Richard Wolffe is the executive editor of MSNBC’s website. Presumably that means he knows something about what goes on at the network.
Last night after someone at MSNBC tweeted the suggestion that the “rightwing” would hate a Cheerios ad featuring a biracial families, there was an immediate firestorm of reaction. About 75 people responded to the #myrightwingbiracialfamily hashtag with photos. Hundreds more were sending comments to MSNBC.
In fairly short order MSNBC announced they had made an error:
We are deleting the earlier offensive tweet. It does not reflect msnbc’s position and we apologize.
— msnbc (@msnbc) January 30, 2014
About 15 minutes later, executive editor Richard Wolffe weighed in with a similar message:
The Cheerios tweet from @msnbc was dumb, offensive and we’ve taken it down. That’s not who we are at msnbc.
— Richard Wolffe (@richardwolffedc) January 30, 2014
Not who we are?
@richardwolffedc Are you sure about that? This sort of thing seems to come up a lot on @msnbc.
— John Sexton (@verumserum) January 30, 2014
Around this time, Dan Riehl started tweeting items like this:
October 24, 2012 Chris Matthews: “Dangerous” To Deny GOP Attacks On Obama Are Racist http://t.co/fejLtew3if
— DanRiehl (@DanRiehl) January 30, 2014
6/12/13: Chris Hayes IDs Infamous Racist Gov George Wallace As Republican http://t.co/9p5B37P53t via @BreitbartNews
— DanRiehl (@DanRiehl) January 30, 2014
This went on for two hours. Two hours without any repetition. Perhaps Richard Wolffe’s statement about who MSNBC is was meant to be aspirational? Because if you look at their record and the string of high-profile apologies and firings it’s pretty clear who they are. You’d have to be the most clueless person on the internet to have missed it.
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