“Baseless?”

Don’t you think it’s time for The New York Times to stop using the cliché “baseless” when referring to allegations — now, actually, official accusations— of the seditious conspiracy to run President Trump out of office after the 2016 election? Of all the fake “journalistic” blurts emanating from this bastion of degenerate sell-outs, “baseless” is the fakest, as if the word printed in a headline were so magically potent, the sheer assertion of it can make all your problems just — poof! — go away.

It’s the thought process of wicked children who fail to develop a sense of true or false, right or wrong, who grow into adults specially licensed, by some new perversion of the social contract, to get away with anything. And those wicked children have become America’s managerial class, the elite who are supposed to do your thinking for you op-ed style, the credentialed experts, such as Tony Fauci, “economist” Paul Krugman, DEI avatar and NPR honcho Katherine Maher, Harvard law prof Lawrence Tribe. . . the list is interminable, but you get the picture.

More…

This entry was posted in Editorial. Bookmark the permalink.
5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

2 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
tom finley
tom finley
14 hours ago

Excellent post, sums it all up very nicely.

Jane Tzilvelis
Jane Tzilvelis
13 hours ago

I agree with the author. Just write the facts. Do not embellish the facts with words that detract from the facts. Just for the fun of it I looked up baseless in the online thesaurus. Here are a few more words that can dampen the facts.
https://www.thesaurus.com/browse/baseless