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WaPo's expert source on Twitter doesn't mind doxxing those fascists who are for 'free speech'

I was awfully glad to see my colleague Doug write a post about this the other day, and I’d like to expand upon it a little. I was a newspaper reporter well before there was the internet, and the local university sent over a book of expert sources on just about any topic if you needed a pithy quote for a piece you were working on. Media outlets these days have their own sources they like to consult: If NPR ever needs an expert for a piece, it has the usual suspects on speed dial, like the SPLC or Planned Parenthood or Media Matters. And media outlets can always find a professor or Ph.D. candidate to give insight, like drag queen and Ph.D. candidate Lil Miss Hot Mess, who co-authored an academic paper on “drag pedagogy” and “the playful practice of queer imagination in early childhood.”

In a recent piece in the Washington Post about the dangers of Elon Musk unleashing free speech on Twitter, the reporter consulted Alejandra Caraballo, a clinical instructor at Harvard Law’s cyberlaw clinic, about Musk “opening the gates of hell.” Caraballo’s expertise is apparently cyberlaw, but we’ve seen them a lot on Twitter, naming and shaming “stochastic terrorists” like Libs of TikTok and Christopher Rufo and Matt Walsh who are trying to get children’s hospitals bombed by reposting their own videos advertising their services. Caraballo’s a full-on trans activist, which is fine, but maybe mention that.

As Doug reported, Caraballo sure likes to threaten Supreme Court justices:

“The 6 justices who overturned Roe should never know peace again.” Oh, and here are their photos. She didn’t give out their home addresses (someone else did), but she doesn’t mind doxxing those fascists who are for quote-unquote “free speech.”

Yep. And once again, the Washington Post’s go-to source for civility on social media.

Be wary of anyone who uses the word “fascists,” and especially be wary of anyone who puts “free speech” in quotation marks.


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