Whitehouse suspends CNN reporter press pass

Jim Acosta violated one of the oldest rules of journalism

https://nypost.com/2018/11/07/jim-acosta-violated-one-of-the-oldest-rules-of-journalism/

November 7, 2018

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By producing a split decision, the election that was supposed to end all elections turned out to be fairly predictable. But it’s the day after that was unlike any other.

The Republican president, the likely speaker of the Democrat-controlled House and the Senate’s Republican majority leader each started Wednesday by talking about working together to get things done. They talked to each other privately and talked separately in public about what they thought they could accomplish for the country.

For most Americans, that would make for a very good day. Given the overheated environment leading up to the midterms and the fear among many that we are drifting toward an era of disunion and spreading political violence, bipartisan pledges to work together for the common good were like the sudden emergence of a bright candle flickering in the wind.

Alas, it was the last thing some members of the White House press corps wanted, so they tried to snuff it out.

The conduct of a handful of so-called reporters during President Trump’s news conference was disgraceful beyond measure. This is not journalism, this is narcissism.

Naturally, the boorish Jim Acosta of CNN was the instigator. As is his habit, Acosta doesn’t ask questions — he makes accusations and argues. Almost daily, he does it with the press secretary; Wednesday, he did it with the president.

“I want to challenge you,” Acosta began after Trump called on him. Trump realized he’d made a mistake, murmuring, “Here we go,” and Acosta didn’t disappoint.

He insisted that despite the president’s use of the word “invasion,” the caravan of Central American migrants “is not an invasion.”

He adopted a lecturing, I-know-best tone to declare that “they’re hundreds and hundreds of miles away; that’s not an invasion.”
Trump’s response should not have been necessary: “Honestly, I think you should let me run the country, you run CNN.”

After more back-and-forth, he called Acosta “a rude, terrible person” and said “CNN should be ashamed of itself.”

That should have been enough — Acosta got the attention he wanted and got Trump’s goat, giving his network video it could make hay out of for days. Besides, there were scores of other reporters raising their hands to be called on.

But Acosta wouldn’t give up the microphone and kept talking over Trump, trying to lob another grenade.

The president, clearly angry now and stepping away from the podium as if he might bolt the room, pointed at him and said forcefully, “That’s enough, that’s enough. Put down the mic.”

Finally, Acosta sat down, then stood up to argue again, interrupting another reporter. That reporter, from NBC, praised Acosta and picked up the baton by making his own accusation disguised as a question. He mentioned Trump’s attacks on Democrats and “asked” the president: Why are “you are pitting Americans against one another?”

Trump, to his credit, actually answered in a substantive way, but that didn’t satisfy because the reporter didn’t really ask a question. He too just wanted to make an accusation and argue. On camera.

There was a time not long ago when young journalists were taught not to become the story. Apparently, many news organizations have flipped that lesson on its head.

But we are witnessing something more insidious here than media trash talk. Plain and simple, we are watching expressions of personal hatred.

Yes, it’s true that most journalists lean far left and their bias sticks out like so many sore thumbs. That’s been true for a long time, but political bias is an insufficient explanation for the Jim Acostas of our time.

They hate Trump. They really, really hate him. There’s nothing professional about it.

They are not alone. Take a poll of almost any major newsroom in America and the vast majority of those working there, if they are being honest, will confess that they too can’t stand the existence or the sound of Trump.

Or try to imagine Acosta and his ilk behaving in similarly hostile fashion toward Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton. Keep trying, but you can’t imagine it because it never happened. Both of those pols lied to journalists repeatedly, yet you can bet 90 percent still voted straight Democratic.

Even if they didn’t like Obama or Clinton, the political reporters would never dare accuse them publicly of anything, argue with them or interrupt them. Even when skeptical, they were respectful.

Recall how Obama used to spend 10, 15 and even 20 minutes answering a single question — without interruption.

Many in the press corps may have found him overbearingly arrogant. They may have resented the way he looked down on them and bristled at critical stories or tough questions. They knew he started more leak investigations than any other president, and might have feared him because his Justice Department wiretapped a Fox News reporter during a leak case.

But they would never interrupt him or insult him or refuse to give up the microphone.

White House press credentials are not a universal right. There are implicit expectations of proper behavior, and the White House decision to suspend Acosta’s credential is warranted.

Just as Acosta can’t go into a movie theater and yell “Fire” when there is no fire, he should not have the right to hijack a presidential press conference to suit his own ego.

It is also long past time for his colleagues, including those from other outlets, to remind him that his shameful conduct is making all of them look bad. More important, scenes like Wednesday’s further erode the public’s already declining trust of the media and fuel resistance to the First Amendment.

The anti-Trump antics are no longer a sideshow. America has serious problems as well as dangerous enemies, and the mere prospect of Trump, Nancy Pelosi and Mitch McConnell working together is the best news we could have hoped for Wednesday.

Instead, it was overshadowed by a few narcissists chasing their own vanity.
 
Bull$#@!, zooming in does not speed up the action, it is just zooming in. His arm moves faster in pixels per second, but the action takes the same amount of time. The video is more grainy because it isn't the original and went through some editing, but he didn't make it look worse than it was except to zoom in.

The point is the media is lying, again..

And it would be polite of him to apologize, a "pardon me ma'am" while he karate chops her arms means you apologize with a "sorry" after.

Bullshit back- zooming in can speed up the action and it was NO karate chop.

Yes, Acosta was not behaving well, and neither was Trump, but to carry on like the girl was attacked in pure bullshit at it's finest.
 
Bullshit back- zooming in can speed up the action and it was NO karate chop.

Can't you read???

His arm moves faster in pixels per second, but the action takes the same amount of time. The video is more grainy because it isn't the original and went through some editing, but he didn't make it look worse than it was except to zoom in.


There was absolutely a light karate chop. Obviously it wasn't full strength, but that is what he did to her arm.


Yes, Acosta was not behaving well, and neither was Trump, but to carry on like the girl was attacked in pure bullshit at it's finest.


Trump didn't push or hit any women's arms.
 
Can't you read???




There was absolutely a light karate chop. Obviously it wasn't full strength, but that is what he did to her arm.





Trump didn't push or hit any women's arms.
Ender will defend the enemy to his dying breath, he is either a troll or he has a psychological problem.
 
Can't you read???




There was absolutely a light karate chop. Obviously it wasn't full strength, but that is what he did to her arm.





Trump didn't push or hit any women's arms.

dannno- I'm a blackbelt & a filmmaker.

Like I said- Acosta was a jerk, but to make a YUGE scene out of this is nonsense.
 
dannno- I'm a blackbelt & a filmmaker.

Like I said- Acosta was a jerk, but to make a YUGE scene out of this is nonsense.
Then you should know just how differences in compression can cause changes in the speed of clips, lost frames etc.
 
dannno- I'm a blackbelt & a filmmaker.

Ok, then you should agree with what I'm saying.. zooming in speeds up the amount the pixels move per second on the screen, but the action takes the same amount of time.. so it's not really "speeding up".

Certainly not "doctored" except for the part about zooming in.. but it is dishonest to say that zooming in is dishonest. That is just what you do when you want to get a closer look.

I believe a karate chop is when your palm is open, and you "chop" down with the bottom of your hand onto something. That is what he did. It wasn't hard. He didn't break her arm. But that's what he did. If you saw something else, make the argument. But everybody will disagree with you unless they are dishonest.

Like I said- Acosta was a jerk, but to make a YUGE scene out of this is nonsense.

They took his press pass away, that was fair, they don't need people man handling the women with the mic at these events.

It's the leftist media that is making a big scene about the whole thing because he got removed.
 
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Ok, then you should agree with what I'm saying.. zooming in speeds up the amount the pixels move per second on the screen, but the action takes the same amount of time.. so it's not really "speeding up".

Certainly not "doctored" except for the part about zooming in.. but it is dishonest to say that zooming in is dishonest. That is just what you do when you want to get a closer look.

I believe a karate chop is when your palm is open, and you "chop" down with the bottom of your hand onto something. That is what he did. It wasn't hard. He didn't break her arm. But that's what he did. If you saw something else, make the argument. But everybody will disagree with you unless they are dishonest.



They took his press pass away, that was fair, they don't need people man handling the women with the mic at these events.

It's the leftist media that is making a big scene about the whole thing because he got removed.

He was pointing when she grabbed for the mic- he was still pointing as his arm came down. It was NOT a karate chop- just part of the movement he had started before she went for the mic.

And I didn't say zooming was "dishonest"- just that it does change the speed.
 
He was pointing when she grabbed for the mic- he was still pointing as his arm came down. It was NOT a karate chop- just part of the movement he had started before she went for the mic.

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And I didn't say zooming was "dishonest"- just that it does change the speed.

No, it doesn't.. not in the way the dishonest media is saying. It increases the distance the pixels travel, but the arm still takes the same amount of time to come down.
 
Lord, dannno. A karate chop is a specific thing. One stiffens the hand, one strikes with the edge, one focuses the force and momentum to maximize the impact.

Look at the pic you posted with the cute little red circles on it. If he tried to break a board with that form--his fingers curved and apart that way--how many bones would he break?

The guy was not being a journalist. He was being an immature little jerk. That kind of behavior would get him kicked out of most preschools. This pro- versus anti-karate chop noise serves only to distract people from that fact. It's a distraction. It can only obscure the ugly truth about how low CNN has sunk.

It's a nothingburger that CNN wants people to talk about because the more some people focus on a nothingburger detail, the more other people will decide the whole incident is a nothingburger.

Stop obsessing.
 
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Lord, dannno. A karate chop is a specific thing. One stiffens the hand, one strikes with the edge, one focuses the force and momentum to maximize the impact.

Look at the pic you posted with the cute little red circles on it. If he tried to break a board with that form--his fingers curved and apart that way--how many bones would he break?

The guy was not being a journalist. He was being an immature little jerk. That kind of behavior would get him kicked out of most preschools. This pro- versus anti-karate chop noise serves only to distract people from that fact. It's a distraction. It can only obscure the ugly truth about how low CNN has sunk.

It's a nothingburger that CNN wants people to talk about because the more some people focus on a nothingburger detail, the more other people will decide the whole incident is a nothingburger.

Stop obsessing.

It is the best and closest description to what happened. It was a strike with an open palm in the same motion as a karate chop with the same contact point. I called it a light karate chop.

It is not enough to call it an assault, but it's enough to pull his creds, that is not how those things are supposed to work.

The right is not obsessing, the left is obsessing over it. The right is simply defending their position.
 
It is the best and closest description to what happened. It was a strike with an open palm in the same motion as a karate chop with the same contact point. I called it a light karate chop.

It is enough to pull his creds, that is not how those things are supposed to work.

The right is not obsessing, the left is obsessing over it.

He grabbed the mike with one hand and tried to push her away with the other arm.

He's an asshole. One needs no karate to be an asshole.

Of course leftists are focusing on the karate chop statement. Anyone who knows the first thing about karate can tell a chop from a backhanded shove. The left will pick at any tiny factual mistake in a desperate attempt to discredit their critics. Only an idiot would play that game.
 
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It is the best and closest description to what happened. It was a strike with an open palm in the same motion as a karate chop with the same contact point. I called it a light karate chop.

It is not enough to call it an assault, but it's enough to pull his creds, that is not how those things are supposed to work.

The right is not obsessing, the left is obsessing over it. The right is simply defending their position.

It is a fitting description for moving his hand in that manner and universally recognized.

The left is way too quick at times to describe normal social situations as abuse yet here we have an example of a man intentionally putting his hands on a woman, preventing her from doing her job and they defend him. If people do not wake up to all the incidents this year where the left has exposed themselves for being the frauds they are, they never will.

If this was outside the press room we typically would have seen some guy become her white knight, whom would have came at him in a physically threatening manner or actually kicked his ass for it. If he did this too another guy outside that room in many cases it would not have ended well for him.
 
It's a nothingburger that CNN wants people to talk about because the more some people focus on a nothingburger detail, the more other people will decide the whole incident is a nothingburger.

Stop obsessing.

Cunninglingus and psychiatry brought us to this.
 
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