Anonymous ID: d2397a Sept. 12, 2024, 6:28 a.m. No.21576458   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6890 >>7098

News photographers slam Harris for reduced access

Alex Thompson

, Sara Fischer

White House News Photographers Association president said Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign team has engaged in an "unprecedented reduction in access" to the news media, according to an Aug. 28 letter from the association (WHNPA) to the Harris team obtained by Axios.

 

Why it matters: It adds to a growing frustration among the press corps about limiting access to leaders at the top of the Democratic Party.

 

That includes Harris, who has yet to do a solo TV interview and has avoided unscripted moments since she entered the race on July 21.

 

Driving the news: Jessica Koscielniak, president of the WHNPA, wrote to Harris' top aides last month protesting that"the four independent news photographer seats have been downgraded to one."

 

Koscielniak added: "The WHNPA strongly calls on the Harris campaign toreconsider the number of media seats allowed on Air Force 2."

 

The WHNPA wrote that the group heard the number of seats had to be reduced for security reasons and proposed either adding a "chaser plane" for additional media or the White House Correspondent Association (WHCA) reorganizing who gets a seat.

 

Zoom in: In an email, Koscielniak said that the WHNPA "did not receive a response and the situation has not improved."

 

The letter was addressed to Harris' top communications aides and the head of the WHCA.

 

The WHCA pushed the Harris team for weeks for more seats on the plane or a chase plane, a person familiar with the matter said.

 

Doug Mills, a veteran White House news photographer speaking in his personal capacity, told Axios that "the current situation puts the still photographers at a distinct disadvantage on every trip."

 

He added: "It's essential to us for people to understand the importance of having a full photographer pool. Every photographer sees each event differently. "

 

The intrigue: The vice president's office responded to the WHNPA late Wednesday after Axios reached out for comment, according to a copy of the email.

 

Harris' office wrote to the association that they explored adding more seats on Air Force Two and a chase plane and "learned both suggestions are not viable given available resources, including personnel and aircraft."

 

Asked why representatives did not respond to the WHNPA until after Axios reached out, the Vice President's office said they had "been in constant communication with the Chair of the White House Correspondents' Association as the Office worked to explore solutions to increase press access."

 

"It's very disappointing," Koscielniak told Axios in responding to the letter. "This is the smallest number of media to travel for a presidential race in my memory. When Vice President Harris became the presidential nominee, it should have been negotiated by the WHCA that the full 13 member travel pool be on her plane."

 

Reality check: The Harris team is trying to navigate an abrupt surge in media interest since Biden dropped out in July.Axios stop making excuses for this faker

 

https://www.axios.com/2024/09/12/harris-media-access-photographers-limits

 

Does she have body doubles? Is that what they are trying to hide?

Anonymous ID: d2397a Sept. 12, 2024, 6:54 a.m. No.21576563   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6890 >>7098

Australia to fine social media giants for enabling misinformation

Reuters Videos Updated Thu, September 12, 2024 at 7:24 AM EDT

STORY: Internet platforms could be fined 5% of their global revenue in a new move by Australia to prevent the spread of misinformation online.

 

It's part of a worldwide push to rein in borderless tech giants which has angered free speech advocates.

 

Canberra wants to make tech platforms set codes of conduct, to be approved by a regulator.

 

If they fail to do so, the regulator would set its own and fine the platform for non-compliance.

 

The legislation, introduced on Thursday, =targets false content that hurts election integrity or public health, calls for denouncing a group or injuring a person, or risks disrupting key infrastructure or emergency services==.

 

Communications Minister Michelle Rowland says it positions Australia at the forefront of tackling a growing international problem.

 

“This bill ensures that digital platforms are accountable for combatting mis and disinformation on their services. The top priority is to keep its citizens safe. Doing nothing to protect Australians from seriously harmful mis and disinformation online is simply not an option.”

 

An initial 2023 bill was criticized for giving the Australian Communications and Media Authority too much power to determine what misinformation and disinformation is, the term for intentionally spreading lies.

 

The new bill doesn't give the media regulator the power to takedown individual pieces of content or user accounts, the minister said.

 

Some four-fifths of Australians wanted the spread of misinformation addressed, the minister said, citing the Australian Media Literary Alliance.bullshit

 

Australia leaders have complained foreign-domiciled tech platforms are overriding the country's sovereignty, with the crackdown coming ahead of an upcoming federal election.

 

Meta, which owns Facebook, counts nearly nine in 10 Australians as users. It has said it may block professional news content if it is forced to pay royalties.

 

While X, formerly Twitter, has removed most content moderation since being bought by billionaire Elon Musk in 2022.

 

The platforms declined or were unavailable for comment.

 

Industry body DIGI, of which Meta is a member, said thenew regime reinforced an anti-misinformation code it last updated in 2022, but questions remained.

 

Australia's government is also running an age verification trial for social mediabefore setting a minimum age requirement later this year.

 

(https://finance.yahoo.com/video/australia-fine-social-media-giants-112449364.html

 

NWO dictatorship order accelerating. Orwell was right

Anonymous ID: d2397a Sept. 12, 2024, 6:57 a.m. No.21576579   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6584 >>6890 >>7098

Mario Nawfal

@MarioNawfal

🚨🇺🇸 DENVER FUNNELED COVID FUNDS TO HOUSE THOUSANDS OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS IN SHELTERS

 

Denver reportedly used federal COVID funds to house thousands of illegal immigrants in shelters and motels, leading to crime spikes and evictions.

 

Whistleblowers claim buildings have become magnets for violence, often involving Venezuelan gang members, and taxpayers have spent $70 million on this crisis.

 

Nearby cities, including Castle Rock, are considering lawsuits to protect their communities.

 

Sources: The Post Millennial ,

@FrontlinesTPUSA

,

@realchrisrufo

 

10:28 PM · Sep 11, 2024

·

4.7M

Views

https://x.com/MarioNawfal/status/1834056445392027838