Unless they all thought they were removing Hitler from office and the press would cover for them. Which is the current case.https://twitter.com/JoyAnnReid/status/1326000152801374210 …
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays
I think you underestimate the press's appetite for a really juicy world-beating scoop. It's a sharp-elbowed business and every journo would want to land that story, if it were true.
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Replying to @luscombeland
Ten years ago, I would agree. Today it would be social and career suicide.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays
Since the business is incredibly traffic driven and this would do MONSTER traffic, I do not concur. The book deal alone would get you invited to every party in DC. (NB: Remember how the media loved Harvey Weinstein, until...)
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays
Nooooo. For journalists, getting a big scoop is like dating a celebrity. Suddenly all your friends wants you around...
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Replying to @luscombeland @ScottAdamsSays
Obviously, that's why we got all the Epstein stories, and why they're still talking about it now.
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Replying to @tenacious1894 @ScottAdamsSays
Julie K. Brown at the Miami Herald, who broke that story, won a Polk Award for it, so kind of proves my point.
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Jailing pedos is always popular. Ruining the country for your own team is . . . less.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @tenacious1894
Katie Halper still has a career and a social life, and her "team-destroying" story didn't even check out.
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