Lee

11.9K posts

Lee

Lee

@rltsurf

California, USA Katılım Kasım 2010
50 Takip Edilen120 Takipçiler
Lee
Lee@rltsurf·
@MatrixMysteries Both my parents died and that month the SS administration reached into their bank accounts and withdrew thier recent SS deposits. I don’t believe this dead people on the roles bullshit
English
5
1
7
301
MatrixMysteries
MatrixMysteries@MatrixMysteries·
“They never removed dead people from Social Security because those identities kept other benefit payments flowing, and the second you mark them dead, ALL the money shuts off.” Elon Musk says it’s a built-in loophole — one that’s drained hundreds of billions from taxpayers.
English
60
1.1K
3.6K
36K
Lee
Lee@rltsurf·
@jjstyx You’re an idiot
English
1
0
0
15
Joey - Master of Wit and Sarcasm
If California Democrats were smart they should start all rallying behind Katie Porter. She is the only one with the humanity, compassion and civility to get this done.....
English
422
12
143
13.2K
Conspiratorial Templates
When Trump is gone it's important we never let anyone who supported him forget it. They shouldn't be allowed to offer an opinion on any serious subject ever again.
English
458
216
957
21.5K
Lee
Lee@rltsurf·
@gabseunagal No the liberals have been destroying America for 60 years
English
0
0
0
5
Gabrielle Renee Seunagal 🇪🇺
The demise of America started when the general population there decided being "anti woke," "based," and "owning the libs" was more important than electing serious candidates, raising the literacy rates, and embracing intellectualism.
Albania 🇦🇱 English
651
1K
5.3K
79.8K
Sir Pumpaloaf
Sir Pumpaloaf@Drownomatic5000·
@JVMonte2 Always been partial to this one but there are soooooo many.
Sir Pumpaloaf tweet media
English
3
2
25
841
Jim
Jim@JVMonte2·
What is the greatest “live” album ever released?
English
613
11
195
28.4K
Peter Girnus 🦅
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz·
@Sjusbrowsing You're not the only person advocating for it. You're the only person advocating for it who doesn't attend the dinner. The six corporations that own ninety percent of American media also own the lobbyists who draft the media consolidation exemptions. I signed the talking points.
English
2
3
13
1.2K
Peter Girnus 🦅
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz·
I am a managing editor at a national news organization you have heard of. I have held this title for nine years, which means I have attended nine White House Correspondents' Dinners, killed four stories, and produced a newsroom that hasn't won a Pulitzer in six years but hasn't lost an advertiser in four. Let me tell you how American journalism works. I am telling you because nobody told me. I had to learn it the way everyone learns it. Slowly. And then all at once. Every morning I attend a 9 AM editorial meeting where eleven people decide what 340 million Americans should care about. Our combined household income is roughly $2.8 million. None of us has ever staffed a newsroom that covers a community where the median household income is under $45,000. We live in Washington. We live in New York. We live in the zip codes our readers were priced out of in 2019. We decide what matters. That is the job. I have killed four stories in nine years. Only four. My predecessor averaged eleven per year. We do not call it killing. We call it deprioritizing. Sometimes we call it revisiting the angle. Sometimes we call it timing. A story about an advertiser's supply chain practices gets revisited. A story about a senator's stock trades gets revisited. A story about a pharmaceutical company that spends $1.4 million a year with us gets revisited for fourteen months until the reporter who brought it stops bringing it. That's editorial process. A metro reporter brought that pharmaceutical story to the meeting once. Fourteen months of work. Solid sourcing. Three former employees on the record. The room went quiet. I said we needed to revisit the angle. She revised it. I said we needed to revisit the timing. She revised it again. I said the sourcing needed to be bulletproof. She added two more sources. I said we should circle back after the quarterly review. She left the paper eight months later. She works in communications for a nonprofit in New Mexico now. Makes $38,000. I did not raise my voice. I did not send a single email about that story. I did not have to. Silence is the editor's veto. It requires no memo. It leaves no evidence. And the reporter learns. They always learn. That's editorial independence. I have reassigned two reporters who pushed too hard. Nobody told me to reassign them. That is important. Nobody tells you. The architecture does the work. You learn which stories get praised in the morning meeting and which ones produce silence. The praised ones involve the people we had dinner with last month. The silent ones involve the people who pay for the dinner. I keep the WHCD pins in a bowl on my desk. Nine of them. One from each year. When new hires visit my office they see the pins and they understand what a successful career in journalism looks like. That is mentorship. My editor taught me the same way. 2004. My first year at the paper. I had a story about a defense contractor billing the Pentagon $1,200 for a component that cost $35 to manufacture. Four sources. One on the record. My editor said the sourcing needed work. I revised. He said we should circle back after the appropriations vote. I waited. He said maybe the defense beat reporter should take the lead. The defense beat reporter had a profile series running on the same contractor. He needed access. The profile ran three months later. It won a regional Murrow. I did not bring my story back. My editor kept his WHCD pins framed above his desk. I remember counting them — fourteen — while he explained the timing wasn't right. Now I keep mine in a bowl. The bowl is bigger. That's training. In 2025, Gallup measured public trust in mass media at 28 percent. The lowest in the poll's fifty-year history. The first time it dropped below 30. When Gallup started asking in the 1970s, it was 72 percent. We have lost 44 points of public confidence in two generations. I was on the task force. Seven editors. Two consultants billing $400 an hour. We met for four months. I brought the Gallup numbers to the first meeting. I did not bring the advertiser revenue spreadsheet. Nobody did. We identified the problem in the second meeting. Misinformation. Social media algorithms. Media literacy. The problem was external. We were certain. The consultants were certain. We drafted a transparency initiative and proposed a series of op-eds explaining our editorial standards to the audience that no longer reads us. I wrote one of the op-eds. It was about our commitment to fearless, independent journalism. I wrote it in the same office where I had deprioritized the pharmaceutical story six months earlier. The op-ed ran on a Tuesday. The pharmaceutical company renewed its contract the following quarter. The other 72 percent have a media literacy problem. Six corporations control 90 percent of American media. In 1983, it was fifty. I know this because I have worked for three of them. Each acquisition was announced with a town hall. Each town hall included the phrase "editorial independence." I have attended eleven town halls. The phrase has never not been said. BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street hold top shareholder positions in all six. The same three asset managers that own my newsroom also own the defense contractor from my first story, the pharmaceutical company whose ad revenue holds up my floor, and the insurance conglomerate whose CEO sat two seats from me at last year's dinner. I did not make this connection in the editorial meeting. I made it at 2 AM on a Saturday reading a ProPublica investigation written by someone who left our paper in 2019. She does not attend the dinner. Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post. Marc Benioff bought Time. Patrick Soon-Shiong bought the LA Times. Laurene Powell Jobs bought The Atlantic. I was at the dinner the year Bezos came for the first time. He was seated at the head table. The room applauded. I clapped. I remember clapping. That's civic engagement. I attend the White House Correspondents' Dinner every year. Have for nine years. I have the seating chart saved on my phone from the day the assignments come out. The theme is always about the First Amendment. The banners always say something about a free press for a free people. This year the WHCA replaced the comedian with a mentalist — a man who professionally performs what he describes as "embellishment and partial truths" — because the comedy slot had become unpredictable. The last comedian called the president what he is. They stopped inviting comedians. The mentalist is better. He deceives people in what he calls "an ethical way." That's programming. The WHCA president — a CBS White House correspondent — described the dinner as a chance for the press and the president to get together in a different context and recognize the important relationship, despite how complicated it might be. I found this eloquent. It is exactly what I would have said. We want to be around our subject. Not adversarial to it. Not above it. Around it. Close enough to be invited to the after-party at the French Ambassador's residence. Close enough that the press secretary knows your first name. Close enough that a rescinded dinner invitation would feel like a professional consequence rather than an editorial decision. That's access. Access is how you build trust. Trust is how you get the story. Getting the story is the job. 250 journalists signed a letter asking for a "forceful defense of press freedom" from the podium at this year's dinner. The letter named the president. It listed his actions in detail. It was sent to the organization hosting the dinner where the president would be the guest of honor. The dinner is a celebration of the First Amendment held in the presence of the man who is arresting reporters, threatening to revoke broadcast licenses, and using the FCC to selectively enforce the equal time rule. The letter asked for a forceful defense. What it got was a mentalist. That took courage. Two hundred and fifty signatures. Meanwhile, 136 newspapers closed in 2025. Two per week. Since 2005, 3,500 newspapers have shut down or merged. Fifty million Americans now live in communities with limited or no local journalism. Newspaper employment has dropped 75 percent since 2005. Web traffic to the hundred largest newspapers fell 45 percent in four years. A hedge fund called Alden Global Capital owns more than two hundred of those papers through a holding company. Their model is efficient. Buy the paper. Cut the newsroom. Extract the revenue. Let it close when the revenue stops. They have done this to the Denver Post, the Chicago Tribune, the San Jose Mercury News. My colleagues at other outlets call this vulture capitalism. I call it a different business model. Everyone has one. That's portfolio management. We did not cover this at the editorial meeting. We were discussing the seating chart. The seating chart matters. Proximity to the head table correlates with source quality. I have the data. The pipeline runs one direction. A journalist's median salary is $60,280. A public relations specialist makes $69,780. Corporate communications exceeds $150,000. We train investigators for five years on $34,000 starting salaries and then export them to the companies they were supposed to investigate. That is not a pipeline problem. That is talent development. We contribute human capital to the broader communications ecosystem. Google and Facebook take more than half of every digital advertising dollar. We compete for what remains. The pharmaceutical company's $1.4 million is not an advertiser. It is a load-bearing wall. That's the business model. Jen Psaki left the podium and went to MSNBC. Ari Fleischer left the podium and went to Fox. I have had drinks with both of them. Not at the same event. At the same event it would suggest the podium and the press table are interchangeable. They are not interchangeable. The career paths are simply adjacent. That's networking. Networking is how you build a career. A career is how you serve the public interest. I am writing a book. My agent says it could advance in the low six figures if the sourcing holds. The sourcing requires access. Access requires that my sources trust me. Trust requires that when I write about them, they recognize themselves. I sent the first three chapters to a source last month. He returned them with two corrections. Both were accurate. One removed a detail about a policy decision that would have been embarrassing. I accepted both. The detail was not essential to the narrative. The source is essential to the next three chapters. The sources get the manuscript before publication. The public gets the book fourteen months later for $28. The advance will pay for the renovation I have been putting off since the last round of layoffs made me nervous about spending. That's the craft at its highest level. Last month I saw her name. A newsletter published by the nonprofit in New Mexico. She was covering water contamination on tribal land. Nine thousand readers. Clean sourcing. The kind of work that wins the awards we give each other. I typed three words into an email and deleted them. Then I pulled up next year's WHCD guest list. That's priorities. Yesterday, a satirist wrote a fictional piece about journalists at the correspondents' dinner. It reached 3 million people. A Fox News White House correspondent with 188,000 followers called the satirist a "lunatic." She wrote: "No part of this is true — including the timing of events he couldn't even manage to get right in fabricating this BS." Her tweet reached 357,000 people. She used a platform built on the First Amendment to fact-check a fictional job title in a satire about journalists who prioritize the wrong thing. Someone added a Community Note. To fiction. A New York Post columnist with 869,000 followers wrote a defense of the wine-taking. "What is this guy's problem?" she asked. "The wine was there for the guests to drink." She asked if the satirist wanted everyone to start screaming hysterically. She did not ask why 3 million people found the piece more credible than the institution it described. Others called it AI. "AI" is what you call writing that makes you uncomfortable when you cannot argue with what it says. The institutional immune system activated exactly as designed: identify the threat, classify it, neutralize it, resume operations. That's media literacy. The satirist wrote that a woman checked the vintage during an evacuation. The profession reenacted it in the replies. The satirist said journalists would prioritize the wrong thing. The journalists responded by prioritizing the wrong thing. The correspondent checked the byline. The columnist defended the wine. The Community Note verified the fiction. Nobody verified the 28 percent. That's editorial judgment. I have been in this industry for twenty-two years. I have watched us go from 72 percent trust to 28 percent. In any other industry this would be a catastrophic product failure. In ours it is an audience problem. The audience does not understand us. We will fix this with a podcast. I have been asked about all of it. The closures. The consolidation. The revolving door. The dinner. The trust numbers. I have answers for each one. Good answers. The business model changed. Scale creates efficiency. Government experience makes better journalists. Proximity to power is how you hold it accountable. Trust is a lagging indicator. I have given these answers at conferences. I have given them on panels. The foundation that funded the last panel on "Restoring Public Trust" is a subsidiary of the holding company that closed eleven of the newspapers. These are separate issues. Unrelated. I have been doing this for twenty-two years and I can tell you with certainty that the declining trust, the consolidation, the proximity to power, the revolving door, the advertiser sensitivity, the dinner, the wine, and the silence in the editorial meeting are all separate issues. I am one of the good ones. I track the trust numbers. I attend the dinner for the right reasons. I keep the pins because I believe in the mission. The proximity is incidental. The access is necessary. The silence in the editorial meeting is just how editorial meetings work. Once a year, we put on black tie, sit next to the people we are supposed to hold accountable, toast to the First Amendment with wine we didn't pay for, and call it a free press. The wine is $76 a bottle. It was included. I am already looking at next year's seating chart.
English
150
199
780
154.7K
Lee retweetledi
S
S@Sjusbrowsing·
@gothburz At least 150,000,000 people understand that the White House “press corps” is full of idiots. That legacy media is controlled propaganda. The ONLY ones who don’t get it are the “journalists.” It was nauseating to hear them goad each other into “protecting the first amendment”
English
1
3
17
1.3K
Lee
Lee@rltsurf·
@gothburz Your attitude IS the problem. Every time I meet “journalists “ they all have ego and glory themselves attitudes. Working Americans with attitudes and egos like yours get fired from their jobs for being a self righteous dick.
English
0
0
0
3
Val
Val@TrumpsHurricane·
This Liberal woman says “I want to know what MAGA Men find attractive so I can do the opposite” What is your response to her ??
English
14.7K
405
1.6K
214.7K
Katie Porter
Katie Porter@katieporterca·
I’m the only candidate in this race who is a mom. I drive a minivan, push a shopping cart, and I actually know how much groceries cost. And I know what it takes to make life more affordable for California families.
English
603
46
246
21.4K
Lee
Lee@rltsurf·
@OrevaZSN Move to Cuba you fucktard
English
0
0
0
1
𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉
No one “earns” a billion dollars. No one can work a billion times harder than anyone else. There is no good, ethical, or righteous billionaire. That kind of wealth can only be accumulated through the exploitation of the working class. No exceptions.
English
518
776
3.1K
518.9K
FireFighterDev
FireFighterDev@fire_starter457·
Hey MAGA- If teachers could truly indoctrinate children, 100% of children would be reading on grade level.
English
297
373
3K
35.9K
Gene Trevino
Gene Trevino@GenoVeno73·
To make myself clear.... FUCK RUDY GIULIANI And fuck the Pedo-in-Chief @realDonaldTrump for blaming Democrats bcos Rudy's in the hospital. Revelation 21:8: "But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts, the idolaters and all liars—they will be consigned to the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death." May Rudy get what he deserves.
English
26
11
68
2K
Sir !!! Tonka
Sir !!! Tonka@salehAbba10·
@HormuzLetter Iran’s Azizi calls Trump’s Project Freedom ‘delusional’ the undeniable fact is this: U.S. interference in the Strait of Hormuz isn’t about freedom, it’s about manufacturing a pretext for strikes. Blame‑shifting is empire’s oldest trick.
English
1
0
3
508
The Hormuz Letter
The Hormuz Letter@HormuzLetter·
BREAKING: In a direct response to Trump's new US Navy operation, Iran's National Security Commission Chairman Azizi says any US interference with the Strait of Hormuz will be considered a violation of the ceasefire, dismissing Trump's "Project Freedom" announcement as "delusional posts" and rejecting any "blame-shifting scenarios," per Tasnim. The "blame-shifting" Azizi rejected refers to Trump's framing of Project Freedom as a humanitarian and freedom of navigation operation, which lets him argue Iran blocking the mission would be the war-initiating act, allowing him to authorize US strikes on Iran without Congressional approval. This works around his 60-day war authorization which expired May 1.
English
50
309
1.4K
107.8K
Lee
Lee@rltsurf·
@RandPaul Stop the fraud and overseas give away
English
0
0
3
18
Rand Paul
Rand Paul@RandPaul·
More War means more debt and makes us less safe. Congress needs more fiscal hawks and more backbone. Interest on US debt is a top driver of future deficits, as past borrowing overwhelms fiscal outlook  | Fortune fortune.com/2026/05/02/int…
English
549
196
1K
57.5K
Lee retweetledi
Peter Babineau
Peter Babineau@TheRev_1878·
@RealJamesWoods You can preach about being on stolen land. You can live on stolen land. But you cant do both!
English
0
4
38
398