• @[email protected]
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    255 months ago

    Yeah - I’m calling bullshit at this point.

    This isn’t reporting - it’s just flogging a narrative.

    And I say that as someone who argued for Biden dropping out.

    • @givesomefucks
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      25 months ago

      Why?

      This is how these things happen. You’re viewing it as just political, but for these campaign workers, it’s a lot closer.

      They didn’t just realize Biden was bad. This has been an open an obvious secret for them for a long time. And the dam has finally broken and people are talking

      Everytime someone talks, more people feel comfortable talking.

      There’s no way to stop it once it starts except getting in front of it. The longer Biden waits and the more talk. The more it hurts the party

      Trust is eroding and there wasn’t much in the party to begin with

      • Blanksy
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        -195 months ago

        I agree, the media and the Whitehouse has been covering for him for a long time but now the cats out of the bag and I’ve heard a couple people say they were covering for him because they feared blowback from the Whitehouse

    • @TropicalDingdong
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      5 months ago

      If its new/ people keep repeating it, its news-worthy.

      If its reposting/ rehashing last weeks news, then it deserves downvotes.

      If you are sick of hearing the news, maybe log out, take a break.

      But the news is what the news is.

    • jwigglerOP
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      -55 months ago

      How do you mean? Like, you don’t actually think campaign aids said these things?

      Not sure what flogging a narrative really means

      • @[email protected]
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        105 months ago

        Flogging a narrative - someone has a vested interest not just in promoting a particular idea or position, but in communicating the idea that there’s a broad consensus for that idea or position. That’s the “narrative.”

        For whatever reason (generally simply that that broad consensus doesn’t exist), they can’t simply report that some significant majority of people support the idea or position. So instead, they publish an anecdotal example of it - this particular person, who’s notable for whatever reason, supports it. Then the next day, they publish another. Then another. Then another. Then another.

        The goal is simply to repeat the same idea enough times that people who aren’t really paying much attention will come to think that it must be a notably popular position, since they keep seeing it mentioned.

        I have no doubt that an aide said what 's being reported. And I also have no doubt that a determined enough reporter could come up with pretty much any idea at all - for instance, that Kraft macaroni and cheese is the best food ever - then find some aide somewhere who would go on record saying it.