Narcissist Trump Uses Censorship To Quell The Truth
Coming into office with the lowest approval ratings of an incoming president ever, just around 33 percent (plus/minus some points according to whichever network or pollsters data you use), the very narcissistic Donald J. Trump, who claims to be loved by everybody, and calls himself the "rating machine," didn't like the media's story about a low attendance at his inauguration and actually slammed the media for reporting that.
New White House press secretary (spox) Sean Spicer criticized the media coverage of Trump's inaugural address. All the outlets missed the "dramatic support" the president received. He then started lying about the size of the crowd that attended. A lie that was too easily proved to be bogus.
Spicer's slamming the media over ratings was so unreal, that even conservative writer Charles Krauthammer, yes that one, who actually coined the term "Reagan Doctrine," called the press conference surreal, so he didn't have to use the words "just weird."
Well, he did anyway. As Fox News is technically still in the old(en) days, their video with Krauthammer - as it is unsecured can't not be embedded into the blog - so click on the link if you want to see the grand daddy of conservative journalism tearing Spox Sean Spicer apart.
Well obviously not all agencies were yet briefed on how to behave towards the new Narcissist in the White House, the "Gleichschaltung" memorandum hadn't reached the lower level employees. The National Park Service (NPS), a branch of the Department of Interior actually re-tweeted a picture by New York Times journalist Binyamin Appelbaum showing the two different crowds of the 2009 inauguration of Barack Obama and the inauguration of Trump.
Somebody, somewhere saw it and ordered all twitter messages from the Department of Interior to stop. Staffers were instructed that the “new administration has said that the department and all bureau are not supposed to tweet this weekend and wait for guidance until Monday.”
Well, I guess the story about the Twitter shut down, started to twirl up too much dust and on Saturday, the NPS tweets were back, the original tweet with the crowd comparison removed and replaced with a Buffalo, sorry an apology, calling the re-tweets from a day earlier "mistaken."
Sources: FoxNews, National Park Service
New White House press secretary (spox) Sean Spicer criticized the media coverage of Trump's inaugural address. All the outlets missed the "dramatic support" the president received. He then started lying about the size of the crowd that attended. A lie that was too easily proved to be bogus.
Spicer's slamming the media over ratings was so unreal, that even conservative writer Charles Krauthammer, yes that one, who actually coined the term "Reagan Doctrine," called the press conference surreal, so he didn't have to use the words "just weird."
Well, he did anyway. As Fox News is technically still in the old(en) days, their video with Krauthammer - as it is unsecured can't not be embedded into the blog - so click on the link if you want to see the grand daddy of conservative journalism tearing Spox Sean Spicer apart.
Well obviously not all agencies were yet briefed on how to behave towards the new Narcissist in the White House, the "Gleichschaltung" memorandum hadn't reached the lower level employees. The National Park Service (NPS), a branch of the Department of Interior actually re-tweeted a picture by New York Times journalist Binyamin Appelbaum showing the two different crowds of the 2009 inauguration of Barack Obama and the inauguration of Trump.
Somebody, somewhere saw it and ordered all twitter messages from the Department of Interior to stop. Staffers were instructed that the “new administration has said that the department and all bureau are not supposed to tweet this weekend and wait for guidance until Monday.”
Well, I guess the story about the Twitter shut down, started to twirl up too much dust and on Saturday, the NPS tweets were back, the original tweet with the crowd comparison removed and replaced with a Buffalo, sorry an apology, calling the re-tweets from a day earlier "mistaken."
We regret the mistaken RTs from our account yesterday and look forward to continuing to share the beauty and history of our parks with you pic.twitter.com/mctNNvlrmv— NationalParkService (@NatlParkService) January 21, 2017
Sources: FoxNews, National Park Service
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