TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @HaMeturgeman

Saved - February 17, 2025 at 4:20 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I noticed that 60 Minutes featured two communications consultants as if they were long-time USAID employees who were dismissed for disloyalty. This misrepresentation contrasts sharply with Kristina Drye's account of the sudden loss of job security due to the USAID shutdown. Additionally, there seems to be a troubling narrative around free speech, with some claiming that the Holocaust was a result of it, while denying reporters access to the Oval Office is seen as an attack on the First Amendment. It's a confusing time in political media.

@HaMeturgeman - Eli Steinberg

🚨🚨60 Minutes pulled in 2 comms consultants who were never actual employees of USAID and presented them as though they were longtime employees who were fired for lack of "loyalty." 🚨🚨

@60Minutes - 60 Minutes

“Twelve days ago, people knew where their next paycheck was coming from. They knew how they were going to pay for their kids' daycare, their medical bills. And then, all gone overnight,” says Kristina Drye, who was fired in the USAID shutdown. https://cbsn.ws/3CU2X1y

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@HaMeturgeman - Eli Steinberg

Between this and Brennan asserting the Holocaust happened because of free speech, CBS had a heckuva day.

@HaMeturgeman - Eli Steinberg

https://t.co/Ccqx1zjUhc

@HaMeturgeman - Eli Steinberg

The state of the political media is such that denying a reporter special Oval Office access is an attack on the First Amendment, but outright censorship is just responsible governance—because, after all, "free speech was weaponized by the Nazis.”

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