Glenn Greenwald Resigns From Intercept Due to Hunter Censorship

12,342 Views | 86 Replies | Last: 3 yr ago by BearForce2
Yogi49
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The news outlet he co-founded six years ago.

https://taibbi.substack.com/p/glenn-greenwald-on-his-resignation?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=cta

Quote:

In a nutshell, the fatal sequence of events went as follows:

Greenwald, after commenting pointedly about the reaction by press and Democratic Party officials to the New York Post story, reached out to Intercept editor Betsy Reed to float the idea of writing on the subject.

The first hint of trouble came when Reed suggested that yes, it might be a story, if proven correct, but "even if it did represent something untoward about Biden," that would "represent a tiny fraction of the sleaze and lies Trump and his cronies are oozing in every day."

When Greenwald retorted that deciding not to report on one politician's scandals because those of another politician are deemed worse is a "corrupt calculus" for reporters, Reed expressed concern. Based on this, on his comments on Twitter, and other factors, she worried that "we are headed for a conflict over the editing of this piece."

Greenwald insisted he wasn't planning an overwhelming amount of coverage but wanted to do a single article, reviewing the available facts and perhaps asking the Biden campaign to comment on the veracity of the Post story. Reed agreed that he should write a draft, then they could "see where we are."
An aside: when reporters and editors interact, they speak between the lines. If an editor only ever suggests or assigns stories from a certain angle, you're being told they don't particularly want the other angle. If your editor has lots of hypothetical concerns at the start, he or she probably won't be upset if you choose a different topic. Finally, when an editor lays out "suggestions" about things that might "help" a piece "be even stronger," it's a signal both parties understand about what elements have to be put in before the editor will send the thing through.

Reed explained that any piece Greenwald wrote on the Biden/Burisma subject would have to go through "the editorial process and fact-checking that we do with any story with this kind of high profile." Peter Maass would edit, but Reed also noted that there was a lot of "in-house knowledge" they could all "tap into."

By "in-house knowledge," she meant the work of Robert Mackey and Jim Risen, two Intercept reporters with whom Greenwald clashed in the past. Risen had already loudly denounced the Post story not only as conspiracy theory, but foreign disinformation. Essentially, Reed was telling Greenwald his piece would be quasi-edited by people with whom he'd had major public disagreements about Russia-related issues going back years.

To this, Greenwald responded that this was a double-standard: when Risen wrote an article credulously quoting intelligence officials like James Clapper, John Brennan, and Michael Hayden (more on the extreme irony of this later) describing the Post story as having "the classic earmarks of Russian misinformation," he could do so willy-nilly. But when Greenwald wanted to write an op-ed piece questioning the "prevailing wisdom on Biden and Burisma," a team of people would would be summoned.

"The only reason people are getting interested in and ready to scrutinize what I write is because everyone is afraid of being accused of having published something harmful to Biden," Greenwald told them. "That's the reality."
Emails between Greenwald and his editors as they proceeded to censor any content referencing Hunter and Joe Biden.

https://greenwald.substack.com/p/emails-with-intercept-editors-showing
Quote:

Recall that under my contract, and the practice of The Intercept over the last seven years, none of my articles is edited unless it presents the possibility of legal liability or complex original reporting, and not one of my articles in the last fifteen years published with dozens of major media outlets around the world has ever been retracted or even had appended to it a serious correction.

This article should never have been subject to the whims and views of editors at all, let alone this heavy-handed attempt to protect Joe Biden
Original unedited article submitted to the Intercept and now posted on Substack
https://greenwald.substack.com/p/article-on-joe-and-hunter-biden-censored
Quote:

Individuals included in some of the email chains have confirmed the contents' authenticity. One of Hunter's former business partners, Tony Bubolinski, has stepped forward on the record to confirm the authenticity of many of the emails and to insist that Hunter along with Joe Biden's brother Jim were planning on including the former Vice President in at least one deal in China. And GOP pollster Frank Luntz, who appeared in one of the published email chains, appeared to confirm the authenticity as well, though he refused to answer follow-up questions about it.

Thus far, no proof has been offered by Bubolinski that Biden ever consummated his participation in any of those discussed deals. The Wall Street Journal says that it found no corporate records reflecting that a deal was finalized and that "text messages and emails related to the venture that were provided to the Journal by Mr. Bobulinski, mainly from the spring and summer of 2017, don't show either Hunter Biden or James Biden discussing a role for Joe Biden in the venture."

But nobody claimed that any such deals had been consummated -- so the conclusion that one had not been does not negate the story. Moreover, some texts and emails whose authenticity has not been disputed state that Hunter was adamant that any discussions about the involvement of the Vice President be held only verbally and never put in writing.

Beyond that, the Journal's columnist Kimberly Strassel reviewed a stash of documents and "found correspondence corroborates and expands on emails recently published by the New York Post," including ones where Hunter was insisting that it was his connection to his father that was the greatest asset sought by the Chinese conglomerate with whom they were negotiating. The New York Times on Sunday reached a similar conclusion: while no documents prove that such a deal was consummated, "records produced by Mr. Bobulinski show that in 2017, Hunter Biden and James Biden were involved in negotiations about a joint venture with a Chinese energy and finance company called CEFC China Energy," and "make clear that Hunter Biden saw the family name as a valuable asset, angrily citing his 'family's brand' as a reason he is valuable to the proposed venture."

These documents also demonstrate, reported the Times, "that the countries that Hunter Biden, James Biden and their associates planned to target for deals overlapped with nations where Joe Biden had previously been involved as vice president." Strassel noted that "a May 2017 'expectations' document shows Hunter receiving 20% of the equity in the venture and holding another 10% for 'the big guy'who Mr. Bobulinski attests is Joe Biden." And the independent journalist Matt Taibbi published an article on Sunday with ample documentation suggesting that Biden's attempt to replace a Ukranian prosecutor in 2015 benefited Burisma.
BearForce2
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The difference between a right wing conspiracy and the truth is about 20 months.
Yogi49
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Yeah, the clowns on this forum have no response to this. They don't want to confront the truth that their "real media outlets" are now no better than Fox News and they really really don't want to have to confront the truth that Hunter is a dirty guy. Does it extend to Biden? I don't know. But this story ain't gonna go away after the election.

LOL at believing a lettter signed by 50 professional liars.

sycasey
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From reading Greenwald's screed it appears he doesn't think he should be edited at all. Then when editors attempted to do their jobs, he threw a tantrum and resigned in a huff.

Yawn.

golden sloth
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Conservatives need to learn that freedom of speech does not mean the freedom to lie.
okaydo
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sycasey said:

From reading Greenwald's screed it appears he doesn't think he should be edited at all. Then when editors attempted to do their jobs, he threw a tantrum and resigned in a huff.

Yawn.



















bearlyamazing
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golden sloth said:

Conservatives need to learn that freedom of speech does not mean the freedom to lie.
Except that he's a noted liberal that liberals now hate because he dares to expose the left, too.
sycasey
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Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
BearForce2
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The difference between a right wing conspiracy and the truth is about 20 months.
heartofthebear
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bearlyamazing said:

golden sloth said:

Conservatives need to learn that freedom of speech does not mean the freedom to lie.
Except that he's a noted liberal that liberals now hate because he dares to expose the left, too.
What you think is liberal may still be right of center for the rest of the world.
sycasey
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heartofthebear said:

bearlyamazing said:

golden sloth said:

Conservatives need to learn that freedom of speech does not mean the freedom to lie.
Except that he's a noted liberal that liberals now hate because he dares to expose the left, too.
What you think is liberal may still be right of center for the rest of the world.

Greenwald seemed pretty liberal at one time, and certainly when he founded The Intercept he created a very progressive news organization. I'm not even really sure he's not liberal anymore. I'd say it's more like he's become generally paranoid. He thinks anyone who crosses him is out to get him.
okaydo
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Basically, Greenwald was out the door already.

Oh, and anbbody who's vaguely familiar with The Intercept knows that they're not fans of Obama or Biden.


Kaworu
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sycasey said:

From reading Greenwald's screed it appears he doesn't think he should be edited at all. Then when editors attempted to do their jobs, he threw a tantrum and resigned in a huff.

Yawn.


I think that's quite frankly a very partisan way of looking at this. He had a contract that allowed him to do exactly what he said he would do and he did it. When he said he would publish it elsewhere, they are the ones who threw the tantrum.

I don't know how much wheat is in the chafe and the source obviously has their own agenda for the timing and release of this, but I think there's little question that the media has been doing pretty much all they can to bury this story.
Kaworu
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sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Kaworu
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okaydo said:




Hunter Walker sounds like a jealous ex-boyfriend to me in those tweets. But since I never heard of him until you posted them all, I guess it's hard for me to find his perspective all that relevant.
sycasey
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Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
95bears
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Why is there a thread started by a Russian troll that got this far?
calpoly
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golden sloth said:

Conservatives need to learn that freedom of speech does not mean the freedom to lie.
Why would they did that? It would mean they would never get elected if they really told us what they plan to do.
okaydo
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Kaworu said:

okaydo said:




Hunter Walker sounds like a jealous ex-boyfriend to me in those tweets. But since I never heard of him until you posted them all, I guess it's hard for me to find his perspective all that relevant.

When you attack the messenger instead of the message, you're admitting the message is hard to argue against.

So all you're able to do is attack the messenger.
sycasey
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Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

From reading Greenwald's screed it appears he doesn't think he should be edited at all. Then when editors attempted to do their jobs, he threw a tantrum and resigned in a huff.

Yawn.


I think that's quite frankly a very partisan way of looking at this. He had a contract that allowed him to do exactly what he said he would do and he did it. When he said he would publish it elsewhere, they are the ones who threw the tantrum.

I don't know how much wheat is in the chafe and the source obviously has their own agenda for the timing and release of this, but I think there's little question that the media has been doing pretty much all they can to bury this story.

"The media" is a very general term that these days gets to mean whatever the speaker wants it to mean. Seems to me that the story isn't really buried. Some media outlets are happy to run with it all day and twice on Thursdays. Others are finding it hard to swallow. Critical consumers can review both arguments and decide how believable the story is.
dajo9
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sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

From reading Greenwald's screed it appears he doesn't think he should be edited at all. Then when editors attempted to do their jobs, he threw a tantrum and resigned in a huff.

Yawn.


I think that's quite frankly a very partisan way of looking at this. He had a contract that allowed him to do exactly what he said he would do and he did it. When he said he would publish it elsewhere, they are the ones who threw the tantrum.

I don't know how much wheat is in the chafe and the source obviously has their own agenda for the timing and release of this, but I think there's little question that the media has been doing pretty much all they can to bury this story.

"The media" is a very general term that these days gets to mean whatever the speaker wants it to mean. Seems to me that the story isn't really buried. Some media outlets are happy to run with it all day and twice on Thursdays. Others are finding it hard to swallow. Critical consumers can review both arguments and decide how believable the story is.


I think the opposite of what Kaworu said is true. The Hunter story has received exponentially more coverage than say, the mysterious payments to Trump in the mysterious Chinese bank account. It's just that the Hunter story is not very relevant and not worthy of multi-day coverage.
Kaworu
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sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.
Kaworu
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okaydo said:

Kaworu said:

okaydo said:




Hunter Walker sounds like a jealous ex-boyfriend to me in those tweets. But since I never heard of him until you posted them all, I guess it's hard for me to find his perspective all that relevant.

When you attack the messenger instead of the message, you're admitting the message is hard to argue against.

So all you're able to do is attack the messenger.
And that's not what he was doing?
BearForce2
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okaydo said:

Kaworu said:

okaydo said:




Hunter Walker sounds like a jealous ex-boyfriend to me in those tweets. But since I never heard of him until you posted them all, I guess it's hard for me to find his perspective all that relevant.

When you attack the messenger instead of the message, you're admitting the message is hard to argue against.

So all you're able to do is attack the messenger.

You know this because you are a leftist and Democrat and this is what they specialize in.
The difference between a right wing conspiracy and the truth is about 20 months.
sycasey
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Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.


April: https://theintercept.com/2020/04/24/new-evidence-tara-reade-joe-biden/

https://theintercept.com/2020/04/30/joe-biden-thinks-we-should-believe-women-just-not-tara-reade/

May: https://theintercept.com/2020/05/10/tara-reade-joe-biden-sexual-assault/

https://theintercept.com/2020/05/06/donald-trump-joe-biden-and-the-politics-of-sexual-misconduct/

C'mon, man.

The story fell out of the news in general after that, in large part because a bunch of people stepped forward to question Reade's credibility. But the Intercept definitely wasn't shy about covering it after March.
sycasey
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Kaworu said:

okaydo said:

Kaworu said:

okaydo said:




Hunter Walker sounds like a jealous ex-boyfriend to me in those tweets. But since I never heard of him until you posted them all, I guess it's hard for me to find his perspective all that relevant.

When you attack the messenger instead of the message, you're admitting the message is hard to argue against.

So all you're able to do is attack the messenger.
And that's not what he was doing?

No, he was breaking down Greenwald's story and explaining why he finds it hard to believe, based his experience as a journalist.
Kaworu
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sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.


April: https://theintercept.com/2020/04/24/new-evidence-tara-reade-joe-biden/

https://theintercept.com/2020/04/30/joe-biden-thinks-we-should-believe-women-just-not-tara-reade/

May: https://theintercept.com/2020/05/10/tara-reade-joe-biden-sexual-assault/

https://theintercept.com/2020/05/06/donald-trump-joe-biden-and-the-politics-of-sexual-misconduct/

C'mon, man.

The story fell out of the news in general after that, in large part because a bunch of people stepped forward to question Reade's credibility. But the Intercept definitely wasn't shy about covering it after March.
You consider 4 articles a lot?
sycasey
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Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.


April: https://theintercept.com/2020/04/24/new-evidence-tara-reade-joe-biden/

https://theintercept.com/2020/04/30/joe-biden-thinks-we-should-believe-women-just-not-tara-reade/

May: https://theintercept.com/2020/05/10/tara-reade-joe-biden-sexual-assault/

https://theintercept.com/2020/05/06/donald-trump-joe-biden-and-the-politics-of-sexual-misconduct/

C'mon, man.

The story fell out of the news in general after that, in large part because a bunch of people stepped forward to question Reade's credibility. But the Intercept definitely wasn't shy about covering it after March.
You consider 4 articles a lot?

So you don't want them to cover it. You want them to harp on it, to the exclusion of other stories.

Sounds a lot like what Greenwald wants to do about Hunter Biden.
Kaworu
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sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.


April: https://theintercept.com/2020/04/24/new-evidence-tara-reade-joe-biden/

https://theintercept.com/2020/04/30/joe-biden-thinks-we-should-believe-women-just-not-tara-reade/

May: https://theintercept.com/2020/05/10/tara-reade-joe-biden-sexual-assault/

https://theintercept.com/2020/05/06/donald-trump-joe-biden-and-the-politics-of-sexual-misconduct/

C'mon, man.

The story fell out of the news in general after that, in large part because a bunch of people stepped forward to question Reade's credibility. But the Intercept definitely wasn't shy about covering it after March.
You consider 4 articles a lot?

So you don't want them to cover it. You want them to harp on it, to the exclusion of other stories.

Sounds a lot like what Greenwald wants to do about Hunter Biden.
Why would I want them to harp on Tara Reade? That story is what it is. People didn't seem too interested in it, nor from an electoral standpoint is anybody going to care about Hunter Biden and Jim Biden trading on their dad's name when Trump's family does the same thing. The issue is one more about the role the media is playing on this than the story itself, which is what some of the more independent journalists are saying.
sycasey
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Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.


April: https://theintercept.com/2020/04/24/new-evidence-tara-reade-joe-biden/

https://theintercept.com/2020/04/30/joe-biden-thinks-we-should-believe-women-just-not-tara-reade/

May: https://theintercept.com/2020/05/10/tara-reade-joe-biden-sexual-assault/

https://theintercept.com/2020/05/06/donald-trump-joe-biden-and-the-politics-of-sexual-misconduct/

C'mon, man.

The story fell out of the news in general after that, in large part because a bunch of people stepped forward to question Reade's credibility. But the Intercept definitely wasn't shy about covering it after March.
You consider 4 articles a lot?

So you don't want them to cover it. You want them to harp on it, to the exclusion of other stories.

Sounds a lot like what Greenwald wants to do about Hunter Biden.
Why would I want them to harp on Tara Reade? That story is what it is. People didn't seem too interested in it, nor from an electoral standpoint is anybody going to care about Hunter Biden and Jim Biden trading on their dad's name when Trump's family does the same thing. The issue is one more about the role the media is playing on this than the story itself, which is what some of the more independent journalists are saying.

So what's the issue? Greenwald claims The Intercept was afraid to cover Biden negatively. History suggests they are not. But your further argument is that they didn't cover his potential scandals enough.

How much is enough?
Kaworu
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sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.


April: https://theintercept.com/2020/04/24/new-evidence-tara-reade-joe-biden/

https://theintercept.com/2020/04/30/joe-biden-thinks-we-should-believe-women-just-not-tara-reade/

May: https://theintercept.com/2020/05/10/tara-reade-joe-biden-sexual-assault/

https://theintercept.com/2020/05/06/donald-trump-joe-biden-and-the-politics-of-sexual-misconduct/

C'mon, man.

The story fell out of the news in general after that, in large part because a bunch of people stepped forward to question Reade's credibility. But the Intercept definitely wasn't shy about covering it after March.
You consider 4 articles a lot?

So you don't want them to cover it. You want them to harp on it, to the exclusion of other stories.

Sounds a lot like what Greenwald wants to do about Hunter Biden.
Why would I want them to harp on Tara Reade? That story is what it is. People didn't seem too interested in it, nor from an electoral standpoint is anybody going to care about Hunter Biden and Jim Biden trading on their dad's name when Trump's family does the same thing. The issue is one more about the role the media is playing on this than the story itself, which is what some of the more independent journalists are saying.
So what's the issue? Greenwald claims The Intercept was afraid to cover Biden negatively. History suggests they are not. But your further argument is that they didn't cover his potential scandals enough.

How much is enough?
4 articles on Tara Reade doesn't seem like a lot to me compared to the number of articles written about Benghazi or private e-mail servers by other publications. They broke the story (nobody touched it before them), followed up on it, and nobody seemed to care much about it. I think that's as much to do with coronavirus being the number one thing on everybody's mind as it is to the veracity of her story, to be honest. Whether it got covered or more isn't particularly a concern of mine. And the people who wrote these articles are not the people who were attempting to block Greenwald's article, so I don't really feel like the two are related.

I don't really care about the story per se. The Republicans will keep looking into it after the election and it will be the Benghazi of the next four years. How much meat there is to the story will be revealed in time. I'm more concerned with the fact that the left-oriented media is now engaging in stuff that only used to happen on the right-wing in terms of suppression of stories and just flat out lying about certain things for political purposes. I'm concerned that the cable news networks are essentially extensions of the Democratic and Republican parties. I'm concerned that Jeff Bezos wants to buy CNN. I think we are morphing into a state where the media is becoming much more like propaganda and less investigative. Ideally, we as a society should want our media and our politicians to have different motivations. Politicians lie and the media tries to find out the truth.

The current direction we are heading in concerns me greatly.
Yogi49
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Kaworu said:

okaydo said:

Kaworu said:

okaydo said:




Hunter Walker sounds like a jealous ex-boyfriend to me in those tweets. But since I never heard of him until you posted them all, I guess it's hard for me to find his perspective all that relevant.

When you attack the messenger instead of the message, you're admitting the message is hard to argue against.

So all you're able to do is attack the messenger.
And that's not what he was doing?
Of course it is.
Yogi49
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Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Kaworu said:

sycasey said:

Greenwald's idea that The Intercept is afraid to be critical of Joe Biden is laughable. They have been critical of him (from the left) pretty consistently. The editors just didn't want to repeat Trump campaign material uncritically, which is a responsible decision, especially a week before the election.
They were critical of him up until he won the nomination. There's a difference.
Not true, they posted plenty of Tara Reade stuff.
That happened in March. Not a lot of Tara Reade articles by them or anyone since.


April: https://theintercept.com/2020/04/24/new-evidence-tara-reade-joe-biden/

https://theintercept.com/2020/04/30/joe-biden-thinks-we-should-believe-women-just-not-tara-reade/

May: https://theintercept.com/2020/05/10/tara-reade-joe-biden-sexual-assault/

https://theintercept.com/2020/05/06/donald-trump-joe-biden-and-the-politics-of-sexual-misconduct/

C'mon, man.

The story fell out of the news in general after that, in large part because a bunch of people stepped forward to question Reade's credibility. But the Intercept definitely wasn't shy about covering it after March.
You consider 4 articles a lot?

So you don't want them to cover it. You want them to harp on it, to the exclusion of other stories.

Sounds a lot like what Greenwald wants to do about Hunter Biden.
Why would I want them to harp on Tara Reade?
Because it exposes the hypocrisy of the Democrats temporary embrace of #MeToo. But I guess when it's politically inconvenient, that goes out the window for the party of hypocrisy.
Yogi49
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Glenn Greenwald on Joe Rogan
Anarchistbear
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Most of journalism is a bunch of self- obsessed 30 somethings tweeting bull**** back and forth at each other fantasizing that they are in some "resistance" to the fascist takeover of Trumpkin instead of pathetic losers they are. The bull$It is canonized by other insecure misfits until it reaches here via Okaydo.

Whatever one thinks of Greenwald and the Biden caper his work with Snowden and in Brazil was courageous journalism with a lot of risk to him. He broke the global surveillance story, won a Pulitzer and Academy Award that earned him a lot of enemies, death threats in Brazil and attacks on his sexuality. He's a serious investigative reporter not a trivial self- aggrandizing talking head which makes me give him the benefit of the doubt- though in truth the Hunter Biden story to me only confirms that which is intuitive-come January some relatives of a President- either one- will be feasting at the banquet.
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