Hypocritical Gov. Andrew Cuomo says strong leaders 'admit your mistakes' — though he won't admit his



The New York Republican Party and several pundits and commentators lambasted New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo after he gave a speech over the weekend criticizing the Trump administration's response to the coronavirus pandemic and saying that strong leaders admit their mistakes.

Plugging his new book on leadership during the pandemic at Riverside Church in Morningside Heights in Manhattan Sunday, Cuomo said that a strong leader shouldn't be defensive when he's made mistakes.

"The key is to be strong and secure enough to admit your mistakes and admit your shortcomings, don't get defensive," Cuomo said. "Denying the mistake only assures repeating the mistake."

NY Gov. Cuomo: "The key is to be strong and secure enough to admit your mistakes and admit your shortcomings -- don… https://t.co/6tivF1Ggne
— The Hill (@The Hill)1605485700.0

The New York GOP responded to a video of Cuomo's remarks, blasting the governor and accusing him of dodging responsibility for his numerous mistakes.

After the onset of the pandemic at the beginning of the year, Cuomo infamously issued an executive directive on March 25 requiring nursing home facilities to accept patients diagnosed with COVID-19 from hospitals. The purpose of the order was to free up hospital bed space for an expected overwhelming influx of virus patients. The result of this extraordinary mistake was to house sick coronavirus patients with elderly populations that proved to be extremely susceptible to contracting the disease, resulting in the deaths of about 6,720 New Yorkers in nursing homes, according to estimates from the state Health Department.

Cuomo has never accepted responsibility for this mistake. In fact, the governor has defensively accused his critics of lying and blamed state Republicans and the New York Post for the controversy over his administration's disastrous policy.

In the speech, Cuomo also discussed progress on a coronavirus vaccine, accusing the federal government under President Donald Trump's leadership of politicizing vaccine progress and undermining the American people's confidence in the government.

"We have a vaccine on the way, truly great news," Cuomo said. "But polls say 50% of the American people say they would not take the vaccine if it were available today because they don't trust the way this federal government has politicized the process."

Cuomo added that his administration and independent medical experts will review any vaccine supplied by the Trump administration before distributing it to New Yorkers to increase confidence in the vaccine. He did not mention that in October he said he himself was "not that confident" in the Food and Drug Administration's approval process for a potential vaccine, adding that the American people "should be" "very skeptical."

President Trump on Friday held a press conference updating the nation on Operation Warp Speed and the progress pharmaceutical companies partnered with the federal government have made toward creating and distributing a coronavirus vaccine. The Trump administration announced that they expect to be able to vaccinate 20 million Americans in December and another 25 to 30 million Americans per month on an ongoing basis from there.

In his remarks, Trump called out Cuomo's vaccine skepticism and said the federal government will not be able to deliver a vaccine to New York until Cuomo's reviewers give it approval. In response, Cuomo on Sunday threatened to sue the Trump administration.

"I tell you today, if the Trump administration does not change this plan and does not provide an equitable vaccine process … we will bring legal action to protect New Yorkers," he vowed.

"President Trump must learn the lesson: Stop the abuse. Stop the division. Stop the anger. Stop the hatred. Stop the narcissism. And spend your last months trying to help people and repair the damage you have done," Cuomo said.

Commentators noted Cuomo's jarring hypocrisy. Fox News meteorologist Janice Dean called Cuomo "a real piece of work." Dean's husband's parents were both residents of New York assisted living facilities or nursing homes before they contracted COVID-19 and died.

This guy is a real piece of work. https://t.co/FvYHl1P5Fo
— Janice Dean (@Janice Dean)1605527663.0

Others mocked Cuomo for his seeming lack of self-awareness.

Several thousand grandmas and grandpas, killed as a result of Cuo's senicide order, couldn't be reached for comment. https://t.co/MxibYtPDyF
— Sohrab Ahmari (@Sohrab Ahmari)1605525114.0

Or just criticized his attempt to gaslight New York and the rest of the nation.

Not trying to be funny, this guy is a deluded sociopath https://t.co/PnjZh7Czwj
— Buck Sexton (@Buck Sexton)1605539644.0
Here is a partial @NYGovCuomo blame list as he’s trying to excuse away his disastrous order that killed up to 12,00… https://t.co/qMHaKJ8dfk
— Reagan Battalion (@Reagan Battalion)1605535980.0
This is up there with "Trump and Russia Stole the 2016 Election" types decrying court challenges as a danger to our… https://t.co/foqxeKSVCm
— ConservativeNotCrazy (@ConservativeNotCrazy)1605529908.0

In August at the Democratic National Convention, Cuomo declared that "our way succeeded," claiming his policies lowered the spread of coronavirus in New York and attacking Republicans for failing to control the pandemic, even as tens of thousands of New Yorkers died of the virus and the state's economy was crippled by his policies.

Now, Cuomo's comments on Sunday and his new book on lessons learned from the pandemic come as New York faces a new spike of coronavirus cases and an increase in hospitalizations. In response to this second wave of the pandemic, Cuomo days ago announced a new series of coronavirus restrictions, limiting private gatherings in New York to just 10 people indoors with Thanksgiving around the corner.

"Rhetoric only goes so far, we don't want to hear any more," Cuomo said Sunday. "We want actions, because it is results that matter at the end of the day."

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

Twitter completely censors New York Post's Hunter Biden story; users can't even send it in DMs



After Facebook limited the distribution of the New York Post's bombshell Hunter Biden story, Twitter users are reporting an inability to share the story on the platform.

As the video from the Daily Caller's White House Correspondent Anders Hagstrom shows, an error message appears when users attempt to share the story, which Twitter has labeled as "potentially harmful."

Twitter is prohibiting users from sharing the @nypost’s Hunter Biden story because the link is “potentially harmful… https://t.co/pFwr14sdrb
— Anders Hagstrom (@Anders Hagstrom)1602700718.0

New York Magazine contributor Yashar Ali reported the censorship, along with a statement from Twitter explaining why it is blocking the spread of the New York Post's article.

"Given the lack of authoritative reporting on the origins of the materials included in the article, we're taking action to limit the spread of this information," Twitter said in a statement shared by Ali.

"As our Hacked Material Policy states, 'we don't permit the use of our services to directly distribute content obtained through hacking that contains private information, may put people in physical harm or danger, or contains trade secrets," Twitter said.

From Twitter re blocking the NY Post link. https://t.co/k908Xf1ODV https://t.co/sOMS29lTfB
— Yashar Ali 🐘 (@Yashar Ali 🐘)1602702700.0

On Wednesday, the New York Post published what the paper says is email correspondence between Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden and Vadym Pozharskyi, an adviser to the board of Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma, appearing to show Pozharskyi thanking the younger Biden for setting up a meeting with his father, who was then serving as vice president. The email, if true, would contradict claims from Biden that he's never spoken with his son about his overseas business dealings.

According to the Post, the email was contained in "massive trove of data recovered from a laptop computer." The computer was dropped off at a repair shop in Biden's home state of Delaware in April 2019 and the owner of the shop told the Post it was never retrieved by its owner.

Nothing in the Post's story suggests the email or other material recovered from the laptop was "hacked."

Several commentators and even some lawmakers expressed shock and outrage at the steps Twitter and Facebook have taken to suppress the Post's story.

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), a crusader against powerful social media companies, accused Facebook and Twitter of censorship and remarked, "you almost get the idea #bigtech wants to buy this election."

House Judiciary Committee Republicans tweeted the story and asked other users to share it because "The mainstream media doesn't want you to share this article."

The mainstream media doesn’t want you to share this article. RT to make sure you do. https://t.co/UgakOk0IvE
— House Judiciary GOP (@House Judiciary GOP)1602689146.0

New York Post opinion writer Sohrab Ahmari called Twitter's actions "a digital civil war."

This is a Big Tech information coup. This is digital civil war. I, an editor at The New York Post, one of the nat… https://t.co/aJNQhZjK4w
— Sohrab Ahmari (@Sohrab Ahmari)1602700338.0

Writer Mark Hemingway said the actions by Twitter verge into "'enemy of the people' territory," referencing President Donald Trump's frequent claim that the mainstream media and social media's bias makes them the enemy of the people.

I'm not in the habit of defending Trump's rhetorical excesses, but tech companies unilaterally suppressing bad news… https://t.co/n97AaMlpkv
— Mark Hemingway (@Mark Hemingway)1602701228.0

The Dispatch's David French noted that Twitter and Facebook never censored information reported from the infamous Steele Dossier, despite many of the claims made about President Donald Trump having been false.

Speaking of sketchy oppo dumps and online censorship -- why is the Steele dossier still freely available (and still… https://t.co/h0r0XOKI00
— David French (@David French)1602703321.0

The Federalist's Mollie Hemingway pointed out that Twitter took no steps to limit the distribution of the New York Times' story on President Trump's taxes.

The New York Times never even pretended to explain how it hacked Trump's tax records and yet Twitter *promoted* lin… https://t.co/5ktwJkb6wM
— Mollie (@Mollie)1602703430.0

And Lee Fang, a reporter for the Intercept, also noted the discrepancy in Twitter's enforcement of this policy.

Media roundup: Most commentators think the first presidential debate was a 's**t show'



The emerging mainstream media consensus is, predictably, that Democratic nominee former Vice President Joe Biden won the first presidential debate of the 2020 campaign. The commentators and pundits also seem to agree that the debate was, to quote CNN's Dana Bash, a "s**t show."

Headlines reported by CNN's senior media reporter Oliver Darcy describe the debate as "pure chaos" and "mayhem."

President Donald Trump's performance in particular is under fire, variously being characterized as "monstrous," "abusive," "horrific," and a "disgrace."

Leading a panel discussion after the debate, CNN's Jake Tapper called it "a hot mess inside a dumpster fire inside of a train wreck."

"That was the worst debate I have ever seen. It wasn't even a debate. It was a disgrace," Tapper said. "And it's primarily because of President Trump, who spent the entire time interrupting, not abiding by the rules he agreed to, lying, maliciously attacking the son of the vice president. When asked to condemn white supremacists, he brought up the name of a neo-fascist far right group and said stand back and stand by."

"The American people lost tonight, because that was horrific," he added.

Dana Bash went further, calling the debate a "s**t show."

'Dumpster fire': See Jake Tapper and Dana Bash's blunt reaction to debateyoutu.be

ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos also said this debate was "the worst presidential debate I have ever seen in my life."

.@GStephanopoulos: "I have to speak personally here...that was the worst presidential debate I have ever seen in my… https://t.co/hYHDt6j4Lo
— ABC News (@ABC News)1601434004.0

MSNBC's Rachel Maddow said the debate was "unlike anything that has ever happened on a presidential debate stage ever before." She slammed the president for accusing Democrats of engaging in electoral fraud and criticizing mail-in ballots.

.@maddow: "What happened on that debate stage is unlike anything that has ever happened on a presidential debate stage ever before."
— Kyle Griffin (@Kyle Griffin)1601434001.0
.@maddow: "He is not participating in a re-election campaign. He is arguing that he should stay in office and the e… https://t.co/vSP5oV4KRJ
— Kyle Griffin (@Kyle Griffin)1601434207.0

In her telling, Trump delivered a "monstrous cavalcade of increasingly wild and obscene lies."

>> @Maddow: "There's something beyond fact-checking that needs to happen."Trump delivered a "monstrous cavalcade… https://t.co/wM4MUYmQ6G
— Brian Stelter (@Brian Stelter)1601434037.0

MSNBC commentator Nicole Wallace said Trump acted as an "abuser."

"Chris Wallace did not act as a moderator. Donald Trump did not act as a debater," Wallace said. "Donald Trump was the abuser, and Chris Wallace was among the abused.

Wallace said Biden was also "among the abused" and said Trump was "cheating" by continually interrupting his opponent and speaking during his allotted time.

"I think women might have appreciated that this didn't descend into pure violence ... this felt like an assault," Wallace said.

Nicolle Wallace: Trump's Debate Performance Felt Like 'An Assault' On American Politics | MSNBCwww.youtube.com

It's not just liberals in the media saying the debate was bad.

"This debate was a train wreck," said former press secretary for President George W. Bush Ari Fleischer. "A mess that isn't good for our country." He criticized Trump for interrupting too much and Biden for responding in kind.

Townhall's Guy Benson said Biden succeeded tonight because he presented himself as a viable alternative to people tired of President Trump.

Well, that was bad. Hard to organize thoughts after that chaos, but bottom line: Biden’s overall goal was to look l… https://t.co/mfcN6EUxWu
— Guy Benson (@Guy Benson)1601433867.0

Former New Jersey Republican Gov. Chris Christie, who helped Trump prepare for the debates, said the president was "too aggressive" but added "that potentially can be fixed."

On ABC, Chris Christie says that debate did not plan out as he had prepped Trump for. He called him out for having… https://t.co/7sxwdNOdbZ
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1601437681.0

Many conservative commentators expressed irritation with moderator Chris Wallace, who frequently fought with Trump and tried to get the president to refrain from interrupting Biden.

Chris Wallace is the most irritating person on this broadcast, which is saying something.
— Michael Knowles (@Michael Knowles)1601432106.0
Never allow Chris Wallace to moderate another debate again. This was an absolute shit show. The viewer wasn’t even a secondary concern.
— Dana Loesch (@Dana Loesch)1601433614.0

Wallace came under fire for letting Biden assert that Trump said there were "very fine people" on both sides at the 2017 neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. That is a false narrative, as President Trump was not talking about the neo-Nazis, he was referring to individuals on both sides of the Confederate monument debate. Wallace's refusal to push back on Biden made him a target for criticism.

Tonight, “Moderator” Chris Wallace allowed Joe Biden to repeat the Charlottesville “Very Fine People” Lie unchallen… https://t.co/FgxToEdvkG
— Benny (@Benny)1601439392.0
Ok, I don’t generally nitpick moderators, but Chris Wallace asking Joe Biden about the “very fine people” thing wit… https://t.co/uDKvHaKFCD
— Jesse Kelly (@Jesse Kelly)1601430941.0

Wallace was also criticized for appearing to take Biden's side on the issues.

Chris Wallace, over the course of the night, has moved from moderator to debater.
— Ben Shapiro (@Ben Shapiro)1601432459.0
And Chris Wallace did not ask Biden to denounce Antifa - journalistic malpractice https://t.co/Qcj0tfg4vq
— Benny (@Benny)1601438459.0
Biden claimed tonight, after helpful prompting from Chris Wallace, that he does not support the Green New Deal.Bi… https://t.co/i0o2macDgg
— Sean Davis (@Sean Davis)1601438428.0
Just FYI, critical race theory is NOT “racial-sensitivity training,” contra Chris Wallace’s ill-informed framing.… https://t.co/lSmaziTVmq
— Sohrab Ahmari (@Sohrab Ahmari)1601438326.0

According to a snap poll taken by CBS News, most viewers thought Biden edged out Trump, with 48% saying the Democratic nominee won, 41% saying the president won, and 10% saying it was a tie.

CBS NEWS BATTLEGROUND TRACKERInstant poll of debate watchers: more say Joe Biden won tonight’s debate https://t.co/dHZqV95wqB
— CBS News Poll (@CBS News Poll)1601434691.0

A CNN poll found 60% of respondents said Biden defeated Trump.

Interestingly, Spanish-speaking viewers on Telemundo had a different opinion, saying by a wide margin that Trump won the debate.

Spanish speaking viewers of Telemundo expressed their preference of who won tonight’s presidential debate: 66% Trum… https://t.co/HAcpy1cEUS
— Daniel Garza (@Daniel Garza)1601435002.0

BlazeTV host Steve Deace may have had the best summary, offering that if you liked either candidate coming into the debate, you probably didn't change your mind.

If you liked these two candidates coming in, you probably like this cranky and personally spiteful debate. If you w… https://t.co/14Zslvox2L
— Steve Deace (@Steve Deace)1601431464.0

The second presidential debate between President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden is scheduled for Oct. 15. It will be moderated by Steve Scully, a senior executive producer and political editor for C-SPAN .