Media Skip Farrakhan and Hype 'Nazi' Prom

bripat9643

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Apr 1, 2011
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Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"

Is that what you got out the article you fucking moron?
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"

Is that what you got out the article you fucking moron?
Hey look! The photographer wants you to wave to mommy!

755489
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"

Is that what you got out the article you fucking moron?
Hey look! The photographer wants you to wave to mommy!

755489

Quite an imagination you got there. You should really tell these things to a good doctor. I can’t help you, son.
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
They didn't salute Nazis, dumbass.
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
Farrakhan is a nasty,evil SOB who wants all white people dead, especially Jews. He deserves a Sicilian necktie and I would love to take that animal into the woods and give him one and then barbecue his heathen ass and feed him to the hogs.
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"

Is that what you got out the article you fucking moron?
Hey look! The photographer wants you to wave to mommy!

755489
Read the story before you embarrass yourself further.
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
Farrakhan is a nasty,evil SOB who wants all white people dead, especially Jews. He deserves a Sicilian necktie and I would love to take that animal into the woods and give him one and then barbecue his heathen ass and feed him to the hogs.
Fuck Farrakhan and fuck Nazi's
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
Farrakhan is a nasty,evil SOB who wants all white people dead, especially Jews. He deserves a Sicilian necktie and I would love to take that animal into the woods and give him one and then barbecue his heathen ass and feed him to the hogs.
Fuck Farrakhan and fuck Nazi's

^^^^^Pretending he doesn’t give Farrakhan a free pass
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
Farrakhan is a nasty,evil SOB who wants all white people dead, especially Jews. He deserves a Sicilian necktie and I would love to take that animal into the woods and give him one and then barbecue his heathen ass and feed him to the hogs.
Fuck Farrakhan and fuck Nazi's

^^^^^Pretending he doesn’t give Farrakhan a free pass

I was taking a course at the local Community College a few years ago and the Political Science class had Louie for a guest speaker in the auditorium. I went to the speech and when he got to the part where he said he wanted to see white people's blood running curb deep in the street. I got up and walked down the aisle to the door, turned around and said loudly, "Who let that MF in here?" Next day I had to go see the college president. Before he could say anything I told him ''before you say anything, and I know you're going to say something, compare that bastard's free speech to my free speech''. He said, "well, you didn't have to use vulgar language and I said neither did he." I walked out of his office and never heard anything more about it. However one of Louie's student disciples wrote a letter to the editor and complained about the racist who cursed at his God.
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
upload_2018-11-17_1-0-42.jpeg


upload_2018-11-17_1-1-11.jpeg


Salutes ?
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
Farrakhan is a nasty,evil SOB who wants all white people dead, especially Jews. He deserves a Sicilian necktie and I would love to take that animal into the woods and give him one and then barbecue his heathen ass and feed him to the hogs.
Fuck Farrakhan and fuck Nazi's

^^^^^Pretending he doesn’t give Farrakhan a free pass

I was taking a course at the local Community College a few years ago and the Political Science class had Louie for a guest speaker in the auditorium. I went to the speech and when he got to the part where he said he wanted to see white people's blood running curb deep in the street. I got up and walked down the aisle to the door, turned around and said loudly, "Who let that MF in here?" Next day I had to go see the college president. Before he could say anything I told him ''before you say anything, and I know you're going to say something, compare that bastard's free speech to my free speech''. He said, "well, you didn't have to use vulgar language and I said neither did he." I walked out of his office and never heard anything more about it. However one of Louie's student disciples wrote a letter to the editor and complained about the racist who cursed at his God.
Are you saying you were the only one with balls in that whole school....Impressive for you not for the rest of the group.
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"

Except they weren't saluting Nazis...
 
this is THE basic MSM crap
anti-white and pro-black/minority
plain and simple--undeniable
everyday there is an anti-white story
 
If you look at the picture you can see several students who have their arms bent in a waving motion along with several students holding the hands in fist. The media jumped on defining the intent of the picture dismissing the innocent explanation given.

The same media goes out of their way to ignore clear anti-semitic intent of prominent democrats including elected officials regularly.

This is why many view the fake news media as enemy of the people. The fake news media branding these students as racist could comprise their getting into college or finding employment.
 
Good story about media bias:


It's very easy for media elites in Manhattan to decide that one tweet can prove small towns in Wisconsin are stuffed with racists and anti-Semites. On Nov. 12, ABC, CBS and NBC all leaped on a tweet from a contributor of the left-wing talk show "The Young Turks." It showed a months-old prom photo of a collection of teenage boys from Baraboo High School in Wisconsin who are positioned on the front steps of the Sauk County Courthouse and appear to be giving a "Nazi salute."

The town of about 12,000 -- best known before now as the original headquarters of the Ringling Brothers and their circus -- quickly felt the sting of national, and even international, embarrassment. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum tweeted its outrage and attached a link to history lessons about Nazi Germany. This was followed by everyone insisting this photo isn't representative of the local population, as well as school officials promising to investigate.

But what really happened? Student Brock Turkington said it started when the photographer said, "Do a 'hi sign.'" He added: "And nobody really understood what a 'hi sign' was. We'd never heard of it. And he demonstrated by sticking his arm up, kind of what the salute looked like. So we all kinda imitated it."

When Turkington saw the photo later, he winced at what it looked like. "It was just miscommunication, like, we were told to do one thing, and he demonstrated it badly, and we all kind of just followed along because we just kind of wanted to get the pictures over with," he said. "In this picture are many of my friends that I know are not racist and do not hold Nazi views."

The photographer, Pete Gust, who had a son in the picture, told news outlets: "There was no Nazi salute. The last picture we had done ... I'd said to them, 'OK, boys. You're going to say goodbye to your parents, so wave.'"

Why did everyone in the national media rush to assume the worst and end up with "fake news"? There's an easy guess. The Associated Press quickly found Baraboo's state senator, Jon Erpenbach, who blamed ... the rhetoric of President Trump. He said: "There's no room in the world for anything like that at all. From what they're seeing out of the White House, that it's OK to be intolerant and racist."

In today's America, the "objective" press is looking for racist neo-Nazis under every rock who don't submit to the will of The Resistance. But these same outlets refuse to condemn the ongoing attachment of leftists and Democrats to the anti-Semitic Minister Louis Farrakhan, whether the politicians photographed with him are Reps. Maxine Waters or Keith Ellison, or even former President Barack Obama. The scandal -- among some of the most powerful adults in the land -- is barely even recognized. CBS "This Morning" offered one brief anchor-read story earlier this year when an old photo of Obama smiling with Farrakhan surfaced after being suppressed for years. ABC and NBC slept on it.

None of these networks were outraged in September when Farrakhan sat on a dais of honorees during the blanket coverage of Aretha Franklin's funeral, right next to Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Bill Clinton. Three days later, CBS and NBC reported there was "controversy," but they utterly skipped Farrakhan. Whoopi Goldberg on ABC's "The View" told everyone to back off. "It's not about Bill Clinton or Louis Farrakhan. It was all about Aretha," she ranted. "That's why everybody just needs to pull back. Just pull it back, you know, and understand that this is -- we don't control everything."

On the same night all three networks were covering supposedly hateful Baraboo High School prom pictures, only ABC covered Hamas terrorist
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"

Is that what you got out the article you fucking moron?
He got nothing out of the story because he's a Non Player Character. All he's capable of is repeating the same canned responses over and over again.
 
Last edited:
"Look guys, people emboldened to salute Nazi's is fine because FARRAKHAN! FARRAKHAN!!! FARRAKHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!"
Farrakhan is a nasty,evil SOB who wants all white people dead, especially Jews. He deserves a Sicilian necktie and I would love to take that animal into the woods and give him one and then barbecue his heathen ass and feed him to the hogs.
Fuck Farrakhan and fuck Nazi's

^^^^^Pretending he doesn’t give Farrakhan a free pass

I was taking a course at the local Community College a few years ago and the Political Science class had Louie for a guest speaker in the auditorium. I went to the speech and when he got to the part where he said he wanted to see white people's blood running curb deep in the street. I got up and walked down the aisle to the door, turned around and said loudly, "Who let that MF in here?" Next day I had to go see the college president. Before he could say anything I told him ''before you say anything, and I know you're going to say something, compare that bastard's free speech to my free speech''. He said, "well, you didn't have to use vulgar language and I said neither did he." I walked out of his office and never heard anything more about it. However one of Louie's student disciples wrote a letter to the editor and complained about the racist who cursed at his God.
Are you saying you were the only one with balls in that whole school....Impressive for you not for the rest of the group.
I was in my mid fifties at the time and was 30-35 years older than the younguns. There were quite a few veterans like me who were using up our VA education benefits before they expired and most agreed with me. I always was a hot head and wasn't bashful about voicing my opinion.
 

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