Washington Post Pours Cold Water on Media’s ‘Tuzla Dash’
The Washington Post punctured the media’s hyperventilation bag over comments made by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump regarding Hillary Clinton and the Second Amendment on Tuesday.
The Washington Post punctured the media’s hyperventilation bag over comments made by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump regarding Hillary Clinton and the Second Amendment on Tuesday.
Susan Collins, like the rest of the NeverTrump faction, is about preening, not principle. She would rather cede the White House, and the Supreme Court, than endure Trump’s poor taste. That is pure, elitist vanity.
Like the man himself, Donald Trump’s fans on Reddit have been subject to smears, faux outrage and misrepresentation in the mainstream press.
The tight relationship between The Washington Post and the Democratic National Committee was borne out in emails discovered in the 20,000-deep email trove from the DNC posted on WikiLeaks.
Melania Trump’s primetime speech at the Republican National Convention caused a media feeding frenzy after a journalist alleged that she plagiarized phrases from Michelle Obama’s 2008 speech at the Democratic National Convention.
In a macabre hit piece, the Washington Post has launched a smear campaign against important Christian leaders who espouse Biblical morality on homosexuality, labeling them as “enemies of equality.”
Here again, another incredible piece of outrageous propaganda bordering on the absurd from the venerable Washington Post: “Muslim camps are spreading in the U.S. to help kids ‘be proud of who they are.’”
Let’s say the Church of Scientology launched a program it said was aimed at creating healthy work environments and bridging family divides, even those involving church critics.
In a Sunday interview with New York AM 970’s “The Cats Roundtable,” Eric Trump slammed the Washington Post for the article that said the presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, his father, had only donated $10,000 to charities in the last seven years
The Washington Post is reporting that U.S. might not be able to follow in the U.K.’s footsteps in reclaiming its economic independence because of the nation’s demographic makeup, which is the result of four decades of record high green card issuances to foreign nationals.
The US foreign policy establishment, wedded as it is to hawkers, doesn’t like Trump. And neither does the foreign policy establishment in a country such as Georgia, which borders on Russia, and which fought and lost a minor war with Russia in 2008. And so the Post, in its neocon mode, did its best to make Trump’s suggestions that the US and Russia might actually be able to get along look rather sinister.
A new campaign led by “dozens” of delegates to the Republican National Convention is planning to change the convention rules in order to remove Trump as the Republican Party nominee, according to the Washington Post. But the Post only names
The Washington Post reports that there are many issues where “Hillary Clinton and Paul Ryan could make a deal.”
The media have lost their minds after Trump’s magnificent speech on Monday. It’s all hands on deck, no attack is too extreme. Their main point is: DO NOT LOOK AT THAT SPEECH. It has “words that wound.” Much too dangerous even to read it.
Late Night host Seth Meyers announced Tuesday night that presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is banned from appearing on his NBC program.
Tuesday on CNN’s “New Day,” CNN political commentator Bakari Sellers reacted to presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s decision to revoke the press credentials of The Washington Post after it published an article he deemed to be unfair. https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/742456254837215232 Sellers
Donald Trump today revoked “the press credentials of the phony and dishonest Washington Post” following a Washington Post headline and an ongoing battle with the paper’s owner Jeff Bezos.
The Washington Post editorial board is excoriating the White House for an alarming report surfacing that Cuban military agents were given a tour of a pivotal Key West military facility upon the invitation of the U.S. military.
The Associated Press spoke or left messages with each of the organizations Trump named. Of the 30 groups that responded by Tuesday, about half said they had received checks from Trump just last week.
Former Secretary of State and Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton has a canceled campaign event in New Jersey and will be rushing back to California this week to hold off a late surge by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT).
Columnist Joe Concha excoriates the Washington Post for spinning a writeup of its own poll with ABC, searching for a silver lining to give the Hillary Clinton campaign.
Donald Trump and Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon and owner of The Washington Post, disagree on taxes, encryption, and, of course, who should be the next president. Rather strongly, in fact, on all three questions.
Jeff Bezos, the owner of The Washington Post and founder of Amazon.com, is defending his newspaper’s ongoing investigations of Donald Trump.
Robert Kagan of the Brookings Institution writes that Donald Trump’s supporters represent a “dangerous” phenomenon drawn to “an aura crude strength and machismo.”
After being dwarfed by Donald Trump in the Republican presidential primary, Sen. Marco Rubio has remained largely quiet and diplomatic as he returned to the Senate to finish out his term.
Columnist Charles Krauthammer stated that if the recent stories by the Washington Post and New York Times on presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump are “the best” they “can do trying to create scandal around Donald Trump, it’s time to plan
Fox News Channel host Greg Gutfeld argued that presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump’s criticism of the Washington Post “as a political tool,” after the National Enquirer was used as the same thing to boost his campaign on Friday’s broadcast of “The Five.” Gutfeld
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump reacted to a report that the Washington Post has 20 reporters planning to dig into his life by arguing Post owner Jeff Bezos is using the paper “or political purposes to save Amazon, in terms of
The Washington Post appears to have been duped by a left-wing online media outlet into running a false headline targeting the American Family Association (AFA) and has since issued a correction after hearing from AFA’s lawyers.
A recent controversy involving feminist video games activist Zoe Quinn and “anti-abuse” campaigner Randi Harper has led to allegations of journalistic malpractice, the silencing of critics, and an internet firestorm.
An illegal alien from El Salvador, Mauricio Morales-Caceres, faces life in prison without parole after being convicted of stabbing acquaintance Oscar Navarro, father of two, “at least” 89 times with a 15-inch butcher knife and tearing out his liver with his bare hands — but no comments on this shocking murder by a foreign national, who smiled cheerfully in his mugshot, are allowed, according to the Washington Post.
A day after the sudden death of the artist known as Prince — a man who could easily be described as complicated — much is being made of his “conservative” legacy.
The Washington Post’s Wonkblog has elevated a new argument against putting Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill to honor her struggle against slavery: Tubman “fought the oppressive system that launched our economy” — i.e. slavery was capitalism.
Russia says that it acquiesced to a request from President Obama to help secure the release of Americans held in Syria, culminating in the freedom on Friday of an American freelance photographer abducted after he traveled to Syria in 2012.
Hillary Clinton has more FBI agents following her than she has delegates, joked comic legend Jackie Mason in a radio interview on Sunday.
In the aftermath of Donald Trump’s unfortunate comments regarding abortion, a new essay in The Washington Post argues that anyone who is truly pro-life should want to see women who have an abortion thrown in jail, revealing the left’s own take-no-prisoners mentality on the life issue.
The Washington Post opinion writer Greg Sargent calls GOP frontrunner Donald Trump a “nightmare nominee,” arguing that “not even white men” like Trump.
On Saturday, the Washington Post opined that North Carolina lawmakers have rushed “to bigotry” in passing a new non-discrimination law.
On Monday, Republican frontrunner Donald Trump criticized the U.S. role in NATO, the Cold War alliance that has since expanded, echoing remarks in 2011 by then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.
The Washington Post published an editorial on Thursday calling for the Republican Party to reject the will of its primary voters and to stage a brokered convention to prevent Donald Trump from becoming its presidential nominee.