Ho hoho hoh oho, latest kike "hero" for freedom, etc., wants FBI, police to spy on Palestinians, ho ho ho ho

Apollonian

Guest Columnist

Bari Weiss' Free Speech Martyr Uri Berliner Wants FBI and Police to Spy on Pro-Palestine Activists​

Chris Menahan
InformationLiberation
Apr. 17, 2024

Link: https://www.informationliberation.com/?id=64397/

space.gif

uri-berliner-fbi-spy-on-pro-palestine-protesters.jpg
NPR editor Uri Berliner, who Bari Weiss' "Free Press" is pushing as a free speech martyr, shared a tweet "hoping" the FBI and NYPD were spying on pro-Palestine activists and pushed the "40 beheaded babies" hoax.


GLYO9cLWoAAEP7U.png


GLYPANnXwAEbFR8.png


GLS3TgdXsAAsvsi.png


Just as Bari Weiss quit the New York Times after hilariously claiming they weren't pro-Israel enough, Berliner is quitting NPR after hilariously claiming they're not pro-Israel enough.

GLYPBXoWAAAJwF3.jpg


His retweeting lies and disinformation in support of Israel's genocide campaign goes directly against NPR's social media policies but somehow he's the victim:

GLYPFpKWYAAv1nj.jpg

Weiss followed up Berliner's stunt with an article from Eli Lake smearing Tucker Carlson for criticizing Israel:

In his propaganda piece, Lake attacked Carlson as "Noam Chomsky in a bow tie" and insisted he's "wrong when he asserts that Israel and America are no better than their enemies."

Carlson now "proudly apologizes for evil and calls it the truth," Lake claimed, adding: "I look forward to his next dispatch, praising the gleaming shopping malls of Tehran."

Be sure to check out Weiss's "Free Press" for the latest dispatches from Tel Aviv.
 

Dozens Of NPR Employees Write Letter Proving Uri Berliner Was Right About Everything​


Women System April 19, 2024

Link: https://www.womensystems.com/2024/04/dozens-of-npr-employees-write-letter.html

Dozens of National Public Radio (NPR) employees signed on to a letter suggesting that their now-former senior business editor Uri Berliner was spot on in his assessment of the liberal bias that has taken over the network.
New York Times media reporter Ben Mullin shared screenshots of the letter, addressed to CEO Katherine Maher and Editor in Chief Edith Chapin, which claimed that Berliner’s essay in The Free Press had left many of them feeling as though they’d been personally attacked.

“About 50 NPR employees sign a letter to CEO Katherine Maher and top editor Edith Chapin calling for, among other things, a public rebuke of the ‘factual inaccuracies and elisions’ in Uri Berliner’s Free Press essay,” Mullin’s caption read.

“We’re writing to urge stronger support for staff who have had their journalistic expertise called into question by one of their own in a public forum,” the letter read. “We also urge more transparency regarding the consequences of making unauthorized public comments that seek to change NPR’s editorial direction.”
The letter went on to say that while both Chapin and Maher had shared their objections to Berliner’s claims — namely that the outlet been wholly disinterested in presenting stories that might hurt President Joe Biden or help former President Donald Trump — the employees were concerned that their efforts to spur policy changes through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives were being undermined by Berliner’s public comments.
“Staff, many from marginalized backgrounds, have pushed for internal policy changes through mechanisms like the DEI accountability committee, sharing of affinity group guidelines, and an ad-hoc content review group,” they wrote, complaining that Berliner was getting more attention and apparent change from a short essay than they had after years of work.

Their concern on that point, they said, was that others within the network might get the idea that a pointed editorial was more effective at forcing change than going through proper channels.
They also complained that Berliner’s essay had “made their jobs harder” and called on Maher and Chapin to clearly “offer public support and defense of those individuals whose work was directly undermined by the opinion piece.”
 
Back
Top