.

In an essay announcing his resignation, Greenwald said a decision by the Intercept's New York-based editors to censor an article he wrote that criticized Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden was the "final, precipitating cause" of his departure. He lamented that the "pathologies, illiberalism, and repressive mentality that led to the bizarre spectacle of my being censored by my own media outlet are ones that are by no means unique to The Intercept."

My Resignation From The InterceptThe same trends of repression, censorship and ideological homogeneity plaguing t… https://t.co/hjTed6IW6j
— Glenn Greenwald (@Glenn Greenwald)1603993157.0

According to Greenwald, an article he wrote this week criticized Biden, the Democratic nominee, over recent revelations about his business relations with foreign entities as reported by the New York Post and by a witness who claims to be a former business partner of the Biden family. He also critiqued "the media's rank-closing attempt, in a deeply unholy union with Silicon Valley and the 'intelligence community,' to suppress" the Hunter Biden materials. But Greenwald's editors wouldn't let him publish the story unless he removed the parts critical of Biden.

"The final, precipitating cause is that The Intercept's editors, in violation of my contractual right of editorial freedom, censored an article I wrote this week, refusing to publish it unless I remove all sections critical of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, the candidate vehemently supported by all New-York-based Intercept editors involved in this effort at suppression," Greenwald wrote.

"The censored article, based on recently revealed emails and witness testimony, raised critical questions about Biden's conduct. Not content to simply prevent publication of this article at the media outlet I co-founded, these Intercept editors also demanded that I refrain from exercising a separate contractual right to publish this article with any other publication."

He added that his editors rejected a suggestion that they publish their own article airing disagreements with his views on the Biden evidence rather than preventing him from publishing the story.

"So censorship of my article, rather than engagement with it, was the path these Biden-supporting editors chose," Greenwald wrote.

In response, he chose to leave, "voluntarily sacrificing the support of a large institution and guaranteed salary in exchange for nothing other than a belief that there are enough people who believe in the virtues of independent journalism and the need for free discourse who will be willing to support my work by subscribing."

"Like anyone with young children, a family and numerous obligations, I do this with some trepidation, but also with the conviction that there is no other choice," Greenwald wrote. "I could not sleep at night knowing that I allowed any institution to censor what I want to say and believe — least of all a media outlet I co-founded with the explicit goal of ensuring this never happens to other journalists, let alone to me, let alone because I have written an article critical of a powerful Democratic politician vehemently supported by the editors in the imminent national election."

Greenwald co-founded The Intercept and its parent company First Look Media in 2013 with Jeremy Scahill and Laura Poitras. He said the original mission of the publication was "to create a new media outlets where all talented, responsible journalists would enjoy the same right of editorial freedom I had always insisted upon for myself."

He believes that The Intercept of today is "completely unrecognizable when compared to that original vision."

"Rather than offering a venue for airing dissent, marginalized voices and unheard perspectives, it is rapidly becoming just another media outlet with mandated ideological and partisan loyalties, a rigid and narrow range of permitted viewpoints (ranging from establishment liberalism to soft leftism, but always anchored in ultimate support for the Democratic Party), a deep fear of offending hegemonic cultural liberalism and center-left Twitter luminaries, and an overarching need to secure the approval and admiration of the very mainstream media outlets we created The Intercept to oppose, critique and subvert."

Sounding off on the ideological bent of "every mainstream center-left political organization, academic institution, and newsroom," Greenwald declared his independence from groupthink.

"I began writing about politics fifteen years ago with the goal of combatting media propaganda and repression, and — regardless of the risks involved — simply cannot accept any situation, no matter how secure or lucrative, that forces me to submit my journalism and right of free expression to its suffocating constraints and dogmatic dictates."

The Intercept on Thursday published a response to Greenwald's criticisms, accusing him of crafting a "narrative" "teeming with distortions and inaccuracies."

Glenn Greenwald's decision to resign from The Intercept stems from a fundamental disagreement over the role of editors in the production of journalism and the nature of censorship. Glenn demands the absolute right to determine what he will publish. He believes that anyone who disagrees with him is corrupt, and anyone who presumes to edit his words is a censor. Thus, the preposterous charge that The Intercept's editors and reporters, with the lone, noble exception of Glenn Greenwald, have betrayed our mission to engage in fearless investigative journalism because we have been seduced by the lure of a Joe Biden presidency. A brief glance at the stories The Intercept has published on Biden will suffice to refute those claims.

We have the greatest respect for the journalist Glenn Greenwald used to be, and we remain proud of much of the work we did with him over the past six years. It is Glenn who has strayed from his original journalistic roots, not The Intercept.

In tweets sent after the Intercept's response was published, Greenwald refused to get into a "tit-for-tat" with his former employer, but announced he would publish the emails sent back and forth between him and his editors over the article "so people can decide for themselves if it was censored."

3) Given their claims, I'm going to publish -- along with the censored article -- the emails about it so people can… https://t.co/rfMtDVPOdi
— Glenn Greenwald (@Glenn Greenwald)1604000490.0

The news of Greenwald's resignation was received with admiration and respect from many journalists and political commentators.

Lee Fang, a reporter for The Intercept and now former colleague of Greenwald, called him "the most principled person in media today."

Glenn Greenwald is the most principled person in media today. https://t.co/xKFGuxDWXi
— Lee Fang (@Lee Fang)1603995175.0

Others applauded Greenwald for his "courage."

Bravo to Glenn Greenwald for his courage in standing up for what journalism is supposed to be.Without those committ… https://t.co/pcQ1fOTSMI
— Lara Logan (@Lara Logan)1603999304.0
Because he is a brave journalist ... I just subscribed to Greenwald https://t.co/lrl3Rr1K4M Also subscribed to… https://t.co/SfjE9cKJKy
— Mollie (@Mollie)1603994346.0
Glenn: I can’t overstate how much I admire your integrity and intellectual independence. We’d be honored to have yo… https://t.co/PdYD0SaSrf
— Sohrab Ahmari (@Sohrab Ahmari)1603995016.0
In an era of corporate media corruption, the voices of rebellion against the dominant narrative are increasingly st… https://t.co/6ekXCinPzd
— Ben Domenech (@Ben Domenech)1603994906.0
"Courage is required to step out of line, to question and poke at those pieties most sacred in one’s own milieu, bu… https://t.co/av2XIStzXF
— Bari Weiss (@Bari Weiss)1603994825.0
Let's be clear. I'm sure there are many things I don't agree with Glenn Greenwald about, but he is a dying breed, a… https://t.co/tlFd7oM4Mv
— Brent Bozell (@Brent Bozell)1603999607.0
I disagree with Glenn a lot, but I have always been impressed by his willingness to stand on his principles. The MS… https://t.co/t5XiVLIy6b
— Ari Fleischer (@Ari Fleischer)1603998995.0
Glenn Greenwald1000% respectwow https://t.co/nWmsW3wTjv
— Tim Pool (@Tim Pool)1603993487.0

But Greenwald is not without some detractors.

The Intercept: *applies editorial standards*Glenn Greenwald: https://t.co/erO8uuDu7o
— Joe Berkowitz (@Joe Berkowitz)1603995634.0
This is such amazingly *great* news for THE INTERCEPT, a truly impressive news outfit whose investigative journalis… https://t.co/DjHjLvLgnR
— Seth Abramson (@Seth Abramson)1603994744.0
Inevitable. There are still good reporters at The Intercept and I hope they can now be free of the stain of Greenwa… https://t.co/TKJ4URz5ab
— Wajahat "Wears a Mask Because of a Pandemic" Ali (@Wajahat "Wears a Mask Because of a Pandemic" Ali)1603995150.0

NBC's Savannah Guthrie accused of bias after contentious Trump town hall



NBC's Savannah Guthrie received gushing reviews from leftists and scorn from conservatives after being visibly combative toward President Donald Trump during the network's town hall for the president Thursday night.

The moderator pushed back forcefully against the president's responses, in stark contrast to the tone set by ABC's George Stephanopoulos in his dueling town hall for Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden. Critics accused Guthrie of having a clear agenda against Trump.

What are the details?

Fox News reported that "Viewers who tuned into the Peacock Network expected to hear questions from voters, but similarly to the NBC town hall with Biden, questions for nearly the first 20 minutes of the program came from the moderator." The outlet noted that, "Guthrie spent much of that time grilling Trump on masks and white supremacy," and "that didn't sit well with many."

Former NYPD Commissioner Bernard Kerik tweeted, "The @DNC propaganda press, I cannot even fake it. @SavannahGuthrie Look like an unhinged as*, and it's a shame. I thought she was better than that. The good thing for President @realDonaldTrump... Any reasonable viewer could see she was biased, obnoxious and on a mission."

The @DNC propaganda press, I cannot even fake it. @SavannahGuthrie Look like an unhinged as*, and it’s a shame. I t… https://t.co/Mb9JPA94f7
— Bernard B. Kerik (@Bernard B. Kerik)1602815814.0

Air Fleischer, former White House press secretary, wrote, "I just switched to NBC since ABC is in a commercial. Savanah Guthrie has interrupted Trump in these 60 seconds more than Stephanopulos has done to Biden in 40 mins. NBC is an interrogation. ABC is a picnic."

I just switched to NBC since ABC is in a commercial. Savanah Guthrie has interrupted Trump in these 60 seconds more… https://t.co/g7AFp98fMe
— Ari Fleischer (@Ari Fleischer)1602808868.0

The Hill's Joe Concha tweeted during the event, "Trump denounces White Supremacy multiple times. Savannah Guthrie follows by accusing Trump of dodging. This is already an absolute joke. And does the audience get to ask questions?" Concha followed up, "Trump denounces white supremacy a good four times. Guthrie: "It sounds like your dodging."

President Trump's campaign declared victory after it was all over, with spokesman Tim Murtaugh saying in a statement, "Even though the commission canceled the in-person debate that could have happened tonight, one occurred anyway, and President Trump soundly defeated NBC's Savannah Guthrie in her role as debate opponent and Joe Biden surrogate."

Anything else?

NBC had received widespread criticism from Democrats and its own employees for even holding the event and giving air time to President Trump, after he refused to participate in the Commission on Presidential Debates' proposed "virtual" match-up between him and Biden.

But, according to The Washington Post, Guthrie's "grilling" of Trump took "the heat off NBC for its town hall."