So, I have a thought about the news media, and that is that if you point out the problems with running headlines like "Trump says Page documents exonerate him", the response is basically, "It's not our job to make American people news literate."
But whose job is it, then?
— Alexandra Erin (@alexandraerin) July 22, 2018
My fave tutor at uni had a great journalism 101 lesson: “If someone says it’s raining & another person says it’s dry, it’s not your job to quote them both. Your job is to look out of the f**king window and find out which is true.”
— Sally Claire (@Klujypop) July 14, 2018
Seeing many "THIS, THIS THING HERE, is the thing that FINALLY breaks him" hot takes.
That's adorable.
— WouldOrWouldn'tHat (@Popehat) July 17, 2018
Attempting to replicate doesn’t mean you’re out to get someone.
— Chris Holden (@profcjholden) July 6, 2018
Tenk om journalister, før de publiserer, hadde stilt seg selv spørsmålet: «er det nå virkelig slik intervjuobjektet mitt hevder at ting henger sammen?» Eller enda bedre: på forhånd av intervjuet i saker som dette, hvor de som intervjues lirer av seg programmessige svadasvar
— Niklas Trones (@nitrone) July 21, 2018
Med andre ord: Ikke gi uttrykk for noen politiske synspunkter med et snev av kontrovers rundt seg, ikke si noe om din religion/livssyn, ikke nevn at du tilhører noen form for minoritet, ikke nevn at du har noen hobbyer/interesser som enkelte misliker, osv. osv.
— Doremus Schafer (@DoremusSchafer) July 22, 2018
.@62Arne s gode opprydning i statsrådens og medienes forvirring om ny medieansvarslov nå også i tekstform: https://t.co/15c5p60GDy
— Doremus Schafer (@DoremusSchafer) July 21, 2018
The Internet Archive’s Open Library just added full-text search inside the 4 million books they have scanned. https://t.co/c7iZWp2CXr
— Dan Cohen (@dancohen) July 14, 2018
Etter 20 år i samme jobb mistet han adgangen til flyplassen på dagen. Uten forklaring og klagerett. 13 andre har opplevd det samme. https://t.co/jRTOVDfkZ4
— Lorns Bjerkan (@lornsbjerkan) July 15, 2018
Hei, @vgnett: Kan dere gi så inderlig langt faen i å lage totalt meningsløs clickbait ut av en fryktelig drapssak?!? @IkkeKlikk pic.twitter.com/VEczlYn2Nc
— Doremus Schafer (@DoremusSchafer) July 17, 2018
Twitringa etter mitt møte med ny fysioterapeut har blitt publisert tekst hos Sykepleien.https://t.co/5JTk510MSA
— Utvekslingspasient (@liksomliv) July 17, 2018
Just saying "use paper ballots" isn't enough to fix this. Backend election system security is a nationwide issue that requires close and ongoing attention from local, state, and national officials.
— matt blaze (@mattblaze) July 18, 2018
Thread about ICE using bureaucracy as a weapon. https://t.co/gtg9XTQCdg
— JennyKno (@JennyKno) July 17, 2018
I'm always struck by people who say "In 40 years of politics I've never ONCE seen antisemitism" and seem to believe that's a commentary on the frequency of antisemitism rather than on their power of sight.
— David Schraub (@schraubd) July 18, 2018
– er det egentlig et mål å ha så lavt sykefravær som mulig?https://t.co/U4sripSIYW
— Dagbladet Meninger (@dbmeninger) July 18, 2018
"We promise* not to vote."
*T&Cs: not an actual promise. Any resemblance to a promise is unintentional. We may break this promise without telling you. See our updated privacy policy.https://t.co/KCAOKyo1st
— Hector Denfield (@hectordenfield) July 20, 2018
"Men"? pic.twitter.com/W5tatiYIw0
— Doremus Schafer (@DoremusSchafer) July 21, 2018
Jeg stusset faktisk over at dette tallet på 40 % av befolkningen som riktig svar virket forferdelig høyt, men hadde ikke forestilt meg at @kompetansenorge hadde utvist _dette_ nivået av banal statistisk inkompetanse. 🙈🤦♂️https://t.co/5wSutG0EqU pic.twitter.com/upnIkk4gRt
— Doremus Schafer (@DoremusSchafer) July 21, 2018
Forslag: Gjøre disse 10 budene til et obligatorisk fag på ungdomsskolen. Og videregående. Og høyskoler/universitet/Livets Harde Skole.
Fra @IFLScience pic.twitter.com/zlDqpmeAHG
— Johan Kaos (@johankaos) July 19, 2018
#TheNewPainting
Albert Bierstadt (January 7, 1830 – February 18, 1902) was an American painter best known for his lavish, sweeping landscapes of the American West.#HistoryofPainting
Sunlight and Shadow, 1862Source: @NewarkMuseum
Beauty in #Art https://t.co/oD2enlOyvX pic.twitter.com/JSgQ8R9fx7— History of Painting (@TheNewPainting) July 20, 2018