>Can anyone answer this question?
>I'm asking "is it just a meme ? Or was it an actual Q drop picture?"
THis one?
>Can anyone answer this question?
>I'm asking "is it just a meme ? Or was it an actual Q drop picture?"
THis one?
>nakashimae
'muh pulitzer prize reporting'
The Washington Post wins 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting and for National Reporting
April 16, 2018More than
7 years ago
Contributors to The Postโs coverage of Russian interference in the 2016 campaign and the ongoing investigation included the following byline reporters: Greg Miller, Ellen Nakashima, Adam Entous, Tom Hamburger, Rosalind S. Helderman, Sari Horwitz, Devlin Barrett, Greg Jaffe, Carol D. Leonnig, Ashley Parker, and Philip Rucker.
>FakeNews is the enemy of the people.
>Who owns the Washington Post again?
>'muh pulitzer prize reporting'
>The give awards to the biggest liars and frauds. They virtue signal over the evil they do.
Ellen Nakashima is an American journalist who covers national security for The Washington Post.[1] She is a 2014 and 2018 recipient of the Pulitzer Prize.[2]
Education
Nakashima received a B.A. in humanities from University of California, Berkeley, in 1984 before completing a master's degree in International Journalism from City University in London.
Career
Nakashima began her journalism career at The Hartford Courant and The Quincy Patriot Ledger, before joining The Washington Post as a reporter in 1995. She has since served as a White House reporter, South-East Asia correspondent and a privacy and technology reporter until she started covering national security in 2009.[3]
Awards and recognitions
Nakashima has won a series of awards and investitures for her work at The Post. In 2014, she won the Gerald Loeb Award and the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service,[4] while in 2017, she was named Alumna of the Year by the Daily Californian Alumni Association.[5] She reported on Russian efforts to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election and contacts between aides to President Trump and Russian officials, work which earned her and her colleagues a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 2018.[1]
On 10 April 2024, Nakashima was among the guests invited to the state dinner hosted by U.S. President Joe Biden in honor of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at the White House.[6]
PB
>The spelling of "Promontory" changed on the description of this YouTube video sometime after January 13, 2021. The description on YouTube now shows "Promentory".
>"Unforced Error"
PB below
>The spelling of "Promontory" changed on the description of this YouTube video sometime after January 13, 2021. The description on YouTube now shows "Promentory".
>"Unforced Error"
>>GTOWTH
>"typo"
>R=18
>T=20