livingston
20×102mm Vulcan
He who must not be named: How Hunter Biden became a conversation-stopper
When President TrumpDonald John TrumpFederal prosecutors investigating Giuliani: reportHouse Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman and top Republican to introduce sanctions bill against TurkeyTrump lashes out at 2020 Dems, impeachment inquiryMORE turned to the Bidens and Ukraine in a speech, MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace cut off the coverage, declaring she had to protect the listeners: “We hate to do this, really, but the president isn't telling the truth.” When Sen. John KennedyJohn Neely KennedyMORE (R-La.) tried to answer a question about the Ukraine scandal by referencing the Bidens, Chusk Tod angrily told him not to “gaslight” the nation.
The Bidens, simply, are not what well-bred people discuss in polite company, apparently. Indeed, many journalists seem to be channeling not Edward R. Murrow, the fabled CBS newscaster, but Florence Hartley, the author of “The Ladies' Book of Etiquette, and Manual of Politeness” in 1872. Hartley warned her readers to “avoid, at all times, mentioning subjects or incidents that can in any way disgust your hearers.”
He who must not be named: How Hunter Biden became a conversation-stopper
For news shows on MSNBC, CNN and other cable networks, nothing is more disgusting than the mention of what Hunter Biden actually was doing in Ukraine.
When President TrumpDonald John TrumpFederal prosecutors investigating Giuliani: reportHouse Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman and top Republican to introduce sanctions bill against TurkeyTrump lashes out at 2020 Dems, impeachment inquiryMORE turned to the Bidens and Ukraine in a speech, MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace cut off the coverage, declaring she had to protect the listeners: “We hate to do this, really, but the president isn't telling the truth.” When Sen. John KennedyJohn Neely KennedyMORE (R-La.) tried to answer a question about the Ukraine scandal by referencing the Bidens, Chusk Tod angrily told him not to “gaslight” the nation.
The Bidens, simply, are not what well-bred people discuss in polite company, apparently. Indeed, many journalists seem to be channeling not Edward R. Murrow, the fabled CBS newscaster, but Florence Hartley, the author of “The Ladies' Book of Etiquette, and Manual of Politeness” in 1872. Hartley warned her readers to “avoid, at all times, mentioning subjects or incidents that can in any way disgust your hearers.”
He who must not be named: How Hunter Biden became a conversation-stopper
For news shows on MSNBC, CNN and other cable networks, nothing is more disgusting than the mention of what Hunter Biden actually was doing in Ukraine.