Alleged movie theater shooter left long trail of extreme right-wing views and race hate. Also, a big fan of Charles Murray, it seems.
I would really hate to think The New York Times is dusting off the old 90s-era, Whitewater-style reporting for its coverage of Hillary this year. But, damn, it’s starting to seem that way.
I’ve watching this New York Times blockbuster about the now non-existent criminal referral about Hillary Clinton’s emails. And it is one of these stories that didn’t just come apart in one big way. It fell apart in several different big ways over the course of the day. Former Times reporter Kurt Eichenwald has a good dissection of how it all unfolded that makes a pretty good case that even now – post corrections and sorta retractions – the piece still contains major omissions and distortions.
A former cop and now law professor looks at the dashcam arrest video of Sandra Bland and explains what went wrong.
TPM is seeking a Polling Intern to help manage its award winning app, PollTracker. This is a paid internship program in which interns get a crash course in polling and in how a digital media news organization works from the ground up. We’re taking applications for a polling internship to begin immediately.
What you need to know about Ted Cruz’s weekend of Senate wackiness in 5 Points.
I find this sort of fascinating. We surveyed 1800 TPM Readers to find out who they thought was the “greatest president” out of the last five Democratic presidents: Kennedy, Johnson, Carter, Clinton and Obama.
As you’ve seen, the Times has now issued yet another correction on that terribly botched story about Hillary Clinton and her emails. The scale of the screw up is frankly mind-boggling. But there’s a point in the follow up – particularly Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet’s response – which I think points to at least an element of the problem.
Baquet says you can’t lay the blame on the reporters or the editors since their sources simply were wrong.
That’s wrong – and frankly a bit jarring to hear.
Republican Candidate for Governor in Missouri admits he was gay for five years because he as “abused as a child” but became straight again after a “religious experience”.
Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic & Policy Research, will be joining us in the Hive (sub req) Thursday, July 30th at 1 PM Eastern for a live chat. At the CEPR, Baker focuses on a diverse range of topics including housing, Social Security and Medicare. Get your questions in here.