Latest Coronavirus - Yikes

He is always trolling. Cant believe after 4 years yall still dont get it and let Trump give you stress hissy fits.

It’s one thing to troll about inauguration crowds, it quite another to do it while the whole country is scared. Most of that goes on the media, I’ll give you that, but why play those silly games now?

I’ll never understand those in the left literally hating everything he says or does and those on the right that couldn’t give a rats *** about professionalism as long as he pokes fun.
 
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In the entirety of the history of humanity, never has there been a person who spoke so much and said little of any value than Mike Pence. My God, its just one vague promise followed by four platitudes, kissing Trump's ass, followed by another empty platitude.

I don’t know about that, I don’t think he’s a lawyer.
 
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The simple truth is, he shouldn't be on Twitter. He just shouldn't. I understand there are people who love him "poking the left in the eye", but his ass should not be on Twitter. And he absolutely has diarrhea of the mouth. He talks too much, brags too much, and deflects too much. His biggest problem as President is he opens his mouth. If he'd just shut up and let his actions do the speaking, he wouldn't be such a bad POTUS, but his obnoxious arrogance won't let him keep quiet. I agree with you that his actions are what really matter, and on that front, he's not done bad, but he is his own worst enemy by constantly running off at the mouth and giving his critics something to attack.

All of that said, actions should speak louder than words. His actions are not near the level of incompetence his detractors would like to paint them as. He just needs to cut down on the talking.
The POTUS’s words mean something. They move markets, attitudes, actions of others...
When the President downplays the seriousness of something of this nature, others will follow his lead. This makes it that much harder to get people to make the hard choices that are needed to get through this with as little damage as possible.
 
Nolte: Advertising Karma Hits Corporate Media and the New York Times Calls for Bailout

Due to the coronavirus and a healthy dose of karma, newspaper advertising is drying up, and these same newspapers are now laying staffers off and slashing salaries while the far-left New York Times’ media columnist screams for a bailout.

GettyImages-1124253780-640x480.jpg


Before I get to the karma part, here are the details…

On Monday, we learned the Tampa Bay Times is suspending its print publication from seven to two days a week. That’s not a typo. A newspaper that had been printing every day of the week will now print only on Wednesday and Sunday.

This, however, is not due to a lack of clicks.

“The company reported a surge in traffic to its website … and growth in digital subscriptions over the last few weeks” but “the pandemic sent advertising sales into a plunge. In just the last two weeks, [advertising] cancellations have cost us more than $1 million, and there is no sign of quick recovery on the horizon. We must act now.”

Gannett, one of the largest newspaper companies in the country, publisher of, among others, USA Today, the Des Moines Register, and Arizona Republic, announced a sweeping round of furloughs. A memo from Gannett CEO Paul Bascobert asked employees to immediately make a “collective sacrifice … as soon as this week.”

“Our plan is to minimize long-term damage to the business by implementing a combination of furloughs and pay reductions,” the memo explains.

Finally, Chicago’s Daily Herald is slashing newsroom salaries by 15 percent and salaries at its parent company by 20 percent.

And with this news, all released on Monday (the floundering BuzzFeed cut salaries by up to 25 percent last week), the far-left New York Times published a panicked and ludicrous bailout proposal…

“The coronavirus is likely to hasten the end of advertising-driven media. … And government should not rescue it,” the Times columnist says, which is fair enough: The thought of my tax dollars funding people who hate me is a bit much.

What the Times wants, though, is sugar daddies to save journalism. Get this…
Let every corporate media DIE no matter what. These rags don't deserve to be read by anyone much less bailed out. Worthy products need no bailout.
 
LOL. Fear monger much? Economic collapse? Dude. Economic pause. Thats all.

Economic pause, or whatever it is, you really agree with him trolling over more important things he could be concerning himself with? What does Facebook and Nielsen ratings have to do with anything right now?
 
He isn't being petty, he is being him. Jesus whats wrong with you libs today. Its like Trump has only been in office for 3 months or something and you are just now finally wiping the rage foam from your mouths. Do you people not learn?

I think we're somewhere between anger and bargaining..

cpmnmouxeaey59t-large.jpg
 
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Nolte: Advertising Karma Hits Corporate Media and the New York Times Calls for Bailout

Due to the coronavirus and a healthy dose of karma, newspaper advertising is drying up, and these same newspapers are now laying staffers off and slashing salaries while the far-left New York Times’ media columnist screams for a bailout.

GettyImages-1124253780-640x480.jpg


Before I get to the karma part, here are the details…

On Monday, we learned the Tampa Bay Times is suspending its print publication from seven to two days a week. That’s not a typo. A newspaper that had been printing every day of the week will now print only on Wednesday and Sunday.

This, however, is not due to a lack of clicks.

“The company reported a surge in traffic to its website … and growth in digital subscriptions over the last few weeks” but “the pandemic sent advertising sales into a plunge. In just the last two weeks, [advertising] cancellations have cost us more than $1 million, and there is no sign of quick recovery on the horizon. We must act now.”

Gannett, one of the largest newspaper companies in the country, publisher of, among others, USA Today, the Des Moines Register, and Arizona Republic, announced a sweeping round of furloughs. A memo from Gannett CEO Paul Bascobert asked employees to immediately make a “collective sacrifice … as soon as this week.”

“Our plan is to minimize long-term damage to the business by implementing a combination of furloughs and pay reductions,” the memo explains.

Finally, Chicago’s Daily Herald is slashing newsroom salaries by 15 percent and salaries at its parent company by 20 percent.

And with this news, all released on Monday (the floundering BuzzFeed cut salaries by up to 25 percent last week), the far-left New York Times published a panicked and ludicrous bailout proposal…

“The coronavirus is likely to hasten the end of advertising-driven media. … And government should not rescue it,” the Times columnist says, which is fair enough: The thought of my tax dollars funding people who hate me is a bit much.

What the Times wants, though, is sugar daddies to save journalism. Get this…

Hell to the no!
 
Per Macrotrends.net.... the metropolitan population of Tokyo is 37 million. Per Macrotrends.net the metropolitan population of Seoul is 25.6 million people. So, you could say I was wrong in quoting 9 million people for Seoul, but only because I used a different metric than I had used for Tokyo... but that doesn't change the fact that there is no metric in which Seoul has a population of 38 million people. It appears that Trump was confusing the number 38 with Seoul's elevation of 38 m (125 ft).
I no longer care about our welfare, our safety or even how much toilet paper I have left.

I just want this Seoul/Tokyo population debate settled. It's tearing us apart and I can't take it!
 
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