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#disrespect

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@publicnewsfeed

This is so disgusting and embarrassing. Whether you have heard of #Lesotho or not (I suspect almost all on fediverse have), for any #headofstate to be so dismissive of another country is inexcusable. To admit such ignorance and to garner applause for displaying it shows how #Trump has #normalized, even aggrandized #ignorance.

#authoritarian leaders & #oligarchs crave an ignorant populace and fear the #educated. Study, #vote and make them afraid.

I've read a number of opinion pieces claiming that Americans don't care that Trump is destroying the federal government - proof of which is that we're not out on the streets protesting. That is an insult. Most Americans don't know about the destruction that Trump is wreaking because the fucking news media isn't telling them.

#USPolitics #Disrespect #Journalism

heathercoxrichardson.substack.

Letters from an American · February 1, 2025By Heather Cox Richardson

The NABJ interview with Trump provides a model for media coverage

Trump’s appearance also afforded the opportunity later on Wednesday to 🔸rebuke his hateful rhetoric in a way that made him look like a sad has-been. 🔸

“It was the same old show. The and the ,”
she declared in a speech in Houston.

“And let me just say: The American people deserve better. The American people deserve better.”

She continued, “The American people deserve a leader who tells the ,
a leader who does not respond with hostility and anger when confronted with the .
We deserve a leader who understands that our differences do not divide us.
They are an essential source of our .”

🌟That’s how one puts Trump in his place without getting into a personal spat with him.

🌟No other single interview or media encounter with Trump in this cycle has laid bare as much about the candidate or opened him up to as much criticism.

👍Kudos go to Scott and her co-moderators in Chicago.

The NABJ interview also raises a troubling question:
❓What’s wrong with the rest of the media?❓


Not one question in the CNN-hosted debate with Trump and President Biden on June 27 confronted Trump about or .

(As to the latter, there has been inadequate coverage
— certainly not on the front page of most papers or headlining cable news
— devoted to Trump’s disparaging comments that ...
any Jew who does not support him is a “fool” and “should have their head examined,”

or agreement with a radio host who called Harris’s husband
a “crappy Jew❗️”)

CNN’s debate moderators
🔹did not ask about pardons for Jan. 6. insurrectionists.🔹


Unfortunately,
too many in the mainstream political media have been 🔹taken in by Republican spin. 🔹

The preposterous suggestion that,
after the assassination attempt,
Trump might have “changed,”
entertained as a possibility by far too many outlets

(as The Post’s Philip Bump and a select number of other commentators pointed out),

unsurprisingly turned out to be
.

washingtonpost.com/opinions/20

The Washington Post · The NABJ interview with Trump provides a model for media coverageBy Jennifer Rubin

“I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago 🔸when she happened to turn Black🔸 and now she wants to be known as Black.
So I don’t know, is she Indian or is she Black?” Mr. Trump said of Ms. Harris, whose mother was Indian American and whose father is Black.

The moment was shocking, but for those who have followed Mr. Trump’s divisive language,
it was hardly surprising.

♦️The former president has a history of using race to pit groups of Americans against one another, amplifying a strain of racial politics that has risen as a generation of Black politicians has ascended♦️

The audacity of Mr. Trump, a white man, questioning how much a Black woman truly belongs to Black America was particularly incendiary.

And it evoked 🔷an ugly history in this country, in which white America has often declared the racial categories that define citizens, and sought to determine who gets to call themselves what.🔷

“Give me a break,” said Fred Sweets, a contributing editor at The St. Louis American who watched the discussion from the third row.
“He seemed to be denigrating her background. She knows who she is.”

Ms. Harris has embraced her dual racial identities.

She has long identified as Black and was shaped by several Black institutions. She graduated from Howard University, a historically Black university in Washington, D.C., and there joined Alpha Kappa Alpha, the nation’s oldest Black sorority.

She has spoken extensively about growing up in what she described as a Black community in Berkeley, Calif.

"She had two Black babies, and she raised them to be two Black women,” Harris told The New York Times in a 2016 interview about her mother.

On Wednesday evening, Ms. Harris responded to Mr. Trump’s comment at an event hosted by one of the nation’s most prominent Black sororities, saying they showed “ and .”

“The American people deserve a leader who tells the truth,” she said, making no direct reference to Mr. Trump’s personal attacks.

“We deserve a leader who understands that our differences do not divide us
— they are an essential source of our strength.”

Attacks on Ms. Harris’s racial background have circulated among right-wing figures and Mr. Trump’s close allies for years.

In 2019, Donald Trump Jr. shared a social media post from an alt-right personality that falsely claimed Ms. Harris was
🔥not Black enough 🔥to be discussing the plight of Black Americans during a primary debate.

Though Mr. Trump later deleted the post, it spread widely across conservative social media, prompting a wave of accounts to question her background,
👉which was exactly the point of the effort, according to some far-right activists.
nytimes.com/2024/07/31/us/poli

The New York Times · Trump Remarks on Harris Evoke a Haunting and Unsettling HistoryBy Lisa Lerer