https://twitter.com/intmtnsp/status/729759759247671297
A New York Times magazine profile quoting Obama foreign policy adviser Ben Rhodes admitting that administration officials used deception about the Iran deal to sell it to the public was confirmed today by Josh Earnest.
Jen Psaki, director of communications for the White House, is now at the front of the spin parade:
Since when is having a coordinated message, being responsive with facts and effectively using social media offensive? #BenRhodes
— Jen Psaki NARA (@Psaki44) May 9, 2016
Hmm, what could that mean?
.@Psaki44 coordinated message like, oh I don't know, "If you like your plan you can keep it"?
— Jason (@jasonelevation) May 9, 2016
@CounterMoonbat @Psaki44 Or "It was the video!" #Benghazi
— Jill (@BellaLolaGirl) May 9, 2016
They really do think everybody is stupid.
Define "coordinated". https://t.co/1y5LINKi06
— BT (@back_ttys) May 9, 2016
When it's a coordinated attempt to deceive the public. https://t.co/nn2LdjSFZH
— Jonathan Levin (@JNLevin) May 9, 2016
https://twitter.com/PokerofDogs/status/729764476421967872
@Psaki44 When an administration official brags about lying and manipulating people into accepting a bad deal, it's offensive.
— Thankful Jeff (@JedadiahLeland) May 9, 2016
Recommended
@Psaki44 Since the time that nobody who is speaking on behalf of this administration could speak without lying. Next question.
— pendejo grande (@pendejogrande78) May 9, 2016
Maybe it has something to do with the fact Iran helps murder American troops, sponsors ISIS & wants to nuke Isreal. https://t.co/9mzy5XgpPk
— Anthony Abides (@AnthonyAbides) May 9, 2016
Maybe a #WereNotDishonest hashtag from the White House would help put this controversy to rest.
Editor’s note: A duplicate tweet was deleted from this post.
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