Pressure Needs To Be Put On Baylor Admin To Remove AJ Barber

29,851 Views | 433 Replies | Last: 2 mo ago by ScottS
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

There are differences of opinion on the right. Tom Cotton isn't conservative by my ideal definition, but he is part of the conservative discourse, broadly speaking.

To say the NYT isn't as bad as Fox News is hardly minimizing. You just picked an extremely low standard for comparison.


We can be pretty certain who David French voted for, he didn't make it a secret. That's not a conservative, "broadly speaking."

George Bush Sr. stated while he was still alive that standards at the NYT had fallen so low he saw no point in reading it anymore as an information source.
That was before the NYT had a "political conflict" and fired their editor for a single editorial by a conservative senator. Do you support their firing him for that? Is that the higher standards you're defending here?

I already told you I didn't support it. That doesn't mean I'm going to plug my ears and yell "NY Slimes" every time they print a fact I don't happen to like. And the paper has a number of conservative columnists other than David French.


What do you think about the NYT having to print a retraction of their statement that Kirk was an antisemite? They said they relied on a "social media post" for their information instead of looking at a very easily accessible original source.

Do you think that reflects high journalistic standards? Do you think that was a "fact I don't happen to like"?

We're talking about journalism in a time where so many leftists on BlueSky were advocating the murder of more people that moderators had to do mass post deletions and pin their policy on advocacy of violence on their site. Do you think it was proper journalism for them to falsely claim Kirk was an antisemite, justifying his murder to many liberals in light of this atmosphere of potential violence?

I have no idea what BlueSky is. I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example.

I'm surprised you don't; you should have heard of it at some point if you read the front A section or editorial pages of the New York Times or Washington Post. It's liberal Twitter.

Publishing a retraction is the bare minimum of low bars for a news organization. It's not "many" news sources who should issue retractions when they are wrong; it's "everyone." I think calling calling a recently assassinated political figure an "antisemite" is a mistake that basic journalistic standards would have prevented from ever happening. You stated that you worry about retaliation from conservatives in this current atmosphere. Yet you absolve them for not doing the most basic homework of, wait for it... watching a short online video. They made an inflammatory false claim out of sheer laziness. That is a mistake no journalist should make, and it is clearly not a "sign of integrity." It doesn't matter if "everyone does it." It damages your credibility regardless.



Of course it damages their credibility. It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer.

Are we done?

Your statement has a significantly different meaning than your previous response.

This:

" I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example."

in no way means this:

"Of course it damages their credibility."

And

" It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer."

is a rhetorical statement that shows you missed this: " It doesn't matter if "everyone does it."" We're not talking about other news sources in this specific event. We are talking about the New York Times. This is a journalistic failure of a pretty large magnitude given our current situation and it was so preventable; you're failing to see it and that's fine. The current national mood is either inflamed or its not. They're either potentially pouring gasoline on that fire or they are not. If you think the latter part of both statements is the true case, then I can see why you would see this as less of a problem (despite, still, the sheer laziness of not watching a short online video before making the claim).

Whether we're done or not is up to you, you are free to stop replying any time. I'm just hanging out here for a while and will probably go back to bearly speaking at some point soon.

My statements are consistent. I would love to see the NYT do a better job. I'm not switching to Fox News for obvious reasons. What exactly then do you suggest? The last time I asked someone here to recommend an "objective" source, they said I should look into the Washington Times. So with all due respect, I'm warming up the popcorn for this one.

Munch away; I hope you enjoy your popcorn.

Washington Times has a conservative bias, but I don't think it's significantly worse than any other city newspaper. They got Hunter's laptop, Jussie Smollett's hoax, and the Russia Collusion hoax right when many other news organizations didn't until significantly later. Their reporting on the possibility of a lab leak in Wuhan as the source of Covid-19 is no longer the crazy claim other news organizations made it out to be before studies leaning toward it came out this year.
Their main journalistic malpractice that I am aware of was the Aaron Rich story, which had them on the hook for a lawsuit.

You want me to recommend something objective. An objective view when it comes to news is approached from viewing a multiplicity of perspectives and then making judgments between them. I recommend reading broadly across the political spectrum. I used to say the Associated Press articles and BBC (left-wing bias on some topics) as a sole answer, but then I think about the significant problems in their reporting on the Hamas war, like when the BBC defended at first, but then had to pull a Palestinian-produced propaganda documentary that was revealed to be connected to Hamas, a link that was hidden from the viewer. It was bad enough that The Guardian (far-left bias) reported:

"Failings in the making of a documentary on Gaza are a "dagger to the heart" of the BBC's claims of trustworthiness and impartiality, the corporation's chair [Samir Shah] has said, as he indicated that figures inside the corporation had fallen short in their handling of the film."

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2025/mar/04/gaza-how-to-survive-a-warzone-documentary-bbc-credibility-samir-shah

Or when the Associated Press falsely reported and later had to retract the claim that Israel bombed a hospital, or printing Hamas' inflated civilian casualty figures implying it was a fact, sometimes without specifying the source.

So I'm not going to give you a single go-to.

So at home, a variety of large city newspapers, especially the ones close to local major events (the national stories tend to be the same AP/Reuters in many cases. You might even get a syndicated NYT story, so be careful). Foreign news sources are a good check-up on one's perspective, including the BBC, Al-Jazeera, France 24, and others, as long as you understand the strong regional biases inherent in their reporting. The existence of Twitter, blogs, and other platforms have really expanded the possibilities and are worth searching through for experts if you have an interest in a particular area like the Ukrainian War, China-US relations, tariffs, or any other topic. I found some of these sources to be more knowledgeable and better informed than many journalists. I'm not going to make recommendations here; you can search for new information sources and make your own judgements on the reliability of what you find.

Treating the New York Times as a solid credible news source that doesn't need checking against other sources is a mistake. It no longer stands on its own. That is why George Bush Sr. stopped including it in his daily news sources. It's fine if you want to include it in a collection of news sources, but it no longer has the premier status of objectivity it used to have. I used to read it fairly regularly until the deterioration of its standards got significant enough that I didn't see the point in treating it any different than any other city newspaper.

Well...welcome to the club. Again, I don't regard any source as unbiased or worthy of standing alone. The peculiar animosity toward the NYT is a bit of a mystery, but so be it. I like many of your picks, especially the foreign ones.

I'm also very impressed that the AP managed to find a hospital that Israel hadn't bombed. If that's true, it's worthy of a headline in itself.

No mystery about it; the NYT is not anything special and people should stop treating it as anything other than a regular city newspaper. I mean, damn, just the bare minimum of watching a short video before you put out a story on the most explosive national topic since George Floyd...

Hospitals tend to get caught in the crossfire when you have an enemy that prioritizes the use of civilian shields, attempts a genocide, and then retreats into an urban civilian population to use the inevitable casualties as PR points. Not to mention, they used billions of dollars of foreign aid to build a military tunnel complex that included the hospitals and is so extensive that an explosion in one of them struck by penetrating ordnance collapsed several apartment buildings around it where the foundations had been so weakened by the tunnels. Again, no concern for the civilians. It clearly doesn't help that Hamas is determined to go down in a Gotterdammerung like Hitler's bunker. Why not just give back the hostages at this point? I mean, really? Has anyone in Hamas thought about how releasing the hostages might start to ease things up in the region? Do they care? I understand the Gazans are so fanatical in their hate that they dug up a 10 million dollar water pipe system the EU built for the Gazan civilians and converted it into rockets for Jewish civilian targets (and filmed themselves doing it), but at some point Jew-hatred is only going to take you so far.

What really made AP story worthy of a proper headline is that Hamas bombed their own hospital. But I guess when you think about what Hamas stands for, it's not really surprising.

Sooo, you've been trolling.

Well played, sir. You got me.

You can tell yourself that. Gazan society is so twisted that they thought it was favorable propaganda to film themselves committing unspeakable atrocities against Jews with Gazan men, women, and children, cheering it on and sharing it online so their Western supporters could cheer with them. There is a video out there of a young Jewish children being shot one after the other in a kibbutz. They thought it was a propaganda victory in the eyes of the world when they paraded a young Jewish woman to the cheers of the Gazan civilians with blood seeping through the crotch area of her pants. They filmed themselves doing acts that media/commercial websites have suppressed because of the depravity of the attacks. There is celebratory videos of the rapes and genital mutilations of girls. There are videos of Gazans looking specifically for children to murder. They targeted safe rooms since they knew civilians and children would be in them. Gazans filmed all this because they thought they were the good guys when they did these things. They were proud of what they did to Jewish children and they wanted to world to see it. They openly and ecstatically rejoiced in the violent torture and death of children, and we know that because they filmed themselves doing it so the supporters of Gaza could rejoice with them.

This was a planned mass murder of Jewish civilians. And you think it's funny.

"Well played, sir" indeed.

None of it is funny. Western media have suppressed a great deal of information on the killing of Palestinians as well, but of course someone with your media savvy already knows that. You choose not to acknowledge it, as you choose not to acknowledge Israel's deliberate targeting of civilians, hospitals, aid workers, etc.


You think discussing the gleeful murder of Jewish children is trolling. You think it's a joke. You can't face the level of depravity committed by the Gazans. They were so proud of these depravities they filmed them and Gazan society cheered them on.
You ignore Hamas using the civilian population as human shields, not out of expediency but planned ahead of time. You choose not to acknowledge that. You defend Hamas instead as victims of the October 2023 massacre.

You think pointing that out is trolling. You think it's funny.

Trolling is making absurd claims, for example, that Gaza's hospitals are being destroyed because they're "caught in the crossfire."

I think it's sad.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Getting back on track. From a recent study entitled "Far-left versus Far-right Fatal Violence: An Empirical Assessment of the Prevalence of Ideologically Motivated Homicides in the United States."

Between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2020...there were 269 ideologically motivated homicides (an average of 8.7 incidents per year). Far-left homicide incidents accounted for 15.6% of these homicide events, and far-right homicides accounted for 84.4%.

Although both the far-left and far-right homicide events appear to occur in waves, the baseline for the number of far-right events is higher than the far-left's baseline.

With the exception of 2017 when far-left homicides out-numbered far-right homicides, the far-right has consistently been higher than the far-left.

When comparing the lethality of far-right ideologically motivated homicides to the far-left, the results are consistent with the findings mentioned above. The far-right continues to surpass the far-left in both frequency of incidents and deaths. Even with the exclusion of deaths from the Oklahoma City Bombing, deaths from far-right ideologically motivated homicides average 11.5 per year from 1990-2020, compared to only 2.5 deaths from the far-left for the same period.
BearlySpeaking
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

There are differences of opinion on the right. Tom Cotton isn't conservative by my ideal definition, but he is part of the conservative discourse, broadly speaking.

To say the NYT isn't as bad as Fox News is hardly minimizing. You just picked an extremely low standard for comparison.


We can be pretty certain who David French voted for, he didn't make it a secret. That's not a conservative, "broadly speaking."

George Bush Sr. stated while he was still alive that standards at the NYT had fallen so low he saw no point in reading it anymore as an information source.
That was before the NYT had a "political conflict" and fired their editor for a single editorial by a conservative senator. Do you support their firing him for that? Is that the higher standards you're defending here?

I already told you I didn't support it. That doesn't mean I'm going to plug my ears and yell "NY Slimes" every time they print a fact I don't happen to like. And the paper has a number of conservative columnists other than David French.


What do you think about the NYT having to print a retraction of their statement that Kirk was an antisemite? They said they relied on a "social media post" for their information instead of looking at a very easily accessible original source.

Do you think that reflects high journalistic standards? Do you think that was a "fact I don't happen to like"?

We're talking about journalism in a time where so many leftists on BlueSky were advocating the murder of more people that moderators had to do mass post deletions and pin their policy on advocacy of violence on their site. Do you think it was proper journalism for them to falsely claim Kirk was an antisemite, justifying his murder to many liberals in light of this atmosphere of potential violence?

I have no idea what BlueSky is. I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example.

I'm surprised you don't; you should have heard of it at some point if you read the front A section or editorial pages of the New York Times or Washington Post. It's liberal Twitter.

Publishing a retraction is the bare minimum of low bars for a news organization. It's not "many" news sources who should issue retractions when they are wrong; it's "everyone." I think calling calling a recently assassinated political figure an "antisemite" is a mistake that basic journalistic standards would have prevented from ever happening. You stated that you worry about retaliation from conservatives in this current atmosphere. Yet you absolve them for not doing the most basic homework of, wait for it... watching a short online video. They made an inflammatory false claim out of sheer laziness. That is a mistake no journalist should make, and it is clearly not a "sign of integrity." It doesn't matter if "everyone does it." It damages your credibility regardless.



Of course it damages their credibility. It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer.

Are we done?

Your statement has a significantly different meaning than your previous response.

This:

" I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example."

in no way means this:

"Of course it damages their credibility."

And

" It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer."

is a rhetorical statement that shows you missed this: " It doesn't matter if "everyone does it."" We're not talking about other news sources in this specific event. We are talking about the New York Times. This is a journalistic failure of a pretty large magnitude given our current situation and it was so preventable; you're failing to see it and that's fine. The current national mood is either inflamed or its not. They're either potentially pouring gasoline on that fire or they are not. If you think the latter part of both statements is the true case, then I can see why you would see this as less of a problem (despite, still, the sheer laziness of not watching a short online video before making the claim).

Whether we're done or not is up to you, you are free to stop replying any time. I'm just hanging out here for a while and will probably go back to bearly speaking at some point soon.

My statements are consistent. I would love to see the NYT do a better job. I'm not switching to Fox News for obvious reasons. What exactly then do you suggest? The last time I asked someone here to recommend an "objective" source, they said I should look into the Washington Times. So with all due respect, I'm warming up the popcorn for this one.

Munch away; I hope you enjoy your popcorn.

Washington Times has a conservative bias, but I don't think it's significantly worse than any other city newspaper. They got Hunter's laptop, Jussie Smollett's hoax, and the Russia Collusion hoax right when many other news organizations didn't until significantly later. Their reporting on the possibility of a lab leak in Wuhan as the source of Covid-19 is no longer the crazy claim other news organizations made it out to be before studies leaning toward it came out this year.
Their main journalistic malpractice that I am aware of was the Aaron Rich story, which had them on the hook for a lawsuit.

You want me to recommend something objective. An objective view when it comes to news is approached from viewing a multiplicity of perspectives and then making judgments between them. I recommend reading broadly across the political spectrum. I used to say the Associated Press articles and BBC (left-wing bias on some topics) as a sole answer, but then I think about the significant problems in their reporting on the Hamas war, like when the BBC defended at first, but then had to pull a Palestinian-produced propaganda documentary that was revealed to be connected to Hamas, a link that was hidden from the viewer. It was bad enough that The Guardian (far-left bias) reported:

"Failings in the making of a documentary on Gaza are a "dagger to the heart" of the BBC's claims of trustworthiness and impartiality, the corporation's chair [Samir Shah] has said, as he indicated that figures inside the corporation had fallen short in their handling of the film."

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2025/mar/04/gaza-how-to-survive-a-warzone-documentary-bbc-credibility-samir-shah

Or when the Associated Press falsely reported and later had to retract the claim that Israel bombed a hospital, or printing Hamas' inflated civilian casualty figures implying it was a fact, sometimes without specifying the source.

So I'm not going to give you a single go-to.

So at home, a variety of large city newspapers, especially the ones close to local major events (the national stories tend to be the same AP/Reuters in many cases. You might even get a syndicated NYT story, so be careful). Foreign news sources are a good check-up on one's perspective, including the BBC, Al-Jazeera, France 24, and others, as long as you understand the strong regional biases inherent in their reporting. The existence of Twitter, blogs, and other platforms have really expanded the possibilities and are worth searching through for experts if you have an interest in a particular area like the Ukrainian War, China-US relations, tariffs, or any other topic. I found some of these sources to be more knowledgeable and better informed than many journalists. I'm not going to make recommendations here; you can search for new information sources and make your own judgements on the reliability of what you find.

Treating the New York Times as a solid credible news source that doesn't need checking against other sources is a mistake. It no longer stands on its own. That is why George Bush Sr. stopped including it in his daily news sources. It's fine if you want to include it in a collection of news sources, but it no longer has the premier status of objectivity it used to have. I used to read it fairly regularly until the deterioration of its standards got significant enough that I didn't see the point in treating it any different than any other city newspaper.

Well...welcome to the club. Again, I don't regard any source as unbiased or worthy of standing alone. The peculiar animosity toward the NYT is a bit of a mystery, but so be it. I like many of your picks, especially the foreign ones.

I'm also very impressed that the AP managed to find a hospital that Israel hadn't bombed. If that's true, it's worthy of a headline in itself.

No mystery about it; the NYT is not anything special and people should stop treating it as anything other than a regular city newspaper. I mean, damn, just the bare minimum of watching a short video before you put out a story on the most explosive national topic since George Floyd...

Hospitals tend to get caught in the crossfire when you have an enemy that prioritizes the use of civilian shields, attempts a genocide, and then retreats into an urban civilian population to use the inevitable casualties as PR points. Not to mention, they used billions of dollars of foreign aid to build a military tunnel complex that included the hospitals and is so extensive that an explosion in one of them struck by penetrating ordnance collapsed several apartment buildings around it where the foundations had been so weakened by the tunnels. Again, no concern for the civilians. It clearly doesn't help that Hamas is determined to go down in a Gotterdammerung like Hitler's bunker. Why not just give back the hostages at this point? I mean, really? Has anyone in Hamas thought about how releasing the hostages might start to ease things up in the region? Do they care? I understand the Gazans are so fanatical in their hate that they dug up a 10 million dollar water pipe system the EU built for the Gazan civilians and converted it into rockets for Jewish civilian targets (and filmed themselves doing it), but at some point Jew-hatred is only going to take you so far.

What really made AP story worthy of a proper headline is that Hamas bombed their own hospital. But I guess when you think about what Hamas stands for, it's not really surprising.

Sooo, you've been trolling.

Well played, sir. You got me.

You can tell yourself that. Gazan society is so twisted that they thought it was favorable propaganda to film themselves committing unspeakable atrocities against Jews with Gazan men, women, and children, cheering it on and sharing it online so their Western supporters could cheer with them. There is a video out there of a young Jewish children being shot one after the other in a kibbutz. They thought it was a propaganda victory in the eyes of the world when they paraded a young Jewish woman to the cheers of the Gazan civilians with blood seeping through the crotch area of her pants. They filmed themselves doing acts that media/commercial websites have suppressed because of the depravity of the attacks. There is celebratory videos of the rapes and genital mutilations of girls. There are videos of Gazans looking specifically for children to murder. They targeted safe rooms since they knew civilians and children would be in them. Gazans filmed all this because they thought they were the good guys when they did these things. They were proud of what they did to Jewish children and they wanted to world to see it. They openly and ecstatically rejoiced in the violent torture and death of children, and we know that because they filmed themselves doing it so the supporters of Gaza could rejoice with them.

This was a planned mass murder of Jewish civilians. And you think it's funny.

"Well played, sir" indeed.

None of it is funny. Western media have suppressed a great deal of information on the killing of Palestinians as well, but of course someone with your media savvy already knows that. You choose not to acknowledge it, as you choose not to acknowledge Israel's deliberate targeting of civilians, hospitals, aid workers, etc.


You think discussing the gleeful murder of Jewish children is trolling. You think it's a joke. You can't face the level of depravity committed by the Gazans. They were so proud of these depravities they filmed them and Gazan society cheered them on.
You ignore Hamas using the civilian population as human shields, not out of expediency but planned ahead of time. You choose not to acknowledge that. You defend Hamas instead as victims of the October 2023 massacre.

You think pointing that out is trolling. You think it's funny.

Trolling is making absurd claims, for example, that Gaza's hospitals are being destroyed because they're "caught in the crossfire."

I think it's sad.

You are not fooling anybody with the claim that Hamas didn't turn a dense urban center into a warzone by committing atrocities in October 2023. You want to keep pushing the "It's all the Jews' fault" narrative.

How did Gaza's hospitals end up in a warzone? What is up with the military tunnel system connecting to the hospitals? Was it because of "the Jews?" How did the Gazans have the intelligence to hit specific civilian areas with such effectiveness? It's because Gazans worked in the same areas as Jews and brought the information back to Hamas beforehand. I see now that is "self-defense" against "Jews" in your eyes.

The absurd claim is thinking it's justified to go from a low-level conflict where society was functioning at least well enough that Gazans were working in Jewish areas (and collecting intelligence for Hamas' attack) to mass murder with torture/gang rape.

"Caught in the crossfire." What event do you think might have caused hospitals in a dense urban area comparable to Singapore to be "caught in the crossfire?" Do you think the October 2023 racial mass murders were worth it for your Gazan allies? Do you think they were the Jews' own fault?

Why did Egypt close their own border with Gaza when Hamas came to power?

I think defending the Hamas and Gazan civilians' mass rape and murder of Jews is not just sad, it's depraved.
NeuroticBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

Getting back on track. From a recent study entitled "Far-left versus Far-right Fatal Violence: An Empirical Assessment of the Prevalence of Ideologically Motivated Homicides in the United States."

Between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2020...there were 269 ideologically motivated homicides (an average of 8.7 incidents per year). Far-left homicide incidents accounted for 15.6% of these homicide events, and far-right homicides accounted for 84.4%.

Although both the far-left and far-right homicide events appear to occur in waves, the baseline for the number of far-right events is higher than the far-left's baseline.

With the exception of 2017 when far-left homicides out-numbered far-right homicides, the far-right has consistently been higher than the far-left.

When comparing the lethality of far-right ideologically motivated homicides to the far-left, the results are consistent with the findings mentioned above. The far-right continues to surpass the far-left in both frequency of incidents and deaths. Even with the exclusion of deaths from the Oklahoma City Bombing, deaths from far-right ideologically motivated homicides average 11.5 per year from 1990-2020, compared to only 2.5 deaths from the far-left for the same period.

I'm sure the sources for this bu11**** are impeccable, since our resident Communist would never use questionable sources to further his/her/xir's political ideology.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

There are differences of opinion on the right. Tom Cotton isn't conservative by my ideal definition, but he is part of the conservative discourse, broadly speaking.

To say the NYT isn't as bad as Fox News is hardly minimizing. You just picked an extremely low standard for comparison.


We can be pretty certain who David French voted for, he didn't make it a secret. That's not a conservative, "broadly speaking."

George Bush Sr. stated while he was still alive that standards at the NYT had fallen so low he saw no point in reading it anymore as an information source.
That was before the NYT had a "political conflict" and fired their editor for a single editorial by a conservative senator. Do you support their firing him for that? Is that the higher standards you're defending here?

I already told you I didn't support it. That doesn't mean I'm going to plug my ears and yell "NY Slimes" every time they print a fact I don't happen to like. And the paper has a number of conservative columnists other than David French.


What do you think about the NYT having to print a retraction of their statement that Kirk was an antisemite? They said they relied on a "social media post" for their information instead of looking at a very easily accessible original source.

Do you think that reflects high journalistic standards? Do you think that was a "fact I don't happen to like"?

We're talking about journalism in a time where so many leftists on BlueSky were advocating the murder of more people that moderators had to do mass post deletions and pin their policy on advocacy of violence on their site. Do you think it was proper journalism for them to falsely claim Kirk was an antisemite, justifying his murder to many liberals in light of this atmosphere of potential violence?

I have no idea what BlueSky is. I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example.

I'm surprised you don't; you should have heard of it at some point if you read the front A section or editorial pages of the New York Times or Washington Post. It's liberal Twitter.

Publishing a retraction is the bare minimum of low bars for a news organization. It's not "many" news sources who should issue retractions when they are wrong; it's "everyone." I think calling calling a recently assassinated political figure an "antisemite" is a mistake that basic journalistic standards would have prevented from ever happening. You stated that you worry about retaliation from conservatives in this current atmosphere. Yet you absolve them for not doing the most basic homework of, wait for it... watching a short online video. They made an inflammatory false claim out of sheer laziness. That is a mistake no journalist should make, and it is clearly not a "sign of integrity." It doesn't matter if "everyone does it." It damages your credibility regardless.



Of course it damages their credibility. It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer.

Are we done?

Your statement has a significantly different meaning than your previous response.

This:

" I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example."

in no way means this:

"Of course it damages their credibility."

And

" It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer."

is a rhetorical statement that shows you missed this: " It doesn't matter if "everyone does it."" We're not talking about other news sources in this specific event. We are talking about the New York Times. This is a journalistic failure of a pretty large magnitude given our current situation and it was so preventable; you're failing to see it and that's fine. The current national mood is either inflamed or its not. They're either potentially pouring gasoline on that fire or they are not. If you think the latter part of both statements is the true case, then I can see why you would see this as less of a problem (despite, still, the sheer laziness of not watching a short online video before making the claim).

Whether we're done or not is up to you, you are free to stop replying any time. I'm just hanging out here for a while and will probably go back to bearly speaking at some point soon.

My statements are consistent. I would love to see the NYT do a better job. I'm not switching to Fox News for obvious reasons. What exactly then do you suggest? The last time I asked someone here to recommend an "objective" source, they said I should look into the Washington Times. So with all due respect, I'm warming up the popcorn for this one.

Munch away; I hope you enjoy your popcorn.

Washington Times has a conservative bias, but I don't think it's significantly worse than any other city newspaper. They got Hunter's laptop, Jussie Smollett's hoax, and the Russia Collusion hoax right when many other news organizations didn't until significantly later. Their reporting on the possibility of a lab leak in Wuhan as the source of Covid-19 is no longer the crazy claim other news organizations made it out to be before studies leaning toward it came out this year.
Their main journalistic malpractice that I am aware of was the Aaron Rich story, which had them on the hook for a lawsuit.

You want me to recommend something objective. An objective view when it comes to news is approached from viewing a multiplicity of perspectives and then making judgments between them. I recommend reading broadly across the political spectrum. I used to say the Associated Press articles and BBC (left-wing bias on some topics) as a sole answer, but then I think about the significant problems in their reporting on the Hamas war, like when the BBC defended at first, but then had to pull a Palestinian-produced propaganda documentary that was revealed to be connected to Hamas, a link that was hidden from the viewer. It was bad enough that The Guardian (far-left bias) reported:

"Failings in the making of a documentary on Gaza are a "dagger to the heart" of the BBC's claims of trustworthiness and impartiality, the corporation's chair [Samir Shah] has said, as he indicated that figures inside the corporation had fallen short in their handling of the film."

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2025/mar/04/gaza-how-to-survive-a-warzone-documentary-bbc-credibility-samir-shah

Or when the Associated Press falsely reported and later had to retract the claim that Israel bombed a hospital, or printing Hamas' inflated civilian casualty figures implying it was a fact, sometimes without specifying the source.

So I'm not going to give you a single go-to.

So at home, a variety of large city newspapers, especially the ones close to local major events (the national stories tend to be the same AP/Reuters in many cases. You might even get a syndicated NYT story, so be careful). Foreign news sources are a good check-up on one's perspective, including the BBC, Al-Jazeera, France 24, and others, as long as you understand the strong regional biases inherent in their reporting. The existence of Twitter, blogs, and other platforms have really expanded the possibilities and are worth searching through for experts if you have an interest in a particular area like the Ukrainian War, China-US relations, tariffs, or any other topic. I found some of these sources to be more knowledgeable and better informed than many journalists. I'm not going to make recommendations here; you can search for new information sources and make your own judgements on the reliability of what you find.

Treating the New York Times as a solid credible news source that doesn't need checking against other sources is a mistake. It no longer stands on its own. That is why George Bush Sr. stopped including it in his daily news sources. It's fine if you want to include it in a collection of news sources, but it no longer has the premier status of objectivity it used to have. I used to read it fairly regularly until the deterioration of its standards got significant enough that I didn't see the point in treating it any different than any other city newspaper.

Well...welcome to the club. Again, I don't regard any source as unbiased or worthy of standing alone. The peculiar animosity toward the NYT is a bit of a mystery, but so be it. I like many of your picks, especially the foreign ones.

I'm also very impressed that the AP managed to find a hospital that Israel hadn't bombed. If that's true, it's worthy of a headline in itself.

No mystery about it; the NYT is not anything special and people should stop treating it as anything other than a regular city newspaper. I mean, damn, just the bare minimum of watching a short video before you put out a story on the most explosive national topic since George Floyd...

Hospitals tend to get caught in the crossfire when you have an enemy that prioritizes the use of civilian shields, attempts a genocide, and then retreats into an urban civilian population to use the inevitable casualties as PR points. Not to mention, they used billions of dollars of foreign aid to build a military tunnel complex that included the hospitals and is so extensive that an explosion in one of them struck by penetrating ordnance collapsed several apartment buildings around it where the foundations had been so weakened by the tunnels. Again, no concern for the civilians. It clearly doesn't help that Hamas is determined to go down in a Gotterdammerung like Hitler's bunker. Why not just give back the hostages at this point? I mean, really? Has anyone in Hamas thought about how releasing the hostages might start to ease things up in the region? Do they care? I understand the Gazans are so fanatical in their hate that they dug up a 10 million dollar water pipe system the EU built for the Gazan civilians and converted it into rockets for Jewish civilian targets (and filmed themselves doing it), but at some point Jew-hatred is only going to take you so far.

What really made AP story worthy of a proper headline is that Hamas bombed their own hospital. But I guess when you think about what Hamas stands for, it's not really surprising.

Sooo, you've been trolling.

Well played, sir. You got me.

You can tell yourself that. Gazan society is so twisted that they thought it was favorable propaganda to film themselves committing unspeakable atrocities against Jews with Gazan men, women, and children, cheering it on and sharing it online so their Western supporters could cheer with them. There is a video out there of a young Jewish children being shot one after the other in a kibbutz. They thought it was a propaganda victory in the eyes of the world when they paraded a young Jewish woman to the cheers of the Gazan civilians with blood seeping through the crotch area of her pants. They filmed themselves doing acts that media/commercial websites have suppressed because of the depravity of the attacks. There is celebratory videos of the rapes and genital mutilations of girls. There are videos of Gazans looking specifically for children to murder. They targeted safe rooms since they knew civilians and children would be in them. Gazans filmed all this because they thought they were the good guys when they did these things. They were proud of what they did to Jewish children and they wanted to world to see it. They openly and ecstatically rejoiced in the violent torture and death of children, and we know that because they filmed themselves doing it so the supporters of Gaza could rejoice with them.

This was a planned mass murder of Jewish civilians. And you think it's funny.

"Well played, sir" indeed.

None of it is funny. Western media have suppressed a great deal of information on the killing of Palestinians as well, but of course someone with your media savvy already knows that. You choose not to acknowledge it, as you choose not to acknowledge Israel's deliberate targeting of civilians, hospitals, aid workers, etc.


You think discussing the gleeful murder of Jewish children is trolling. You think it's a joke. You can't face the level of depravity committed by the Gazans. They were so proud of these depravities they filmed them and Gazan society cheered them on.
You ignore Hamas using the civilian population as human shields, not out of expediency but planned ahead of time. You choose not to acknowledge that. You defend Hamas instead as victims of the October 2023 massacre.

You think pointing that out is trolling. You think it's funny.

Trolling is making absurd claims, for example, that Gaza's hospitals are being destroyed because they're "caught in the crossfire."

I think it's sad.

You are not fooling anybody with the claim that Hamas didn't turn a dense urban center into a warzone by committing atrocities in October 2023. You want to keep pushing the "It's all the Jews' fault" narrative.

How did Gaza's hospitals end up in a warzone? What is up with the military tunnel system connecting to the hospitals? Was it because of "the Jews?" How did the Gazans have the intelligence to hit specific civilian areas with such effectiveness? It's because Gazans worked in the same areas as Jews and brought the information back to Hamas beforehand. I see now that is "self-defense" against "Jews" in your eyes.

The absurd claim is thinking it's justified to go from a low-level conflict where society was functioning at least well enough that Gazans were working in Jewish areas (and collecting intelligence for Hamas' attack) to mass murder with torture/gang rape.

"Caught in the crossfire." What event do you think might have caused hospitals in a dense urban area comparable to Singapore to be "caught in the crossfire?" Do you think the October 2023 racial mass murders were worth it for your Gazan allies? Do you think they were the Jews' own fault?

Why did Egypt close their own border with Gaza when Hamas came to power?

I think defending the Hamas and Gazan civilians' mass rape and murder of Jews is not just sad, it's depraved.

Wow, I knew there were some lunatics on this board, but you are quickly setting yourself apart from the crowd.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

Getting back on track. From a recent study entitled "Far-left versus Far-right Fatal Violence: An Empirical Assessment of the Prevalence of Ideologically Motivated Homicides in the United States."

Between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2020...there were 269 ideologically motivated homicides (an average of 8.7 incidents per year). Far-left homicide incidents accounted for 15.6% of these homicide events, and far-right homicides accounted for 84.4%.

Although both the far-left and far-right homicide events appear to occur in waves, the baseline for the number of far-right events is higher than the far-left's baseline.

With the exception of 2017 when far-left homicides out-numbered far-right homicides, the far-right has consistently been higher than the far-left.

When comparing the lethality of far-right ideologically motivated homicides to the far-left, the results are consistent with the findings mentioned above. The far-right continues to surpass the far-left in both frequency of incidents and deaths. Even with the exclusion of deaths from the Oklahoma City Bombing, deaths from far-right ideologically motivated homicides average 11.5 per year from 1990-2020, compared to only 2.5 deaths from the far-left for the same period.

I'm sure the sources for this bu11**** are impeccable, since our resident Communist would never use questionable sources to further his/her/xir's political ideology.

It's all taken from the US Extremist Crime Database (ECDB), which was funded by the DHS as a resource for law enforcement and policy makers.
NeuroticBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

Getting back on track. From a recent study entitled "Far-left versus Far-right Fatal Violence: An Empirical Assessment of the Prevalence of Ideologically Motivated Homicides in the United States."

Between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2020...there were 269 ideologically motivated homicides (an average of 8.7 incidents per year). Far-left homicide incidents accounted for 15.6% of these homicide events, and far-right homicides accounted for 84.4%.

Although both the far-left and far-right homicide events appear to occur in waves, the baseline for the number of far-right events is higher than the far-left's baseline.

With the exception of 2017 when far-left homicides out-numbered far-right homicides, the far-right has consistently been higher than the far-left.

When comparing the lethality of far-right ideologically motivated homicides to the far-left, the results are consistent with the findings mentioned above. The far-right continues to surpass the far-left in both frequency of incidents and deaths. Even with the exclusion of deaths from the Oklahoma City Bombing, deaths from far-right ideologically motivated homicides average 11.5 per year from 1990-2020, compared to only 2.5 deaths from the far-left for the same period.

I'm sure the sources for this bu11**** are impeccable, since our resident Communist would never use questionable sources to further his/her/xir's political ideology.

It's all taken from the US Extremist Crime Database (ECDB), which was funded by the DHS as a resource for law enforcement and policy makers.

Provided by an NGO funded by SPLC. But thanks for playing.
NeuroticBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Well, this is certainly a pot / kettle reply.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

Getting back on track. From a recent study entitled "Far-left versus Far-right Fatal Violence: An Empirical Assessment of the Prevalence of Ideologically Motivated Homicides in the United States."

Between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2020...there were 269 ideologically motivated homicides (an average of 8.7 incidents per year). Far-left homicide incidents accounted for 15.6% of these homicide events, and far-right homicides accounted for 84.4%.

Although both the far-left and far-right homicide events appear to occur in waves, the baseline for the number of far-right events is higher than the far-left's baseline.

With the exception of 2017 when far-left homicides out-numbered far-right homicides, the far-right has consistently been higher than the far-left.

When comparing the lethality of far-right ideologically motivated homicides to the far-left, the results are consistent with the findings mentioned above. The far-right continues to surpass the far-left in both frequency of incidents and deaths. Even with the exclusion of deaths from the Oklahoma City Bombing, deaths from far-right ideologically motivated homicides average 11.5 per year from 1990-2020, compared to only 2.5 deaths from the far-left for the same period.

I'm sure the sources for this bu11**** are impeccable, since our resident Communist would never use questionable sources to further his/her/xir's political ideology.

It's all taken from the US Extremist Crime Database (ECDB), which was funded by the DHS as a resource for law enforcement and policy makers.

Provided by an NGO funded by SPLC.

Says who?
BearlySpeaking
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

There are differences of opinion on the right. Tom Cotton isn't conservative by my ideal definition, but he is part of the conservative discourse, broadly speaking.

To say the NYT isn't as bad as Fox News is hardly minimizing. You just picked an extremely low standard for comparison.


We can be pretty certain who David French voted for, he didn't make it a secret. That's not a conservative, "broadly speaking."

George Bush Sr. stated while he was still alive that standards at the NYT had fallen so low he saw no point in reading it anymore as an information source.
That was before the NYT had a "political conflict" and fired their editor for a single editorial by a conservative senator. Do you support their firing him for that? Is that the higher standards you're defending here?

I already told you I didn't support it. That doesn't mean I'm going to plug my ears and yell "NY Slimes" every time they print a fact I don't happen to like. And the paper has a number of conservative columnists other than David French.


What do you think about the NYT having to print a retraction of their statement that Kirk was an antisemite? They said they relied on a "social media post" for their information instead of looking at a very easily accessible original source.

Do you think that reflects high journalistic standards? Do you think that was a "fact I don't happen to like"?

We're talking about journalism in a time where so many leftists on BlueSky were advocating the murder of more people that moderators had to do mass post deletions and pin their policy on advocacy of violence on their site. Do you think it was proper journalism for them to falsely claim Kirk was an antisemite, justifying his murder to many liberals in light of this atmosphere of potential violence?

I have no idea what BlueSky is. I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example.

I'm surprised you don't; you should have heard of it at some point if you read the front A section or editorial pages of the New York Times or Washington Post. It's liberal Twitter.

Publishing a retraction is the bare minimum of low bars for a news organization. It's not "many" news sources who should issue retractions when they are wrong; it's "everyone." I think calling calling a recently assassinated political figure an "antisemite" is a mistake that basic journalistic standards would have prevented from ever happening. You stated that you worry about retaliation from conservatives in this current atmosphere. Yet you absolve them for not doing the most basic homework of, wait for it... watching a short online video. They made an inflammatory false claim out of sheer laziness. That is a mistake no journalist should make, and it is clearly not a "sign of integrity." It doesn't matter if "everyone does it." It damages your credibility regardless.



Of course it damages their credibility. It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer.

Are we done?

Your statement has a significantly different meaning than your previous response.

This:

" I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example."

in no way means this:

"Of course it damages their credibility."

And

" It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer."

is a rhetorical statement that shows you missed this: " It doesn't matter if "everyone does it."" We're not talking about other news sources in this specific event. We are talking about the New York Times. This is a journalistic failure of a pretty large magnitude given our current situation and it was so preventable; you're failing to see it and that's fine. The current national mood is either inflamed or its not. They're either potentially pouring gasoline on that fire or they are not. If you think the latter part of both statements is the true case, then I can see why you would see this as less of a problem (despite, still, the sheer laziness of not watching a short online video before making the claim).

Whether we're done or not is up to you, you are free to stop replying any time. I'm just hanging out here for a while and will probably go back to bearly speaking at some point soon.

My statements are consistent. I would love to see the NYT do a better job. I'm not switching to Fox News for obvious reasons. What exactly then do you suggest? The last time I asked someone here to recommend an "objective" source, they said I should look into the Washington Times. So with all due respect, I'm warming up the popcorn for this one.

Munch away; I hope you enjoy your popcorn.

Washington Times has a conservative bias, but I don't think it's significantly worse than any other city newspaper. They got Hunter's laptop, Jussie Smollett's hoax, and the Russia Collusion hoax right when many other news organizations didn't until significantly later. Their reporting on the possibility of a lab leak in Wuhan as the source of Covid-19 is no longer the crazy claim other news organizations made it out to be before studies leaning toward it came out this year.
Their main journalistic malpractice that I am aware of was the Aaron Rich story, which had them on the hook for a lawsuit.

You want me to recommend something objective. An objective view when it comes to news is approached from viewing a multiplicity of perspectives and then making judgments between them. I recommend reading broadly across the political spectrum. I used to say the Associated Press articles and BBC (left-wing bias on some topics) as a sole answer, but then I think about the significant problems in their reporting on the Hamas war, like when the BBC defended at first, but then had to pull a Palestinian-produced propaganda documentary that was revealed to be connected to Hamas, a link that was hidden from the viewer. It was bad enough that The Guardian (far-left bias) reported:

"Failings in the making of a documentary on Gaza are a "dagger to the heart" of the BBC's claims of trustworthiness and impartiality, the corporation's chair [Samir Shah] has said, as he indicated that figures inside the corporation had fallen short in their handling of the film."

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2025/mar/04/gaza-how-to-survive-a-warzone-documentary-bbc-credibility-samir-shah

Or when the Associated Press falsely reported and later had to retract the claim that Israel bombed a hospital, or printing Hamas' inflated civilian casualty figures implying it was a fact, sometimes without specifying the source.

So I'm not going to give you a single go-to.

So at home, a variety of large city newspapers, especially the ones close to local major events (the national stories tend to be the same AP/Reuters in many cases. You might even get a syndicated NYT story, so be careful). Foreign news sources are a good check-up on one's perspective, including the BBC, Al-Jazeera, France 24, and others, as long as you understand the strong regional biases inherent in their reporting. The existence of Twitter, blogs, and other platforms have really expanded the possibilities and are worth searching through for experts if you have an interest in a particular area like the Ukrainian War, China-US relations, tariffs, or any other topic. I found some of these sources to be more knowledgeable and better informed than many journalists. I'm not going to make recommendations here; you can search for new information sources and make your own judgements on the reliability of what you find.

Treating the New York Times as a solid credible news source that doesn't need checking against other sources is a mistake. It no longer stands on its own. That is why George Bush Sr. stopped including it in his daily news sources. It's fine if you want to include it in a collection of news sources, but it no longer has the premier status of objectivity it used to have. I used to read it fairly regularly until the deterioration of its standards got significant enough that I didn't see the point in treating it any different than any other city newspaper.

Well...welcome to the club. Again, I don't regard any source as unbiased or worthy of standing alone. The peculiar animosity toward the NYT is a bit of a mystery, but so be it. I like many of your picks, especially the foreign ones.

I'm also very impressed that the AP managed to find a hospital that Israel hadn't bombed. If that's true, it's worthy of a headline in itself.

No mystery about it; the NYT is not anything special and people should stop treating it as anything other than a regular city newspaper. I mean, damn, just the bare minimum of watching a short video before you put out a story on the most explosive national topic since George Floyd...

Hospitals tend to get caught in the crossfire when you have an enemy that prioritizes the use of civilian shields, attempts a genocide, and then retreats into an urban civilian population to use the inevitable casualties as PR points. Not to mention, they used billions of dollars of foreign aid to build a military tunnel complex that included the hospitals and is so extensive that an explosion in one of them struck by penetrating ordnance collapsed several apartment buildings around it where the foundations had been so weakened by the tunnels. Again, no concern for the civilians. It clearly doesn't help that Hamas is determined to go down in a Gotterdammerung like Hitler's bunker. Why not just give back the hostages at this point? I mean, really? Has anyone in Hamas thought about how releasing the hostages might start to ease things up in the region? Do they care? I understand the Gazans are so fanatical in their hate that they dug up a 10 million dollar water pipe system the EU built for the Gazan civilians and converted it into rockets for Jewish civilian targets (and filmed themselves doing it), but at some point Jew-hatred is only going to take you so far.

What really made AP story worthy of a proper headline is that Hamas bombed their own hospital. But I guess when you think about what Hamas stands for, it's not really surprising.

Sooo, you've been trolling.

Well played, sir. You got me.

You can tell yourself that. Gazan society is so twisted that they thought it was favorable propaganda to film themselves committing unspeakable atrocities against Jews with Gazan men, women, and children, cheering it on and sharing it online so their Western supporters could cheer with them. There is a video out there of a young Jewish children being shot one after the other in a kibbutz. They thought it was a propaganda victory in the eyes of the world when they paraded a young Jewish woman to the cheers of the Gazan civilians with blood seeping through the crotch area of her pants. They filmed themselves doing acts that media/commercial websites have suppressed because of the depravity of the attacks. There is celebratory videos of the rapes and genital mutilations of girls. There are videos of Gazans looking specifically for children to murder. They targeted safe rooms since they knew civilians and children would be in them. Gazans filmed all this because they thought they were the good guys when they did these things. They were proud of what they did to Jewish children and they wanted to world to see it. They openly and ecstatically rejoiced in the violent torture and death of children, and we know that because they filmed themselves doing it so the supporters of Gaza could rejoice with them.

This was a planned mass murder of Jewish civilians. And you think it's funny.

"Well played, sir" indeed.

None of it is funny. Western media have suppressed a great deal of information on the killing of Palestinians as well, but of course someone with your media savvy already knows that. You choose not to acknowledge it, as you choose not to acknowledge Israel's deliberate targeting of civilians, hospitals, aid workers, etc.


You think discussing the gleeful murder of Jewish children is trolling. You think it's a joke. You can't face the level of depravity committed by the Gazans. They were so proud of these depravities they filmed them and Gazan society cheered them on.
You ignore Hamas using the civilian population as human shields, not out of expediency but planned ahead of time. You choose not to acknowledge that. You defend Hamas instead as victims of the October 2023 massacre.

You think pointing that out is trolling. You think it's funny.

Trolling is making absurd claims, for example, that Gaza's hospitals are being destroyed because they're "caught in the crossfire."

I think it's sad.

You are not fooling anybody with the claim that Hamas didn't turn a dense urban center into a warzone by committing atrocities in October 2023. You want to keep pushing the "It's all the Jews' fault" narrative.

How did Gaza's hospitals end up in a warzone? What is up with the military tunnel system connecting to the hospitals? Was it because of "the Jews?" How did the Gazans have the intelligence to hit specific civilian areas with such effectiveness? It's because Gazans worked in the same areas as Jews and brought the information back to Hamas beforehand. I see now that is "self-defense" against "Jews" in your eyes.

The absurd claim is thinking it's justified to go from a low-level conflict where society was functioning at least well enough that Gazans were working in Jewish areas (and collecting intelligence for Hamas' attack) to mass murder with torture/gang rape.

"Caught in the crossfire." What event do you think might have caused hospitals in a dense urban area comparable to Singapore to be "caught in the crossfire?" Do you think the October 2023 racial mass murders were worth it for your Gazan allies? Do you think they were the Jews' own fault?

Why did Egypt close their own border with Gaza when Hamas came to power?

I think defending the Hamas and Gazan civilians' mass rape and murder of Jews is not just sad, it's depraved.

Wow, I knew there were some lunatics on this board, but you are quickly setting yourself apart from the crowd.


What event do you think caused the Israelis to invade Gaza? I'm curious because I noticed mentioning the origin of the current round of violence seems to have set you off. You think I am not just a lunatic for mentioning what happened in October 7, 2023, but that it sets me apart. What is it about mentioning the origin of this current conflict leads you to believe that it is "setting [oneself] apart from the crowd" in being a "lunatic?"

Do you think there was an actual event in southern Israel on October 7, 2023 that led to the invasion of Gaza or do you think it was an attack by Israel out of the blue for no reason? I'm now genuinely curious about what you think happened, if anything, on October 7, 2023 in southern Israel.
Wangchung
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

BearlySpeaking said:

Sam Lowry said:

There are differences of opinion on the right. Tom Cotton isn't conservative by my ideal definition, but he is part of the conservative discourse, broadly speaking.

To say the NYT isn't as bad as Fox News is hardly minimizing. You just picked an extremely low standard for comparison.


We can be pretty certain who David French voted for, he didn't make it a secret. That's not a conservative, "broadly speaking."

George Bush Sr. stated while he was still alive that standards at the NYT had fallen so low he saw no point in reading it anymore as an information source.
That was before the NYT had a "political conflict" and fired their editor for a single editorial by a conservative senator. Do you support their firing him for that? Is that the higher standards you're defending here?

I already told you I didn't support it. That doesn't mean I'm going to plug my ears and yell "NY Slimes" every time they print a fact I don't happen to like. And the paper has a number of conservative columnists other than David French.


What do you think about the NYT having to print a retraction of their statement that Kirk was an antisemite? They said they relied on a "social media post" for their information instead of looking at a very easily accessible original source.

Do you think that reflects high journalistic standards? Do you think that was a "fact I don't happen to like"?

We're talking about journalism in a time where so many leftists on BlueSky were advocating the murder of more people that moderators had to do mass post deletions and pin their policy on advocacy of violence on their site. Do you think it was proper journalism for them to falsely claim Kirk was an antisemite, justifying his murder to many liberals in light of this atmosphere of potential violence?

I have no idea what BlueSky is. I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example.

I'm surprised you don't; you should have heard of it at some point if you read the front A section or editorial pages of the New York Times or Washington Post. It's liberal Twitter.

Publishing a retraction is the bare minimum of low bars for a news organization. It's not "many" news sources who should issue retractions when they are wrong; it's "everyone." I think calling calling a recently assassinated political figure an "antisemite" is a mistake that basic journalistic standards would have prevented from ever happening. You stated that you worry about retaliation from conservatives in this current atmosphere. Yet you absolve them for not doing the most basic homework of, wait for it... watching a short online video. They made an inflammatory false claim out of sheer laziness. That is a mistake no journalist should make, and it is clearly not a "sign of integrity." It doesn't matter if "everyone does it." It damages your credibility regardless.



Of course it damages their credibility. It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer.

Are we done?

Your statement has a significantly different meaning than your previous response.

This:

" I think issuing retractions when appropriate is a sign of integrity, yes. When it comes to false charges of antisemitism, there are many who should follow the NYT's example."

in no way means this:

"Of course it damages their credibility."

And

" It just doesn't put it near the abysmal level of some of the sources you seem to prefer."

is a rhetorical statement that shows you missed this: " It doesn't matter if "everyone does it."" We're not talking about other news sources in this specific event. We are talking about the New York Times. This is a journalistic failure of a pretty large magnitude given our current situation and it was so preventable; you're failing to see it and that's fine. The current national mood is either inflamed or its not. They're either potentially pouring gasoline on that fire or they are not. If you think the latter part of both statements is the true case, then I can see why you would see this as less of a problem (despite, still, the sheer laziness of not watching a short online video before making the claim).

Whether we're done or not is up to you, you are free to stop replying any time. I'm just hanging out here for a while and will probably go back to bearly speaking at some point soon.

My statements are consistent. I would love to see the NYT do a better job. I'm not switching to Fox News for obvious reasons. What exactly then do you suggest? The last time I asked someone here to recommend an "objective" source, they said I should look into the Washington Times. So with all due respect, I'm warming up the popcorn for this one.

Munch away; I hope you enjoy your popcorn.

Washington Times has a conservative bias, but I don't think it's significantly worse than any other city newspaper. They got Hunter's laptop, Jussie Smollett's hoax, and the Russia Collusion hoax right when many other news organizations didn't until significantly later. Their reporting on the possibility of a lab leak in Wuhan as the source of Covid-19 is no longer the crazy claim other news organizations made it out to be before studies leaning toward it came out this year.
Their main journalistic malpractice that I am aware of was the Aaron Rich story, which had them on the hook for a lawsuit.

You want me to recommend something objective. An objective view when it comes to news is approached from viewing a multiplicity of perspectives and then making judgments between them. I recommend reading broadly across the political spectrum. I used to say the Associated Press articles and BBC (left-wing bias on some topics) as a sole answer, but then I think about the significant problems in their reporting on the Hamas war, like when the BBC defended at first, but then had to pull a Palestinian-produced propaganda documentary that was revealed to be connected to Hamas, a link that was hidden from the viewer. It was bad enough that The Guardian (far-left bias) reported:

"Failings in the making of a documentary on Gaza are a "dagger to the heart" of the BBC's claims of trustworthiness and impartiality, the corporation's chair [Samir Shah] has said, as he indicated that figures inside the corporation had fallen short in their handling of the film."

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2025/mar/04/gaza-how-to-survive-a-warzone-documentary-bbc-credibility-samir-shah

Or when the Associated Press falsely reported and later had to retract the claim that Israel bombed a hospital, or printing Hamas' inflated civilian casualty figures implying it was a fact, sometimes without specifying the source.

So I'm not going to give you a single go-to.

So at home, a variety of large city newspapers, especially the ones close to local major events (the national stories tend to be the same AP/Reuters in many cases. You might even get a syndicated NYT story, so be careful). Foreign news sources are a good check-up on one's perspective, including the BBC, Al-Jazeera, France 24, and others, as long as you understand the strong regional biases inherent in their reporting. The existence of Twitter, blogs, and other platforms have really expanded the possibilities and are worth searching through for experts if you have an interest in a particular area like the Ukrainian War, China-US relations, tariffs, or any other topic. I found some of these sources to be more knowledgeable and better informed than many journalists. I'm not going to make recommendations here; you can search for new information sources and make your own judgements on the reliability of what you find.

Treating the New York Times as a solid credible news source that doesn't need checking against other sources is a mistake. It no longer stands on its own. That is why George Bush Sr. stopped including it in his daily news sources. It's fine if you want to include it in a collection of news sources, but it no longer has the premier status of objectivity it used to have. I used to read it fairly regularly until the deterioration of its standards got significant enough that I didn't see the point in treating it any different than any other city newspaper.

Well...welcome to the club. Again, I don't regard any source as unbiased or worthy of standing alone. The peculiar animosity toward the NYT is a bit of a mystery, but so be it. I like many of your picks, especially the foreign ones.

I'm also very impressed that the AP managed to find a hospital that Israel hadn't bombed. If that's true, it's worthy of a headline in itself.

No mystery about it; the NYT is not anything special and people should stop treating it as anything other than a regular city newspaper. I mean, damn, just the bare minimum of watching a short video before you put out a story on the most explosive national topic since George Floyd...

Hospitals tend to get caught in the crossfire when you have an enemy that prioritizes the use of civilian shields, attempts a genocide, and then retreats into an urban civilian population to use the inevitable casualties as PR points. Not to mention, they used billions of dollars of foreign aid to build a military tunnel complex that included the hospitals and is so extensive that an explosion in one of them struck by penetrating ordnance collapsed several apartment buildings around it where the foundations had been so weakened by the tunnels. Again, no concern for the civilians. It clearly doesn't help that Hamas is determined to go down in a Gotterdammerung like Hitler's bunker. Why not just give back the hostages at this point? I mean, really? Has anyone in Hamas thought about how releasing the hostages might start to ease things up in the region? Do they care? I understand the Gazans are so fanatical in their hate that they dug up a 10 million dollar water pipe system the EU built for the Gazan civilians and converted it into rockets for Jewish civilian targets (and filmed themselves doing it), but at some point Jew-hatred is only going to take you so far.

What really made AP story worthy of a proper headline is that Hamas bombed their own hospital. But I guess when you think about what Hamas stands for, it's not really surprising.

Sooo, you've been trolling.

Well played, sir. You got me.

You can tell yourself that. Gazan society is so twisted that they thought it was favorable propaganda to film themselves committing unspeakable atrocities against Jews with Gazan men, women, and children, cheering it on and sharing it online so their Western supporters could cheer with them. There is a video out there of a young Jewish children being shot one after the other in a kibbutz. They thought it was a propaganda victory in the eyes of the world when they paraded a young Jewish woman to the cheers of the Gazan civilians with blood seeping through the crotch area of her pants. They filmed themselves doing acts that media/commercial websites have suppressed because of the depravity of the attacks. There is celebratory videos of the rapes and genital mutilations of girls. There are videos of Gazans looking specifically for children to murder. They targeted safe rooms since they knew civilians and children would be in them. Gazans filmed all this because they thought they were the good guys when they did these things. They were proud of what they did to Jewish children and they wanted to world to see it. They openly and ecstatically rejoiced in the violent torture and death of children, and we know that because they filmed themselves doing it so the supporters of Gaza could rejoice with them.

This was a planned mass murder of Jewish civilians. And you think it's funny.

"Well played, sir" indeed.

None of it is funny. Western media have suppressed a great deal of information on the killing of Palestinians as well, but of course someone with your media savvy already knows that. You choose not to acknowledge it, as you choose not to acknowledge Israel's deliberate targeting of civilians, hospitals, aid workers, etc.


You think discussing the gleeful murder of Jewish children is trolling. You think it's a joke. You can't face the level of depravity committed by the Gazans. They were so proud of these depravities they filmed them and Gazan society cheered them on.
You ignore Hamas using the civilian population as human shields, not out of expediency but planned ahead of time. You choose not to acknowledge that. You defend Hamas instead as victims of the October 2023 massacre.

You think pointing that out is trolling. You think it's funny.

Trolling is making absurd claims, for example, that Gaza's hospitals are being destroyed because they're "caught in the crossfire."

I think it's sad.

You are not fooling anybody with the claim that Hamas didn't turn a dense urban center into a warzone by committing atrocities in October 2023. You want to keep pushing the "It's all the Jews' fault" narrative.

How did Gaza's hospitals end up in a warzone? What is up with the military tunnel system connecting to the hospitals? Was it because of "the Jews?" How did the Gazans have the intelligence to hit specific civilian areas with such effectiveness? It's because Gazans worked in the same areas as Jews and brought the information back to Hamas beforehand. I see now that is "self-defense" against "Jews" in your eyes.

The absurd claim is thinking it's justified to go from a low-level conflict where society was functioning at least well enough that Gazans were working in Jewish areas (and collecting intelligence for Hamas' attack) to mass murder with torture/gang rape.

"Caught in the crossfire." What event do you think might have caused hospitals in a dense urban area comparable to Singapore to be "caught in the crossfire?" Do you think the October 2023 racial mass murders were worth it for your Gazan allies? Do you think they were the Jews' own fault?

Why did Egypt close their own border with Gaza when Hamas came to power?

I think defending the Hamas and Gazan civilians' mass rape and murder of Jews is not just sad, it's depraved.

Wow, I knew there were some lunatics on this board, but you are quickly setting yourself apart from the crowd.


What event do you think caused the Israelis to invade Gaza? I'm curious because I noticed mentioning the origin of the current round of violence seems to have set you off. You think I am not just a lunatic for mentioning what happened in October 7, 2023, but that it sets me apart. What is it about mentioning the origin of this current conflict leads you to believe that it is "setting [oneself] apart from the crowd" in being a "lunatic?"

Do you think there was an actual event in southern Israel on October 7, 3023 that led to the invasion of Gaza or do you think it was an attack by Israel out of the blue for no reason? I'm now genuinely curious about what you think happened, if anything, on October 7, 2023 in southern Israel.
Some of these idiots will claim Israel knew about the attack and allowed it to happen just so they could genocide. Some of these people are really, really stupid.
Our vibrations were getting nasty. But why? I was puzzled, frustrated... Had we deteriorated to the level of dumb beasts?

Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I'd say it has as much to do with 10/7 as the Iraq war had to do with 9/11, but that would be overly charitable. The goal of a greater Israel goes back longer than that.
The_barBEARian
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Of course the crazy old boomers somehow manage to derail this thread into who can lick Israel's boots the hardest....



Meanwhile Jewish organizations are openly plotting with the speaker of the house against conservative American First candidates in the halls of congress simply bcs we dont want to fight or pay for Israel's wars. This country is broke and Israel should be paying us back the hundreds of billions of dollars they have received from US tax payers.
BearlySpeaking
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

I'd say it has as much to do with 10/7 as the Iraq war had to do with 9/11, but that would be overly charitable. The goal of a greater Israel goes back longer than that.


Am I understanding you correctly that you think the invasion of Gaza has nothing to do with an event in southern Israel on 10/7/23?

What do you think led to the invasion of Gaza? I'm all ears and ready to go down this rabbit hole with you.
Realitybites
How long do you want to ignore this user?
To try and get this thread back on topic, has Baylor acted yet?

Any other schools besides Texas Tech, Texas State, and Auburn?
BaylorFTW
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Realitybites said:

To try and get this thread back on topic, has Baylor acted yet?

Any other schools besides Texas Tech, Texas State, and Auburn?

I am not aware of any official statements by Baylor this week. Made a couple of calls this week to the Dean of Education but she has yet to return either call. Will be following up again tomorrow now that I am back in Texas.
Realitybites
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Looks like Clemson has stepped up to the plate as well.

"Clemson fires employee for Kirk posts. Two more removed from teaching duties

Read more at: https://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/article312116755.html#storylink=cpy
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

I'd say it has as much to do with 10/7 as the Iraq war had to do with 9/11, but that would be overly charitable. The goal of a greater Israel goes back longer than that.


I preferred Col. Klink. He at least was funny. Your act is simply repulsive to men of decency.
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
Method Man
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Realitybites said:

Looks like Clemson has stepped up to the plate as well.

"Clemson fires employee for Kirk posts. Two more removed from teaching duties

Read more at: https://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/article312116755.html#storylink=cpy

All hail our Lord and Savior Charlie Kirk.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

Getting back on track. From a recent study entitled "Far-left versus Far-right Fatal Violence: An Empirical Assessment of the Prevalence of Ideologically Motivated Homicides in the United States."

Between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2020...there were 269 ideologically motivated homicides (an average of 8.7 incidents per year). Far-left homicide incidents accounted for 15.6% of these homicide events, and far-right homicides accounted for 84.4%.

Although both the far-left and far-right homicide events appear to occur in waves, the baseline for the number of far-right events is higher than the far-left's baseline.

With the exception of 2017 when far-left homicides out-numbered far-right homicides, the far-right has consistently been higher than the far-left.

When comparing the lethality of far-right ideologically motivated homicides to the far-left, the results are consistent with the findings mentioned above. The far-right continues to surpass the far-left in both frequency of incidents and deaths. Even with the exclusion of deaths from the Oklahoma City Bombing, deaths from far-right ideologically motivated homicides average 11.5 per year from 1990-2020, compared to only 2.5 deaths from the far-left for the same period.

I'm sure the sources for this bu11**** are impeccable, since our resident Communist would never use questionable sources to further his/her/xir's political ideology.

It's all taken from the US Extremist Crime Database (ECDB), which was funded by the DHS as a resource for law enforcement and policy makers.

Provided by an NGO funded by SPLC. But thanks for playing.


Well at least the SPLC is doing something other than buying its rich attorney founders more Beach mansions on 30-A or ripping off the mothers of murder victims.

[….this widow who lost her son in a lynching and the SPLC represented her against the Klan. Now, the interesting thing is the Klan members had already been convicted of the murder. The SPLC was representing her to get restitution, and so eventually they sued the KKK and the KKK group didn't put up much of a fight. They didn't have a lot of money, they didn't have a lot of lawyers, so they lost. And Morris Dees gets this million-dollar judgment against them.

The interesting thing about this case is Morris Dees gets a million-dollar settlement. I think it was like $6 million that this group had to give. They don't have it. What happens is this settlement goes to the bereaved widow. Now, the organization barely has a penny to its name. They had a piece of property that they were required to sell and give all the money to the widow. That was about 50 grand. The widow gets 50 grand and the SPLC gets this multimillion-dollar judgment so they can go to their donors and say, "Hey, look, we got a million dollars from the Klan. Give us money." The SPLC rakes in millions of dollars, but that 50 grand that the widow got, she pays it back to the SPLC, which had given her a loan for a house.

This woman, who's at the center of the case, who they got the multimillion-dollar judgment for, she gets 50 grand. She gives it to the SPLC. She essentially doesn't make anything. The SPLC goes to its donors and rakes in millions of dollars, and yet the story gets worse because she wants to make a movie about the case. But Morris Dees also wants to make a movie about the case. So Morris Dees gets the movie contract and she gets shunted to the side. So this woman, who actually lost her son in this case, has essentially come out without any more money after the SPLC represented her, and she hasn't been able to get the movie deal and tell her story the way that she wanted to.]

https://www.heritage.org/progressivism/heritage-explains/what-went-wrong-the-southern-poverty-law-center
Assassin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

NeuroticBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

Getting back on track. From a recent study entitled "Far-left versus Far-right Fatal Violence: An Empirical Assessment of the Prevalence of Ideologically Motivated Homicides in the United States."

Between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2020...there were 269 ideologically motivated homicides (an average of 8.7 incidents per year). Far-left homicide incidents accounted for 15.6% of these homicide events, and far-right homicides accounted for 84.4%.

Although both the far-left and far-right homicide events appear to occur in waves, the baseline for the number of far-right events is higher than the far-left's baseline.

With the exception of 2017 when far-left homicides out-numbered far-right homicides, the far-right has consistently been higher than the far-left.

When comparing the lethality of far-right ideologically motivated homicides to the far-left, the results are consistent with the findings mentioned above. The far-right continues to surpass the far-left in both frequency of incidents and deaths. Even with the exclusion of deaths from the Oklahoma City Bombing, deaths from far-right ideologically motivated homicides average 11.5 per year from 1990-2020, compared to only 2.5 deaths from the far-left for the same period.

I'm sure the sources for this bu11**** are impeccable, since our resident Communist would never use questionable sources to further his/her/xir's political ideology.

It's all taken from the US Extremist Crime Database (ECDB), which was funded by the DHS as a resource for law enforcement and policy makers.

Provided by an NGO funded by SPLC. But thanks for playing.


Well at least the SPLC is doing something other than buying its rich attorney founders more Beach mansions on 30-A or ripping off the mothers of murder victims.

[….this widow who lost her son in a lynching and the SPLC represented her against the Klan. Now, the interesting thing is the Klan members had already been convicted of the murder. The SPLC was representing her to get restitution, and so eventually they sued the KKK and the KKK group didn't put up much of a fight. They didn't have a lot of money, they didn't have a lot of lawyers, so they lost. And Morris Dees gets this million-dollar judgment against them.

The interesting thing about this case is Morris Dees gets a million-dollar settlement. I think it was like $6 million that this group had to give. They don't have it. What happens is this settlement goes to the bereaved widow. Now, the organization barely has a penny to its name. They had a piece of property that they were required to sell and give all the money to the widow. That was about 50 grand. The widow gets 50 grand and the SPLC gets this multimillion-dollar judgment so they can go to their donors and say, "Hey, look, we got a million dollars from the Klan. Give us money." The SPLC rakes in millions of dollars, but that 50 grand that the widow got, she pays it back to the SPLC, which had given her a loan for a house.

This woman, who's at the center of the case, who they got the multimillion-dollar judgment for, she gets 50 grand. She gives it to the SPLC. She essentially doesn't make anything. The SPLC goes to its donors and rakes in millions of dollars, and yet the story gets worse because she wants to make a movie about the case. But Morris Dees also wants to make a movie about the case. So Morris Dees gets the movie contract and she gets shunted to the side. So this woman, who actually lost her son in this case, has essentially come out without any more money after the SPLC represented her, and she hasn't been able to get the movie deal and tell her story the way that she wanted to.]

https://www.heritage.org/progressivism/heritage-explains/what-went-wrong-the-southern-poverty-law-center


George Soros has given millions in grants to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) through his Open Society Foundations. This is part of how Democrat politicians have been getting funded for years.
"All assassins had a full-length mirror in their rooms, because it would be a terrible insult to anyone to kill them when you were badly dressed."
BaylorFTW
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Method Man said:

Realitybites said:

Looks like Clemson has stepped up to the plate as well.

"Clemson fires employee for Kirk posts. Two more removed from teaching duties

Read more at: https://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/article312116755.html#storylink=cpy

All hail our Lord and Savior Charlie Kirk.

You mean God bless our Christian brother who was brutally slain in public in front of his wife and children.
BaylorFTW
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Looks like a student challenged a Texas A&M president over his "many genders" claim and now he is stepping down.

BearlySpeaking
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Method Man said:

Realitybites said:

Looks like Clemson has stepped up to the plate as well.

"Clemson fires employee for Kirk posts. Two more removed from teaching duties

Read more at: https://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/article312116755.html#storylink=cpy

All hail our Lord and Savior Charlie Kirk.

Did you publicly celebrate his murder for advocating for free speech in political debates?
KaiBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BaylorFTW said:

Looks like a student challenged a Texas A&M president over his "many genders" claim and now he is stepping down.



Typical over reaction at A&M.

Never good to go full aggie.
Realitybites
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Method Man said:

Realitybites said:

Looks like Clemson has stepped up to the plate as well.

"Clemson fires employee for Kirk posts. Two more removed from teaching duties

Read more at: https://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/article312116755.html#storylink=cpy

All hail our Lord and Savior Charlie Kirk.


Jesus Christ is our Lord and Savior. Charlie Kirk is an American citizen who was exercising his 1st amendment rights, in most cases at publically funded institutions. A left wing terrorist assassinated him for this.

If you are celebrating such an event in public, you automatically decare yourself to be a threat to those around you and a liability risk for whatever institution or company you are associated with. Cutting that affiliation is the wise choice for the management of that institution or company.

It's just business.

Philosophy aside, the question is why Left Wing Linda and the Baylor BOR are intentionally exposing the University to this sort of risk by not taking any action against Baylor affiliated terrorist sympathizers. Can you imagine the negative press if an Antifa sympathizing or LGBTQ sympathizing Baylor student or employee shot up the campus? If the BOR thought that whatever bad press came Baylor's way by retaining Art Briles as head coach was bad, this would be an avalanche. Lawsuits would come pouring in. Donations would evaporate.
mcleod66
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Youre a clown said:

You have freedom of speech in this country. You don't have freedom from consequences of expressing free speech. If you want to support murder publicly on Facebook, you should expect a public backlash. That's fairness, is it not?

You have a constitutional right to go on Facebook and post about how stupid your boss is, or about how his wife has a scrumptious rear end, but that doesn't mean that you are shielded from the inevitable termination that you're gonna get tomorrow. None of this is difficult to understand tbh.

I'm glad this dude lost his job, and I hope he never gets hired again and has to live in a cardboard box on the side of I-35 until he issues a heartfelt public apology


He lost his job with Midway ISD. Did he actually lose his job with Baylor?
RD2WINAGNBEAR86
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

BaylorFTW said:

Looks like a student challenged a Texas A&M president over his "many genders" claim and now he is stepping down.



Typical over reaction at A&M.

Never good to go full aggie.

Your Aggie President disappointed me. Apparently he doesn't grasp that there are only two genders.

He was a retired four star general. How is it that this Liberal craziness is so widespread and worked its way all the way up in the ranks of the military and retired military? Very, very concerning.
Call it a tax, the people are outraged! Call it a tariff, the people get out their checkbooks and wave their American flags!!!
D. C. Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
mcleod66 said:

Youre a clown said:

You have freedom of speech in this country. You don't have freedom from consequences of expressing free speech. If you want to support murder publicly on Facebook, you should expect a public backlash. That's fairness, is it not?

You have a constitutional right to go on Facebook and post about how stupid your boss is, or about how his wife has a scrumptious rear end, but that doesn't mean that you are shielded from the inevitable termination that you're gonna get tomorrow. None of this is difficult to understand tbh.

I'm glad this dude lost his job, and I hope he never gets hired again and has to live in a cardboard box on the side of I-35 until he issues a heartfelt public apology


He lost his job with Midway ISD. Did he actually lose his job with Baylor?


I don't know that he had a job with Baylor.
The_barBEARian
How long do you want to ignore this user?
mcleod66 said:

Youre a clown said:

You have freedom of speech in this country. You don't have freedom from consequences of expressing free speech. If you want to support murder publicly on Facebook, you should expect a public backlash. That's fairness, is it not?

You have a constitutional right to go on Facebook and post about how stupid your boss is, or about how his wife has a scrumptious rear end, but that doesn't mean that you are shielded from the inevitable termination that you're gonna get tomorrow. None of this is difficult to understand tbh.

I'm glad this dude lost his job, and I hope he never gets hired again and has to live in a cardboard box on the side of I-35 until he issues a heartfelt public apology


He lost his job with Midway ISD. Did he actually lose his job with Baylor?


Pretty sure he is a Grad student.

Not an employee of Baylor.
Method Man
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BearlySpeaking said:

Method Man said:

Realitybites said:

Looks like Clemson has stepped up to the plate as well.

"Clemson fires employee for Kirk posts. Two more removed from teaching duties

Read more at: https://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/article312116755.html#storylink=cpy

All hail our Lord and Savior Charlie Kirk.

Did you publicly celebrate his murder for advocating for free speech in political debates?

To be honest....I don't care at all. I'm much more concerned about the Arizona St game tomorrow.
I'd never heard of Kirk before he got shot.

This epidemic of white on white crime and the assassination's attempts on Trump, Kirk and the politician from Minnesota is scary and a reflection of Trump's America.

These are dark times we are living in.







Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
You know, it may be a good idea for you to run your posts by a normie or two before posting.

Could save you a ton of embarrassment.
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
Method Man
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Oldbear83 said:

You know, it may be a good idea for you to run your posts by a normie or two before posting.

Could save you a ton of embarrassment.

What is a normie?
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Method Man said:

Oldbear83 said:

You know, it may be a good idea for you to run your posts by a normie or two before posting.

Could save you a ton of embarrassment.

What is a normie?


That explains a lot
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
RD2WINAGNBEAR86
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Method Man said:

Oldbear83 said:

Method Man said:

Oldbear83 said:

wYou know, it may be a good idea for you to run your posts by a normie or two before posting.

Could save you a ton of embarrassment.

What is a normie?


That explains a lot

Speak English or STFU you stupid ass clown.

Go eat dirt with your boy Charlie you old ass wrinkled MOFO.

Dude. My friend OldBear and I have had our differences, but you are out of line. Not sure why all of a sudden you have come out of hibernation, but please tone it down.
Call it a tax, the people are outraged! Call it a tariff, the people get out their checkbooks and wave their American flags!!!
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.