I wrote about Elon Musk โ€œgoing to warโ€ with MAGA influencers and major right wing figures and what this could mean for the future of the pro-Trump movement
I wrote about the similarities between OpenAI and Visa, and how both companies have sought to build regulatory and legal moats to lock in customers and lock out competitors
Misogyny is at the core of these types of smear campaigns targeting women, yet media coverage consistently and intentionally avoids naming it.
Seeking help! No matter how many keywords/names u search related to this story the article doesn't appear on Google This was a front page A1 story I wrote for WaPo on how smear campaigns and abuse women journalists endure are a press freedom issue. Can someone explain why the article does not appear on Google? https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/2023/02/14/women-journalists-global-violence/
Did I say that I felt โ€œjoyโ€ over the healthcare CEOโ€™s death? No, but that hasnโ€™t stopped the media from lying about it.
"People donโ€™t cheer for chaos when they feel like justice is possible. But right now, what options do they have? The Supreme Court is corrupt, voting feels useless, and the people in power are funded by the very corporations theyโ€™re supposed to regulate. Of course, Mangione gets turned into a meme heroโ€”itโ€™s not him they love; itโ€™s the idea of someone finally fighting back"
Ken Klippenstein has obtained and published Luigi's full manifesto. "Many have illuminated the corruption and greed... decades ago and the problems simply remain. It is not an issue of awareness at this point, but clearly power games at play. Evidently I am the first to face it with such brutal honesty.โ€
I wrote about the new information landscape and how prediction markets are transforming media into a libertarian fever dream
Police have taken a suspect into custody for the UnitedHealth CEO's shooting in Pennsylvania. The man was found with a gun, silencer, four fake IDs and other items "consistent" with what police were looking for related to the shooting
Major health insurance companies have taken their executive leadership pages down following the shooting of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson