Video wird geladen...

Video konnte nicht geladen werden

Zur Startseite

Why did Atlantic editor Jeffery Goldberg sit on Yemen chat group transcripts when he might have saved 53 lives and changed government policy by publishing when it was most impactful—before the bombing started? Goldberg clearly knew the group was real based on valid Signal usernames, as is also shown...

438,031 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

0 Kommentare

Keine Kommentare verfügbar

Kommentare vom Original-Post werden hier angezeigt

Ähnliche Videos

A 42 year old man, #Deepak, died by suicide in #Kerala after a video posted by #Shimjitha accusing him of inappropriate behaviour (#SexualHarassment) on a bus went viral. What followed was not justice, it was a digital lynching. The video that Shimjitha uploaded does not clearly show any deliberate sexual act. It shows a crowded bus, a man standing at a distance, and a fleeting moment where his elbow appears to brush past her as he gets down. Multiple viewers and eyewitnesses, including those quoted on television debates, have said the contact appeared unintentional, a consequence of overcrowding. Despite this ambiguity, Shimjitha chose to upload the video publicly, frame it as intentional harassment, allow it to spread unchecked to nearly 2 million views, only after the damage was done did she delete the video. This is where accountability comes in. If the act was intentional, the law was available. Kerala has clear legal mechanisms for dealing with harassment in public transport. Filing a police complaint would have ensured investigation, evidence, and due process. Instead, she chose social media as a courtroom. When you publicly accuse someone of a serious offence, You take responsibility for the consequences. You cannot later claim neutrality You cannot undo reputational damage by deleting a post. Deepak did not get a chance to defend himself. He did not get a fair inquiry. He got humiliation, abuse, and public branding as a criminal. And he paid with his life. This is not about silencing women. Women must speak up against harassment, and real offenders must be punished. But reckless accusations without verification harm genuine victims too. When ambiguous incidents are projected as crimes for online validation, trust in real complaints erodes. Social media outrage is not justice. Viral videos are not verdicts. Public shaming is not accountability. Shimjitha may stand by her allegation. That is her rig. But society has the right, and duty to question the method, the timing, and the consequences of her actions. One life is already lost. If this case doesn’t make us rethink how casually we destroy people online, then the next tragedy is only a post away.

Harish M

57,812 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

Regarding the Eric Trump / Daniel Cormier “text scandal”, I am open to being convinced otherwise, but I do not believe for one second that Eric Trump would text something so stupid to Daniel Cormier. It’s laughably stupid on its face to think that Eric Trump would ask a UFC commentator if any of the fights are “rigged”. That he would ask it in writing. And that he would not, for example, just pick up the phone and call Dana White or Joe Rogan himself. That said, I just want to understand what happened. Daniel Cormier said he was hacked. Is that to say he was hacked at the text level, or the X post level? Did he in fact make the post, and delete it? If he made the post, did he do it as a joke to illustrate how absurd the text hack was, but realized how the post could be misinterpreted as real? Or did someone make the post from his X account he subsequently deleted it. I know there are some who are going to say he made the post in earnest, thinking the text messages were real, intending to call out the “corruption”, and he has since been threatened, deleted the post, and claimed “hack”, etc. I can tell you exactly why I do not believe, even if he made the post, he did it believing the text message was real, intending to call out the “corruption”. If Cormier seriously thought the text messages were real, he would understand that by posting it publicly, it would literally destroy the UFC, his livelihood and his legacy - in addition to the legacy of everyone who has ever competed in the UFC. There is no realm of the universe in which even if it were in fact a real text that he actually received from Eric Trump, he would post it publicly. Because it would mean the end of the UFC. I just want to know if he actually made the post from his X account, or if the entire post was the result of a hack (hence the subsequent deleting of the post). Serious and sincere questions for clarity that would benefit everyone Eric Trump

Viva Frei

30,167 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat