The NYT literally works overtime and goes out of its way daily to beclown itself and further de-legitimize the press.
— horse with no name (@anthymspirit) March 2, 2017
Wow. It’s been a banner day for the New York Times!
First, as Twitchy told you, they got busted for stealth-deleting Claire McCaskill’s lie — which they repeated as truth — about never having met with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak. And now there’s this:
Opinion: "We do not yet know all the facts, but we know enough to see that Attorney General Sessions has to go" https://t.co/I9R3BIxFfn
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 2, 2017
So … they admit they’re spouting off without fully understanding what they’re talking about? Yep, that sounds about right. Way to go, NYT!
I appreciate you are no longer making an attempt to hide your bias "We don't know all the facts, but we made our decision anyway"
— Charles Signorile (@CharlieSigs) March 2, 2017
Bold, new, hard truth, fact checking media comes to conclusion without admittedly knowing facts. https://t.co/4mlC76gEHl
— Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) March 2, 2017
'We don't know all of the facts, but he's gotta go'? Hope your knee pops back into place after jerking it that hard…
— Bruce J. Bennett (@subammas) March 2, 2017
Facts? Facts? We don't need no steenkin' facts! #DemocracyDiesInShameOfYourBias
— 100 Proof (@ChampionCapua) March 2, 2017
has a new marketing campaign: "The truth is more important now than ever, but we don't need to know all the facts" #Unpersuasive
— 100 Proof (@ChampionCapua) March 2, 2017
Recommended
lol "don't know the facts but…." ??
— KP (@kpelner) March 2, 2017
Pro-Tip: When a sentence begins with the clause, "We do not yet know all the facts," that should probably be the end of it.
— Scotch and Briar (@scotchandbriar) March 2, 2017
Yet if you insist on going on with it, here are some suggestions:
— Scotch and Briar (@scotchandbriar) March 2, 2017
"We do not yet know all the facts, so we'll make the rest up."
— Scotch and Briar (@scotchandbriar) March 2, 2017
"don't know all the facts" sums up this newspaper very well #FakeNews
— Sam Adams (@TheWedge716) March 2, 2017
https://twitter.com/Vice_Fallon/status/837370727401680897
Parting idea:
You should stop that sentence after the word 'facts' then pin it to your timeline and make it an evergreen post.
— Rusty Weiss ?? (@rustyweiss74) March 2, 2017
***
Related:
NYT op-ed writer awakens from 8-year nap, shames Trump for using teleprompter
SHOCKER! The Federalist’s Sean Davis catches NY Times NOT living up to new motto
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