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@Rembrandt nah, they'll likely have a T&C that relates to a subset of something shared I reckon. So they can dance on the head of a pin and say A, B, C was fine but that Z bit violated terms. Wouldn't be surprised if their T&Cs are undergoing constant revamp to 'manage' this.
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@Paekakboyz Likely or they'll put it down as a 'mistake' from a junior member of staff.
More revelations on Tucker today
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@Rembrandt revelations I still lol at the lawsuit where Fox lawyers said you should be careful about believing what Tucker says.
""Fox persuasively argues, that given Mr. Carlson's reputation, any reasonable viewer 'arrive[s] with an appropriate amount of skepticism' about the statement he makes.""
Much in the vein of ol Brownlee's boo boo prior to the election about 'just putting ideas out there", and 'asking questions'.
I do wonder how long the reporting will last post-election... probably depends on the outcome aye
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Sounds like Fox has lost the only copy of all that damming evidence on Biden...
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@Paekakboyz said in US Politics:
Sounds like Fox has lost the only copy of all that damming evidence on Biden...
Must have got lost in Trump's postal service on the way to the FBI
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@Paekakboyz said in US Politics:
Sounds like Fox has lost the only copy of all that damming evidence on Biden...
Fox took copies (one journalist actually bothered to ask)
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@Duluth said in US Politics:
@Paekakboyz said in US Politics:
Sounds like Fox has lost the only copy of all that damming evidence on Biden...
Fox took copies (one journalist actually bothered to ask)
That's sooooo old school. Haven't they heard of the cloud?
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@canefan said in US Politics:
@reprobate said in US Politics:
@canefan comedy gold.
Except they are being 100% dead serious
Yeah, when you read that steaming pile - where we actually know the truth - it does cast just a wee smidgeon of doubt over how they report things we don't know about first-hand.
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@reprobate said in US Politics:
@canefan said in US Politics:
@reprobate said in US Politics:
@canefan comedy gold.
Except they are being 100% dead serious
Yeah, when you read that steaming pile - where we actually know the truth - it does cast just a wee smidgeon of doubt over how they report things we don't know about first-hand.
That's not even stretching the truth, it is a work of pure fiction
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The state of journalism in the US right now.
The Intercept was one of the last few independent outlets.
No more.Liberal journalist Glenn Greenwald resigns from the publication he co-founded The Intercept.
Why?
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.
The article they wanted to quash.
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@Frank said in US Politics:
The article they wanted to quash.
Excellent article. The ending raises a good point about the firing of Shokhin
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But that claim does not even pass the laugh test. The U.S. and its European allies are not opposed to corruption by their puppet regimes. They are allies with the most corrupt regimes on the planet, from Riyadh to Cairo, and always have been. Since when does the U.S. devote itself to ensuring good government in the nations it is trying to control? If anything, allowing corruption to flourish has been a key tool in enabling the U.S. to exert power in other countries and to open up their markets to U.S. companies.Beyond that, if increasing prosecutorial independence and strengthening anti-corruption vigilance were really Biden's goal in working to demand the firing of the Ukrainian chief prosecutor, why would the successor to Shokhin, Yuriy Lutsenko, possibly be acceptable? Lutsenko, after all, had "no legal background as general prosecutor," was principally known only as a lackey of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, was forced in 2009 to "resign as interior minister after being detained by police at Frankfurt airport for being drunk and disorderly," and "was subsequently jailed for embezzlement and abuse of office, though his defenders said the sentence was politically motivated."
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It won't make any difference at this late stage but....
Graham, who has been cited as a cybersecurity expert in The Washington Post, the Associated Press, Wired, Engadget and other news and technology outlets, told the DCNF that he used a cryptographic signature found in the email’s metadata to validate that Vadym Pozharsky, an advisor to Burisma’s board of directors, emailed Hunter Biden on April 17, 2015.
In the email, Pozharsky thanked Hunter Biden for “inviting me to DC and giving an opportunity to meet your father and spent [sic] some time together.”
https://dailycaller.com/2020/10/29/cybersecurity-expert-authenticates-hunter-biden-burisma-email/
US Politics