C
Cathoholic
Guest
News snobs around the nation got fed FAKE News again.
The people who take in real news (like Breitbart RedState, LifeSite, Tucker Carlson, etc. etc) , KNEW that the
conspiracy theories about Trump being at death’s door were phony.
.
The people who take in real news (like Breitbart RedState, LifeSite, Tucker Carlson, etc. etc) , KNEW that the
conspiracy theories about Trump being at death’s door were phony.
.
SCHOW: Media Spent Trump’s COVID-19 Diagnosis Pushing Conspiracy Theories About Photos Of Trump Working, His Health, Commonly Prescribed Drug
By Ashe Schow
Oct 6, 2020 DailyWire.com
Reporters spent the past few days pushing conspiracy theories that Trump was far sicker than he appeared, that the White House faked the photographs of him working, and . . .
As soon as Trump announced his COVID-19 test came back positive, reporters rushed to push the narrative that he was going to die. Even though Trump released a video saying he felt fine . . . . Some ex-staffers for President Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Elizabeth Warren even said they hoped Trump dies.
The media ran with the narrative that Trump’s doctors were being dishonest about his health and that he was much sicker . . .
It should have been obvious that Trump was not as sick as the media tried to claim. He was walking and talking normally the day he flew to Walter Reed…
…when Trump took a motorcade to wave to supporters who had gathered outside Walter Reed, the media freaked out that he was endangering members of the Secret Service, whose job is to protect the president with their lives. The White House said medical experts approved of Trump’s short drive, but the media had already decided not to believe the doctors and experts it has spent the past year claiming to believe…
…When the White House released photos of Trump working from Walter Reed, reporters tried to claim they were fake…
. . . . who tried to claim two photos of Trump working at Walter Reed were taken 10 minutes apart, suggesting they were staged or fake. Journalist Tim Pool spent the day trying to correct the conspiracy theory, pointing out that the times Ostrower was referring to was not when the photos were taken, but when they were rendered…
. . . . Perhaps the most dangerous overreaction from the media was its attempt to paint Dexamethasone – a commonly prescribed corticosteroid – as dangerous or experimental. . . . a Stanford professor claiming Trump couldn’t perform his duties as president while taking the drug…
. . . Actual pharmacists weighed in by saying the drug isn’t special or rare and that it’s prescribed regularly for a whole host of issues. . .
. . . The media freakout continued into Monday when Trump walked out of Walter Reed and flew back to the White House. Jennifer Jacobs, a reporter for Bloomberg, stoked conspiracy theories by reporting that she asked Trump’s medical team if any of them “recommended against taking Trump back to the White House.” She said “each one of the doctors shook their head ‘no.’ But not very vigorously.’” How vigorously were they supposed to shake their heads to calm reporter conspiracy theories . . .