Opinion
By Jeff Childers
10/29/24
Good morning, C&C, itβs Tuesday! Only one week left. Your election-countdown roundup today includes: Amazon founder takes to the op-ed section to defend his honor and explain the far-left WaPoβs decision to ghost Kamala; two hundred more papers plus USA Today snub the chortling Veep; Times grudgingly gnaws on Floridaβs red-state status and refuses to credit the real cause; wildly ironic accident plagues Treasury Secretaryβs defense of the dollar; and surprising trend offers optimism for, mixed with concerns for the futures of, our young ladies and gentlemen.
ππ¬ WORLD NEWS AND COMMENTARY π¬π
π₯π₯ Yesterday, Amazon billionaire and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos clapped back. He published an editorial in his own newspaper titled, βThe hard truth: Americans donβt trust the news media.β The story intersected with three of C&Cβs favorite subjects, so of course it leads this morningβs post. We had to know: did the man who invented same day delivery cave to the virtuous mob after all yesterdayβs celebrity cancellations? Or, did the free (not free) shipping magnate bravely double down?
The e-catalog billionaire doubled down! Well, sort of. Bezosβ apologia took the form of a short, pugnacious editorial that sneakily mentioned a single candidate: President Trump. True, Trumpβs name popped up in a completely neutral context. But still. Thereβs something psychologically significant that Bezos left Harris out altogether, in a kind of inverse Freudian slip. Or was it was intentional?
Either way, it was a perfect metaphor for the WaPoβs non-endorsement snub.
In case you, like me, wondered whether the media is aware that during the pandemic it nuked whatever shredded credibility it had left, we can thank Jeff Bezos for clearing that up. It turns out that they do know. And Bezos blamed that, the rotten cavity where eviscerated mediaβs credibility used to live, for the paperβs decision not to endorse any president this cycle.
Everyone β readers and non-readers alike β expected WaPo to endorse Kamala βPlan Bβ Harris, and that, according to Bezos, is the problem. And so Bezos, surely under assault from every conceivable direction yesterday, pushed biased media right back in his criticsβ ugly faces.
Iβll let WaPo Publisher Bezos explain the mediaβs bias problem as he sees it, in his own words (just edited for brevity and clarity):
In the 1990s, the Washington Post achieved 80 percent household penetration in the D.C. metro area. But in this yearβs Gallup poll, our profession is now the least trusted of all. Something we are doing is clearly not working.
More and more, we talk to ourselves. Many people are turning to off-the-cuff podcasts, inaccurate social media posts and other unverified news sources, which can quickly spread misinformation and deepen divisions. The Washington Post and the New York Times win prizes, but increasingly we talk only to a certain elite.
Most people believe the media is biased.
See! Media does know we hate them! They just donβt like talking about it, I guess. Well, who can blame them? Anyway, Bezos continued, linking the problem of perceived media bias directly to presidential endorsements:
Presidential endorsements create a perception of bias and non-independence. They do nothing to tip the scales of an election. No undecided voters in Pennsylvania say, βIβm going with Newspaper Aβs endorsement.β None.
Ending them is a principled decision, and itβs the right one. Eugene Meyer, publisher of The Washington Post from 1933 to 1946, thought the same, and he was right.
I wish we had made the change earlier than we did, in a moment further from the election and the emotions around it. No quid pro quo of any kind is at work here. My views here are, in fact, principled.
His views are principled, but they are principled views informed by economic interests. Every single day, some Bezos-owned business or charity somewhere is meeting with another government official. As Bezos admitted in the editorial, βyou can,β if you want to, βsee this as a web of conflicting interests.β
Ha! The liberals do see it that way, and how. Welcome to the party, liberals. Live by the billionaire, die by the billionaire. Liberals fret that Bezos will break their favorite toy, a newspaper that always agrees with them, praises them, and constantly reminds them what virtuous little boys and girls they are. (Actually, it is controlling their minds and telling them what to think, but hey, they seem to like it.)
Wrapping our third C&C pet issue into one short editorial, and proving that even a broken liberal can tell correct time twice a day, Bezos made a terrific point about voting machines β apparently another Freudian slip. Did he mean to slip the voting machine issue in, only a week from the election?
On the surface, Bezosβ voting machine analogy supported a similar point about newspapers needing trust too. But look deeper:
Let me give an analogy. Voting machines must meet two requirements. They must count the vote accurately, and people must believe they count the vote accurately. The second requirement is distinct from and just as important as the first.
A truer word was never spoken, and Bezosβ argument should begin every conversation about electronic voting machines. Itβs just as important that voters believe the machines are accurate as actually being accurate.
It raises a critical question: Precisely what are the voting machine makers and people pushing them doing to increase votersβ trust? Related to that: how much do you trust the machines?
Now lets talk about the comments. Hoo boy. Thereβs was nearly 13,000 of them when I started, and 250 more came in while I was writing this part of the post. Bezos triggered the WaPoβs liberal readers even harder than the paperβs non-endorsement announcement. They donβt give a damn what Bezos says. They donβt give two squirts about his high-minded neutrality ideals or his idealistic goals to rebuild lost trust in journalism.
They just want their far-left paper back, bias and all. (Iβd quote you an example or two but you can easily imagine them.)
Bezos bought the Post back in 2013, for the inflated price of $250 million. At the time, the Washington Post was what they call βa distressed asset.β In other words, the far-left paper was going out of business. Revenue and circulation were plummeting, and, in the understated words of then-owner Donald Graham, the paper faced βa period in which the Post’s future would be more secure with someone else.β
Go woke, go broke, then a billionaire snaps up your woke newspaper.
Finally, I must mention the paperβs current discount for a digital subscription: only $29 for a year. If youβd asked me ten days ago who or what could have forced me to subscribe to the Washington Post β¦ well, Iβd have been hard-pressed. Maybe terrorists. No wait, make it alien terrorists, and only if they were giving out free vaccinations and playing rap music.
Yet here we are. It was too funny to pass up.
ππ The non-endorsement hot tub must look pretty good right now, and baby, itβs cold outside. The Hill ran a story yesterday headlined, βOver 200 Gannett outlets not βendorsing in presidential or national racesβ.β In other words, USA Today and all its local papers are out, sayonara; more than 200 papers in all, none of them will endorse the Cackling Candidate.
Maybe itβs the latest trend? Maybe newspapers, having decided for principled reasons to leap out of the presidential endorsement racket, will stay out? Or maybe theyβre just chicken, and they can see like everybody else that the Democrats selected a disposable candidate, and so theyβre like, why should we stick our necks out?
So far, the LA Times, the Washington Post, and now USA Today (and its 200 local papers) have defied furious readers and refused to run a simple endorsement. Itβs really something.
ππ The New York Times ran a highly gratifying but deceptive story that still made my morning, headlined, βFlorida Stopped Being a Swing State Slowly, Then All At Once.β Ha! The post-pandemic swing was to +1,000,000 red voters. That headline is encouraging enough, but the sub-headline added: βOnce a top presidential battleground, Florida is no longer competitive.β Take that, dems.
The Times bent itself into a damp pretzel trying every way it could think of to avoid saying the real reason why Florida flipped red. To set the stage, as the Times correctly noted, just a few years back in 2018, it was pretty purple. For instance, the Democratsβ far-left (i.e., open communist), gay, black, single, male-escort connoisseur, coke-snorting candidate Andrew Gillum, was nearly elected.
DeSantis barely scraped by after a contentious recount, edging Gillum out by fewer than 30,000 out of 16.1 million votes (0.5%).
But only four years later in 2022, DeSantis won re-election by millions of votes β over +20%. The Times ignored the obvious question: what significant event happened in between 2018 and 2022, say in 2020, which made DeSantis who he is, and which painted Florida deep red? Hmm?
The word βpandemicβ was mostly absent from the Timesβ article, which instead floundered around whining about wonky hispanic voting trends, pining over democrat underspending and voter-registration outsourcing, and gnashing its teeth about Republican gerrymandering.
The Times wonβt, but I will tell you how it happened. I was here. I was neck-deep in all of it.
Florida flipped red for one reason, and that reasonβs last name is DeSantis. The federal governmentβs fascistic overreach set him up perfectly. The hyper-fascistic overreach from Floridaβs blue counties armed DeSantis with even more ammunition. And, at some point in early summer 2020, DeSantis made the fateful decision that transformed him into one of the most well-known politicians in the world.
Governor DeSantis defied lockdowns at a time when doing that meant the narrative-enforcing media would immediately savage you and try to destroy your political career. DeSantis did it anyway. He also shut down the Summer of Protest. And he fought to free people βlike meβ who live in Floridaβs few blue counties.
The mediaβs effort to destroy DeSantis backfired. They just gave him more publicity. The result was that, over the next two years, Florida experienced a red tsunami of Republican in-migration unlike anything that has maybe ever happened in American history. Conservatives across the country fled to Florida in droves. Meanwhile, small herds of liberals moved out, indignantly muttering βdeathsantisβ to each other all the way up I-75.
These conservative pandemic gains led to Floridaβs legislative supermajority, which promptly, after close observation of the 2020 election, started plugging the holes in Floridaβs electoral code. Florida was already better than most, but now Florida is one of the most secure states in the country in terms of election integrity. They also resisted mandates and fought Biden every step of the way.
Florida stopped being a swing state all at once thanks both to Ron DeSantis and Joe Biden. But Iβm giving DeSantis all the credit.
π₯π₯ In the you-canβt-make-this-stuff-up department, a few days ago, just as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, 78, was about to explain how confident she is in the dollarβs long-term status, the Department of Treasury logo fell right off the platform. It truly must be seen to be fully appreciated:
CLIP: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen surprised by ironic development (0:12).
She was so surprised! You canβt ask for a better metaphor for the profound incompetence of the Biden regime. And note the Russia Today logo in the top right corner. They are having a great laugh at our expense. Literally.
ππ Be encouraged! In the under-the-radar file, one month ago the New York Times quietly ran an incredibly promising story headlined, βIn a First Among Christians, Young Men Are More Religious Than Young Women.β The sub-headline added, βIt has the potential to reshape both politics and family life.β That is an understatement.
βWeβve never seen it before,β said Ryan Burge, associate professor of political science at Eastern Illinois University. Something is happening. They werenβt even trying to increase young menβs attendance:
Young women, unfortunately, are headed the exact other direction. Twenty years of wokeness has produced this, a generation of men who earn less on average than women:
On the other hand, Generation Zβs men are more likely than its women to want kids and have a family. And, late in the story, the Times noted a shocking but related statistic that: βalmost three in 10 Gen Z women identify as belonging to the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community.β
That would be a problem for staying in a conservative church. Whatβs causing the epidemic of young women to identify as LGBTQ?
And β¦ politics appeared to be the gist. Unstated, not explicitly, was the fact that Gen Zβs men seem to be drawn not just to any churches, but to conservative churches (like the Southern Baptists, which cropped up again and again). Whereas young women are being repelled and pushed to join woke churches.
βAt this moment in Christian history,β the reported opined, βAmerican men and women are on divergent paths.β Politically divergent, that is. Politics has finally invaded spirituality instead of the other way around.
The realignment is bigger than young peopleβs choice of church. This welcome spiritual trend among men appears only to be a symptom of a bigger realignment. Behold this headline from just four days ago, in the New Yorker. Young men arenβt voting the way liberals want them to, and so they are even more firmly in the woke crosshairs than they even were before:
Compare that headline to this next headline, from the far-left Florida Keysβ Islander, dated the same day:
So funny. Letβs play spot the bias! (Whereβs Jeff Bezos?) When young men vote for Trump, the papers ask whatβs wrong with them? But when young women vote for Kamala, itβs portrayed as a positive.
Letβs call that what it is. Propaganda. And it must be influential on young women, who donβt want to have people asking whatβs wrong with them.
Do you suppose itβs been completely natural and wholly organic that Americaβs young women bucked the conservative trend and veered wide left? Or, could it perhaps have something to do with relentless political propaganda and faux peer pressure promising them fake happiness and feeding them terrifying pabulum about the patriarchy?
You tell me. But letβs celebrate the good news for our young men, who are getting plugged into the only thing that can help them now. And, in the long term, the ladies will probably go where the men are anyway.
Have a terrific Tuesday! And roll back here tomorrow, for more exciting and entertaining Coffee & Covid.
Donβt race off! We cannot do it alone. Consider joining up with C&C to help move the nationβs needle and change minds. I could sure use your help getting the truth out and spreading optimism and hope, if you can: β Learn How to Get Involved π¦
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The views expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of Citizens Journal Florida