Home » The NY Times’ war on women

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The <i>NY Times’</i> war on women — 12 Comments

  1. “It is not about the quality of our journalism, which in my mind has never been better,” he said.
    I have contended for years that leftists live in fantasyland. Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad.

  2. The left are turning into cannabals. Mozilla and now the NYT are just the beginning. A coalition of aggrieved victim groups will always turn on each other eventually. The friction between blacks and hispanics, drag queens and ‘transgenders’, and privileged white females and “angry black males” increases as each reaches for more influence and power. Time for popcorn, a hoppy ale, as we watch the flesh fly.

  3. “Dean Baquet is married to a white woman.”

    And this proves he does not beat his wife or resent a white female boss? 😉 I’m not a fan of Jill Abramson or anyone remotely associated with the NYT, in fact I do not give bovine excrement about this brouhaha, although I find it extremely amusing. Let them eat their own.

  4. The very idea that she was fired over her paycheck didn’t pass the laugh test.

    She was speaking truth to power…

    Oh, the irony.

    Of course, who could miss the fact that her style mirrors that of Hillary or Anna Wintour.

    You have been warned.

  5. Get out the popcorn. Let’s him and you fight, especially when both him and you are enemies of wingnuts like me.

    Wouldn’t it be nice if Carlos Slim lost a ton of money on the NYT, only to find out he lost his telecom monopoly in Mexico? 🙂

  6. Yawn. Big flippin’ deal, mongrels, all of them ugly nasty stinky curs, growling and snarling.

  7. The crew over at conservativetreehouse had another idea that makes sense. Not so long ago Abramson actually criticized the administration for being so opaque when it promised to be transparent.

    Given the WH tendency for staffers to phone or email reporters who say things they don’t like, it is not too hard to imagine Sulzberger getting a call about how to deal with Abramson. If so, it was one more toxic element in the mix.

  8. I recently had my only departmental co-worker leave the company and I can attest it’s certainly possible for someone to do a good job technically and still be absolutely unmissed otherwise. Even today I was talking with a vendor who said he was so glad I was “back” because the other guy was so annoying to deal with. It turns out my co-worker had told the vendor not to call me any more because he was taking over that role, although no one at the company had ever authorized him to do that. And, of course, the vendor didn’t know, so he went along with it. But, boy, did he have a lot to say (politely) now that the other guy is gone. Sorry, to vent, but I’m still a little flabbergasted. We should have fired him years ago so, right now at least, I can totally sympathize with the NYT. This guy seemed to be clueless that he pissed everyone around him off and seemed to think only technical proficiency was important.

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