It's a bust of someone, looks like with a beard. See the shape of the head? Can you pick out the eyes?
Oh no, it's a child, looks like without a shirt on. I was looking at a smaller image file. Wow. Still searching.
Yes, I just took a look around and I'm not so sure this is legit. Be careful!
New York Times staffers say leadership âterrified of the young wokesâ
By Jon Levine and Keith J. Kelly July 18, 2020 | 10:33am
The Gray Ladyâs convulsions continue.
Former New York Times Executive Editor Jill Abramson says sheâs dismayed by the troubles surrounding the New York Times op-ed section, particularly the departure of its editor James Bennet after he published a commentary by a U.S. senator calling for military force to quell riots.
âI donât think that James Bennet should have been forced out at The Times,â Abramson told The Post, adding she âfelt terribleâ about it.
âHe and I worked together in the Washington Bureau of the Times and I think he is one of the great journalists of our time. So I was very sad to see him pushed out,â Abramson said.
Abramson, who led the Times newsroom from September 2011 to May 2014, expressed sympathy for Bari Weiss, who shockingly resigned from the op-ed desk this week in a blistering open letter to publisher A.G. Sulzberger. Weiss said sheâd been bullied and criticized by a Twitter-obsessed Times culture increasingly intolerant of any ideas outside its progressive, leftist orthodoxy.
Abramson said sheâd been told by friends still at the company that its internal Slack channels have become âmean-spirited,â with employees frequently âoverreactingâ to trivialities.
âI feel terrible for [Bari] if itâs true that she was bullied and that colleagues said the things she said they did. Anybody would empathize with someone who had gone through that,â Abramson said. âI had heard about a lot of overheated statements shooting back and forth on Slack. For more than a year I have heard about it.â
Abramson was at the Times before the newsroom had the Slack messaging system and when Twitter was a more benign place â and said it was âprobableâ that the growth of these platforms had impacted staffers since her departure.
The famed editor, who was ousted after then-publisher Arthur Sulzberger claimed sheâd misled him over the hiring of a new co-managing editor, pushed back against some of Weissâ claims.
âI really take issue with the notion that The Times editors cede their authority to Twitter and that a lefty cabal is somehow deciding what appears in the New York Times. That is ridiculous,â she said.
Her assessment was challenged by multiple current Times insiders, however, who said the âdiversity channelâ on Slack often devolves into a cesspool.
âIt started as a place for journalism and deteriorated into a place for rage,â one Times staffer told The Post. âThe masthead reads Slack and doesnât do anything about it.â
Times brass, in fact, are âterrified of the young âwokes,'â the source said.
âItâs [Bari] as a person that many find unacceptable,â added a second person familiar with the matter. âShe doesnât fit neatly into boxes of being on a side, and that really frustrates a lot of people.â
In a statement responding to Weissâ missive, a Times spokeswoman said the paper was âcommitted to fostering an environment of honest, searching and empathetic dialogue between colleagues, one where mutual respect is required of all.â
That claim, however, has been undermined by how Weissâ colleagues freely vented against her on Twitter in starkly personal terms both before and after her resignation.
Styles reporter Taylor Lorenz in May publicly attacked Weissâ story about MMA commentator and podcaster Joe Rogan as âdishonestâ and âuntrue.â In her piece Weiss attributed Roganâs popularity with men to his embrace of more traditional expressions of masculinity like hunting and body building.
âWhen did it become okay for a @nytimes reporter to publicly describe a @nytopinion columnist as âdishonest?â asked former Times opinion columnist Joe Nocera in a public rebuke of Lorenz.
Lorenz later argued she was not attacking Weissâ credibility and that she âenjoys reading Bariâs work.â
In June, Peter S. Goodman, a London-based economics correspondent for The Times, compared her opinions to âholocaust denial.â
After her resignation letter was published, many of Weissâ colleagues dismissed the document.
Tech columnist Kara Swisher described the letter as âdecidedly inaccurateâ and a âsadâ âpile of words.â
Nikole Hannah-Jones, who won a Pulitzer Prize for her work on the now widely discredited New York Times 1619 project, pointedly suggested the letter was false.
âInteresting how everything in this letter is simply taken as fact,â she said.
https://nypost.com/2020/07/18/new-york-times-staffers-say-young-wokes-terrify-leadership/
Is everyone all looped into this already?
1/ Q drops the Pinocchio metaphor of the puppet Pinocchio = Epstein and the puppet master Gepetto = Maxwell, the main forces behind underage sex trafficking, and the ensuing blackmail of participants.
Epstein Island = Treasure Island metaphor
https://twitter.com/Bruno062418/status/1284452834763780097
And the article, "The Darker Corners of Pinocchio" is at this link. https://the-artifice.com/pinocchio-darker.
InterdashingâŚ
Spicy! Me Likey!