But if you were on Twitter last night you would have seen the outrage. NYT's editors blamed the Gabby Giffords shooting on the bogus and debunked meme of the "GOP climate of hate" and the "cross-hairs map" that allegedly put then-Representative Giffords' life in danger.
(1/2) @nytopinion - commonsense suggestion by a journalist, am talking to attorneys this AM and exploring options. BTW, wonder.. pic.twitter.com/jACvxwUBZH— Sarah Palin (@SarahPalinUSA) June 15, 2017
(2/2) ...WHY someone would no longer be in public eye? Think constant libel & slander have anything to do with it? 🤔— Sarah Palin (@SarahPalinUSA) June 15, 2017
This paragraph in today's NYT editorial on Alexandria shootings is offensively, quasi-Stalinistically wrong: https://t.co/nWhhcHfMso pic.twitter.com/LkJFifUh73— Jeff B/DDHQ (@EsotericCD) June 15, 2017
Are you fucking kidding me? https://t.co/z9oXkYnm2l— John Ekdahl (@JohnEkdahl) June 15, 2017
Helps to remember the NYT is playing politics when GOP representatives were FUCKING TARGETED FOR ASSASSINATION.— John Ekdahl (@JohnEkdahl) June 15, 2017
We published an editorial last night on the shooting at the G.O.P. men's baseball team practice field in Alexandria.— NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) June 15, 2017
We got an important fact wrong, incorrectly linking political incitement and the 2011 shooting of Giffords. No link was ever established.— NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) June 15, 2017
We're sorry about this and we appreciate that our readers called us on the mistake. We've corrected the editorial. https://t.co/t1FZ3iEYQJ pic.twitter.com/k7WW5uJIQO— NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) June 15, 2017
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