The New York Times continues an attempt to portray the paper as truth-seeking beacons of objective journalism:
Times journalists pursue the truth wherever it leads.
— The New York Times (@nytimes) January 8, 2018
New ad from the @nytimes airing during the Golden Globes:
“He said. She said.” pic.twitter.com/IXbinbyiw0
— Dan Diamond (@ddiamond) January 8, 2018
Not so surprisingly, the Times is overheating a lot of BS detectors with that one:
https://twitter.com/dangainor/status/950351138662027264
As someone who was blocked by a Times journalist for pointing out a lie in his visualization (data that he left out because it undermined his narrative), I can assure you this is untrue https://t.co/SYwmPd7CUB
— PoliMath (@politicalmath) January 8, 2018
Should read: Times journalists pursue the truth wherever it leads and bury it if it does not fit their political agenda.
— Mitch Johnson (@JohnsonTaxTN) January 8, 2018
Last line should be: “He has good sources in D.C. so we’re keeping him on the payroll.” https://t.co/0xXhRXU1x5
— Jimmy (@JimmyPrinceton) January 8, 2018
Without fear or favor… ?????
Yes, @nytimes, there is no favoritism in your coverage ? https://t.co/S5kdhgPtqy
— (((Aaron “Worthing” Walker))) (@AaronWorthing) January 8, 2018
https://twitter.com/THEBenWilhelm/status/950369403039821824
Say what now? pic.twitter.com/a5HBFohGnM
— RightWired (@_donaldson) January 8, 2018
https://twitter.com/molratty/status/950349985014534145
https://twitter.com/RepDooley/status/950356352739741696
So we were told at the Golden Globes.
Editor’s note: This post has been updated to include additional tweets.
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