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  1. I had a Genji get a bit fixated on me earlier, but to be fair, I did do this to him. (Clips at 75% speed for clarity and boasting purposes.)
    #Overwatch #Game #JunkShot
    1/2

  2. 🇨🇦🇺🇸👋🏽🙏🏽👋🏽 You know it is bad when the same people who helped 47 come into power— to now go against 47. At this point I do not care why… as long it is done. May more former and #LeavingMaga come to be. www.youtube.com/live/CJRiH4J... #canada #tariff #canadatariff #usa #uspolitics

    USA LIVE: 4 GOP Senators Vote ...

  3. 🇨🇦🇺🇸👋🏽🙏🏽👋🏽 You know it is bad when the same people who helped 47 come into power— to now go against 47. At this point I do not care why… as long it is done. May more former and #LeavingMaga come to be. www.youtube.com/live/CJRiH4J... #canada #tariff #canadatariff #usa #uspolitics

    USA LIVE: 4 GOP Senators Vote ...

  4. 🇨🇦🇺🇸👋🏽🙏🏽👋🏽 You know it is bad when the same people who helped 47 come into power— to now go against 47. At this point I do not care why… as long it is done. May more former and #LeavingMaga come to be. www.youtube.com/live/CJRiH4J... #canada #tariff #canadatariff #usa #uspolitics

    USA LIVE: 4 GOP Senators Vote ...

  5. 🇨🇦🇺🇸👋🏽🙏🏽👋🏽 You know it is bad when the same people who helped 47 come into power— to now go against 47. At this point I do not care why… as long it is done. May more former and #LeavingMaga come to be. www.youtube.com/live/CJRiH4J... #canada #tariff #canadatariff #usa #uspolitics

    USA LIVE: 4 GOP Senators Vote ...

  6. The #Bezos factor… 🫣

    […] “All publications are dealing with huge amounts of traffic loss because of AI summaries,” the staffer observed. “That’s not unique to us. But we’ve responded with these totally failed fad AI products of our own, when the way every other organization that’s been successful in dealing with this has done it is through leaning into personalities.” Thanks to Bezos’s well-publicized instructions, the staffer said, “we’ve been blocked from the human approach because our leadership destroyed our brand.”

    cjr.org/news/layoffs-dismantli

    […] “In an internal meeting with staff in May 2024, Washington Post CEO Will Lewis said the paper lost $77 million in the past year and saw a 50 percent drop in audience since 2020. He and Chief Tech Officer Vineet Khosla—formerly a senior engineering manager at Uber—said that they will have ‘AI everywhere in the newsroom.’”

    […] “Media execs are leveraging the power of high-profile legacy and digital-first brands for clicks…forcing low-paid ghostwriters to fix the SEO-optimized crud that AI tools churn out for cheap advertising dollars.” — Bender, E. M., & Hanna, A. ([2024 or 2025]). The AI con. Harper.

    #thaicon #aihype #wapo #bezos #uspol #fascism #freemedia

  7. A National Newspaper Falls — and Democracy Feels It

    Why the Dismantling of The Washington Post Is a National Warning

    By DrWeb, assisted by AI. All content, images edited and approved. Some images are also public domain, as noted in the captions.

    AI image, created by Sora. Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    On February 4, 2026, the American people lost a vital organ of their democracy. It didn’t happen in a courtroom or through a legislative act; it happened on a Zoom call.

    When Executive Editor Matt Murray and CEO Will Lewis announced the termination of over 300 journalists—one-third of a newsroom that once stood as the world’s watchdog—they used the bloodless language of corporate “restructuring.” They spoke of search engine algorithms, the rise of Generative AI, and the “disappointing realities” of the media market. But we must see through the fog. This was not a business adjustment; it was a surrender.

    The Washington Post has, for over 150 years, been a “living laboratory” of modern journalism. It was the place where the impossible stories were told, where “Darkness” was fought with a relentless, expensive, and often dangerous pursuit of the truth. By gutting the foreign desks and local Metro coverage, leadership has essentially declared that the world—and the citizens of the nation’s capital—no longer deserve to be seen.

    II. A Legacy Forged in Fire: Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers

    To understand the depth of this betrayal, one must remember what the Washington Post used to be. In 1971, the paper faced a choice that would define the First Amendment for a generation. When the Nixon administration secured an injunction against the New York Times to stop the publication of the Pentagon Papers, it was Katherine Graham and Ben Bradlee who stepped into the breach.

    They knew that publishing those top-secret documents—which proved the government had systematically lied about the Vietnam War—could lead to criminal charges or the financial ruin of the paper. They did it anyway. They understood that the press’s duty is to the governed, not the governors. That Post saved this country by exposing the “GIGO (Garbage in, Garbage out” of the military-industrial complex. It proved that a newsroom, armed with the truth and the courage to print it, could stop a war machine. Today, that same newsroom is being hollowed out by a billionaire who appears more concerned with federal contracts than with the legacy of Graham.

    III. The Specter of Anticipatory Obedience

    The layoffs of 2026 are the completion of a bow toward power that began in October 2024. When Jeff Bezos spiked the Post’s endorsement of Kamala Harris, he was signaling a pivot toward compliance.

    As his other companies —Amazon and Blue Origin— depend on massive federal contracts, the Post’s editorial independence has become a “rounding error” on a billionaire’s balance sheet. We are seeing a return to the dark days of “anticipatory obedience,” where the press silences itself to avoid the wrath of a vengeful administration. When the reporter covering Amazon itself is among the first to be fired, the watchdog is no longer guarding the public; it is guarding the owner.

    IV. The Human Cost: Fired in a War Zone

    The cruelty of these layoffs is exemplified by the case of Lizzie Johnson. A dedicated Ukraine correspondent, Johnson was notified of her layoff while on the ground in a war zone—working without heat or power in sub-zero temperatures to bring the reality of the Russian invasion to American doorsteps. To fire a journalist while they are literally under fire is the ultimate indictment of modern corporate “news.” By erasing the entire Middle East roster, the Post is blinding the American public to global realities at a moment when awareness is a matter of national survival.

    V. What Can We Do?

    Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    My small site, a small but growing blog, remains (for now) a small, independent voice, but we are not silent, nor will we be. The death of the Post as we knew it means the burden of truth-seeking falls back onto We the People, and other media, and the resources they can use to report news and facts and fact-checking.

    • Follow the Outcasts: Support the 300+ journalists who still have the truth but have lost their platform. [See below for the listings we have already of fired staff.]
    • Reject the “New” Post: If a “Doorway” to truth is corrupted by billionaire interests, and with a man with real authoritarian impulses on a hair trigger, it is no longer a doorway; it is a wall. For me, the Post now has DO NOT ENTER signs.
    • Fund Independent Journalism: Our American Democratic Republic depends on newsrooms that are not beholden to corporate authorities. Find voices that sound the missing pieces again, loud as we can.

    Names and Work Areas for the Post Wednesday Massacre

    While the Washington Post has not released a formal master list of the 300+ employees affected by the February 4, 2026 layoffs, many journalists and editors have confirmed their departures publicly. Source of this information: Google’s Gemini.

    Below is a compiled listing of names and roles identified through newsroom reports and public statements as of today, February 5, 2026.

    International & Foreign Desks

    The entire Middle East team and several major foreign bureaus were reportedly eliminated.

    NameRole / BureauIshaan TharoorSenior International Affairs ColumnistGerry ShihJerusalem Bureau ChiefClaire ParkerCairo Bureau ChiefSiobhán O’GradyUkraine Bureau ChiefLizzie JohnsonUkraine CorrespondentAaron WienerBerlin Bureau ChiefPranshu VermaNew Delhi Bureau ChiefEva DouChina Correspondent / TechnologyNilo TabrizyVisual Forensics Reporter (covering Iran/Middle East)

    Technology & Corporate Coverage

    These cuts notably included reporters covering Jeff Bezos’s own company, Amazon.

    NameRoleCaroline O’DonovanAmazon Beat ReporterJoseph MennTechnology Reporter (Cybersecurity/Disinformation)Heather KellyTechnology Reporter (San Francisco)Geoff FowlerTechnology ColumnistNix (First name pending)Tech ReporterDanielle AbrilTech Reporter

    Metro & Local Coverage (D.C., MD, VA)

    The Metro desk was reduced from over 40 staffers to approximately 12.

    NameRoleMichael Brice-SaddlerPeople and Politics ReporterMarissa LangEnterprise ReporterRachel WeinerTransportation ReporterEmma UberCrime and Criminal Justice ReporterKarina ElwoodVirginia Education ReporterDan Rosenzweig-ZiffHigher Education & Youth Culture Reporter

    Specialty Desks (Sports, Books, Culture)

    The Sports and Books sections were shuttered as standalone departments.

    NameRoleJacob BroganBooks EditorNeil GreenbergSports Journalist / AnalyticsJada YuanNational Culture and Entertainment WriterEmmanuel FeltonRace and Ethnicity ReporterBrianna TuckerNational Politics ReporterDino GrandoniClimate/Environmental ReporterJesus RodriguezEditorial Writer / Lifestyle

    Editor’s Note: Contact me via the About Page to remove your name or information from this listing.

    Tactical Notes

    • The “AI Strategy”: Executive Editor Matt Murray explicitly cited AI-generated content and declining search traffic as the primary reasons for this “strategic reset.”
    • The Sports Desk Legacy: The shuttering of the High School Sports operation ends a department that had run for over 100 years.
    • Ideological Critique: Several departing reporters, including Emmanuel Felton, have publicly challenged the “financial” necessity of the move, characterizing it instead as an ideological shift.

    Multimedia Evidence

    The Defense of Silence: Watch Jeff Bezos’s direct response to the endorsement crisis that served as the harbinger for this dismantling.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=007rGogqDNo

    [WATCH] Jeff Bezos defends the Washington Post’s decision

    The Fourth Estate (Our Media) Responded as well.. they see what is being done to a legacy national newspaper, over politics and money. It did not fail in its mission. It was no longer allowed to be the Post.
    Below is a PDF snapshot of Google News coverage (late night, 2/4/26). You can see the headlines and the sources and the reactions. –DrWeb

    Google News – Search – news.google.com Washington post Editorial 2 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/Download

    Bibliography (MLA Style)

    SEE ALSO: Additional Deep-Dive Sources

    Additional Historical Links

    #2024Signal #300Outcasts #America #BenBradlee #CNN #democracy #DismantlingThePost #DonaldTrump #Education #FourthEstate #GoogleNewsCoverage #History #JeffBezos #KamalaHarris #KatherineGraham #MattMurray #NationalNewspaper #NewsCoverage #OneThirdOfNewsroom #PentagonPapers #Resistance #Surrender #TheWashingtonPost #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates #WarningForAmerica #WillLewis #YouTube
  8. A National Newspaper Falls — and Democracy Feels It

    Why the Dismantling of The Washington Post Is a National Warning

    By DrWeb, assisted by AI. All content, images edited and approved. Some images are also public domain, as noted in the captions.

    AI image, created by Sora. Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    On February 4, 2026, the American people lost a vital organ of their democracy. It didn’t happen in a courtroom or through a legislative act; it happened on a Zoom call.

    When Executive Editor Matt Murray and CEO Will Lewis announced the termination of over 300 journalists—one-third of a newsroom that once stood as the world’s watchdog—they used the bloodless language of corporate “restructuring.” They spoke of search engine algorithms, the rise of Generative AI, and the “disappointing realities” of the media market. But we must see through the fog. This was not a business adjustment; it was a surrender.

    The Washington Post has, for over 150 years, been a “living laboratory” of modern journalism. It was the place where the impossible stories were told, where “Darkness” was fought with a relentless, expensive, and often dangerous pursuit of the truth. By gutting the foreign desks and local Metro coverage, leadership has essentially declared that the world—and the citizens of the nation’s capital—no longer deserve to be seen.

    II. A Legacy Forged in Fire: Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers

    To understand the depth of this betrayal, one must remember what the Washington Post used to be. In 1971, the paper faced a choice that would define the First Amendment for a generation. When the Nixon administration secured an injunction against the New York Times to stop the publication of the Pentagon Papers, it was Katherine Graham and Ben Bradlee who stepped into the breach.

    They knew that publishing those top-secret documents—which proved the government had systematically lied about the Vietnam War—could lead to criminal charges or the financial ruin of the paper. They did it anyway. They understood that the press’s duty is to the governed, not the governors. That Post saved this country by exposing the “GIGO (Garbage in, Garbage out” of the military-industrial complex. It proved that a newsroom, armed with the truth and the courage to print it, could stop a war machine. Today, that same newsroom is being hollowed out by a billionaire who appears more concerned with federal contracts than with the legacy of Graham.

    III. The Specter of Anticipatory Obedience

    The layoffs of 2026 are the completion of a bow toward power that began in October 2024. When Jeff Bezos spiked the Post’s endorsement of Kamala Harris, he was signaling a pivot toward compliance.

    As his other companies —Amazon and Blue Origin— depend on massive federal contracts, the Post’s editorial independence has become a “rounding error” on a billionaire’s balance sheet. We are seeing a return to the dark days of “anticipatory obedience,” where the press silences itself to avoid the wrath of a vengeful administration. When the reporter covering Amazon itself is among the first to be fired, the watchdog is no longer guarding the public; it is guarding the owner.

    IV. The Human Cost: Fired in a War Zone

    The cruelty of these layoffs is exemplified by the case of Lizzie Johnson. A dedicated Ukraine correspondent, Johnson was notified of her layoff while on the ground in a war zone—working without heat or power in sub-zero temperatures to bring the reality of the Russian invasion to American doorsteps. To fire a journalist while they are literally under fire is the ultimate indictment of modern corporate “news.” By erasing the entire Middle East roster, the Post is blinding the American public to global realities at a moment when awareness is a matter of national survival.

    V. What Can We Do?

    Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    My small site, a small but growing blog, remains (for now) a small, independent voice, but we are not silent, nor will we be. The death of the Post as we knew it means the burden of truth-seeking falls back onto We the People, and other media, and the resources they can use to report news and facts and fact-checking.

    • Follow the Outcasts: Support the 300+ journalists who still have the truth but have lost their platform. [See below for the listings we have already of fired staff.]
    • Reject the “New” Post: If a “Doorway” to truth is corrupted by billionaire interests, and with a man with real authoritarian impulses on a hair trigger, it is no longer a doorway; it is a wall. For me, the Post now has DO NOT ENTER signs.
    • Fund Independent Journalism: Our American Democratic Republic depends on newsrooms that are not beholden to corporate authorities. Find voices that sound the missing pieces again, loud as we can.

    Names and Work Areas for the Post Wednesday Massacre

    While the Washington Post has not released a formal master list of the 300+ employees affected by the February 4, 2026 layoffs, many journalists and editors have confirmed their departures publicly. Source of this information: Google’s Gemini.

    Below is a compiled listing of names and roles identified through newsroom reports and public statements as of today, February 5, 2026.

    International & Foreign Desks

    The entire Middle East team and several major foreign bureaus were reportedly eliminated.

    NameRole / BureauIshaan TharoorSenior International Affairs ColumnistGerry ShihJerusalem Bureau ChiefClaire ParkerCairo Bureau ChiefSiobhán O’GradyUkraine Bureau ChiefLizzie JohnsonUkraine CorrespondentAaron WienerBerlin Bureau ChiefPranshu VermaNew Delhi Bureau ChiefEva DouChina Correspondent / TechnologyNilo TabrizyVisual Forensics Reporter (covering Iran/Middle East)

    Technology & Corporate Coverage

    These cuts notably included reporters covering Jeff Bezos’s own company, Amazon.

    NameRoleCaroline O’DonovanAmazon Beat ReporterJoseph MennTechnology Reporter (Cybersecurity/Disinformation)Heather KellyTechnology Reporter (San Francisco)Geoff FowlerTechnology ColumnistNix (First name pending)Tech ReporterDanielle AbrilTech Reporter

    Metro & Local Coverage (D.C., MD, VA)

    The Metro desk was reduced from over 40 staffers to approximately 12.

    NameRoleMichael Brice-SaddlerPeople and Politics ReporterMarissa LangEnterprise ReporterRachel WeinerTransportation ReporterEmma UberCrime and Criminal Justice ReporterKarina ElwoodVirginia Education ReporterDan Rosenzweig-ZiffHigher Education & Youth Culture Reporter

    Specialty Desks (Sports, Books, Culture)

    The Sports and Books sections were shuttered as standalone departments.

    NameRoleJacob BroganBooks EditorNeil GreenbergSports Journalist / AnalyticsJada YuanNational Culture and Entertainment WriterEmmanuel FeltonRace and Ethnicity ReporterBrianna TuckerNational Politics ReporterDino GrandoniClimate/Environmental ReporterJesus RodriguezEditorial Writer / Lifestyle

    Editor’s Note: Contact me via the About Page to remove your name or information from this listing.

    Tactical Notes

    • The “AI Strategy”: Executive Editor Matt Murray explicitly cited AI-generated content and declining search traffic as the primary reasons for this “strategic reset.”
    • The Sports Desk Legacy: The shuttering of the High School Sports operation ends a department that had run for over 100 years.
    • Ideological Critique: Several departing reporters, including Emmanuel Felton, have publicly challenged the “financial” necessity of the move, characterizing it instead as an ideological shift.

    Multimedia Evidence

    The Defense of Silence: Watch Jeff Bezos’s direct response to the endorsement crisis that served as the harbinger for this dismantling.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=007rGogqDNo

    [WATCH] Jeff Bezos defends the Washington Post’s decision

    The Fourth Estate (Our Media) Responded as well.. they see what is being done to a legacy national newspaper, over politics and money. It did not fail in its mission. It was no longer allowed to be the Post.
    Below is a PDF snapshot of Google News coverage (late night, 2/4/26). You can see the headlines and the sources and the reactions. –DrWeb

    Google News – Search – news.google.com Washington post Editorial 2 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/Download

    Bibliography (MLA Style)

    SEE ALSO: Additional Deep-Dive Sources

    Additional Historical Links

    Tags: 2024 Signal, 300 Outcasts, America, Ben Bradlee, CNN, democracy, Dismantling the Post, Donald Trump, Education, Fourth Estate, Google News Coverage, History, Jeff Bezos, Kamala Harris, Katherine Graham, Matt Murray, National Newspaper, News Coverage, One Third of Newsroom, Pentagon Papers, Resistance, Surrender, The Washington Post, Trump, Trump Administration, United States, Warning for America, Will Lewis, YouTube
    #2024Signal #300Outcasts #America #BenBradlee #CNN #democracy #DismantlingThePost #DonaldTrump #Education #FourthEstate #GoogleNewsCoverage #History #JeffBezos #KamalaHarris #KatherineGraham #MattMurray #NationalNewspaper #NewsCoverage #OneThirdOfNewsroom #PentagonPapers #Resistance #Surrender #TheWashingtonPost #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates #WarningForAmerica #WillLewis #YouTube
  9. A National Newspaper Falls — and Democracy Feels It

    Why the Dismantling of The Washington Post Is a National Warning

    By DrWeb, assisted by AI. All content, images edited and approved. Some images are also public domain, as noted in the captions.

    AI image, created by Sora. Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    On February 4, 2026, the American people lost a vital organ of their democracy. It didn’t happen in a courtroom or through a legislative act; it happened on a Zoom call.

    When Executive Editor Matt Murray and CEO Will Lewis announced the termination of over 300 journalists—one-third of a newsroom that once stood as the world’s watchdog—they used the bloodless language of corporate “restructuring.” They spoke of search engine algorithms, the rise of Generative AI, and the “disappointing realities” of the media market. But we must see through the fog. This was not a business adjustment; it was a surrender.

    The Washington Post has, for over 150 years, been a “living laboratory” of modern journalism. It was the place where the impossible stories were told, where “Darkness” was fought with a relentless, expensive, and often dangerous pursuit of the truth. By gutting the foreign desks and local Metro coverage, leadership has essentially declared that the world—and the citizens of the nation’s capital—no longer deserve to be seen.

    II. A Legacy Forged in Fire: Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers

    To understand the depth of this betrayal, one must remember what the Washington Post used to be. In 1971, the paper faced a choice that would define the First Amendment for a generation. When the Nixon administration secured an injunction against the New York Times to stop the publication of the Pentagon Papers, it was Katherine Graham and Ben Bradlee who stepped into the breach.

    They knew that publishing those top-secret documents—which proved the government had systematically lied about the Vietnam War—could lead to criminal charges or the financial ruin of the paper. They did it anyway. They understood that the press’s duty is to the governed, not the governors. That Post saved this country by exposing the “GIGO (Garbage in, Garbage out” of the military-industrial complex. It proved that a newsroom, armed with the truth and the courage to print it, could stop a war machine. Today, that same newsroom is being hollowed out by a billionaire who appears more concerned with federal contracts than with the legacy of Graham.

    III. The Specter of Anticipatory Obedience

    The layoffs of 2026 are the completion of a bow toward power that began in October 2024. When Jeff Bezos spiked the Post’s endorsement of Kamala Harris, he was signaling a pivot toward compliance.

    As his other companies —Amazon and Blue Origin— depend on massive federal contracts, the Post’s editorial independence has become a “rounding error” on a billionaire’s balance sheet. We are seeing a return to the dark days of “anticipatory obedience,” where the press silences itself to avoid the wrath of a vengeful administration. When the reporter covering Amazon itself is among the first to be fired, the watchdog is no longer guarding the public; it is guarding the owner.

    IV. The Human Cost: Fired in a War Zone

    The cruelty of these layoffs is exemplified by the case of Lizzie Johnson. A dedicated Ukraine correspondent, Johnson was notified of her layoff while on the ground in a war zone—working without heat or power in sub-zero temperatures to bring the reality of the Russian invasion to American doorsteps. To fire a journalist while they are literally under fire is the ultimate indictment of modern corporate “news.” By erasing the entire Middle East roster, the Post is blinding the American public to global realities at a moment when awareness is a matter of national survival.

    V. What Can We Do?

    Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    My small site, a small but growing blog, remains (for now) a small, independent voice, but we are not silent, nor will we be. The death of the Post as we knew it means the burden of truth-seeking falls back onto We the People, and other media, and the resources they can use to report news and facts and fact-checking.

    • Follow the Outcasts: Support the 300+ journalists who still have the truth but have lost their platform. [See below for the listings we have already of fired staff.]
    • Reject the “New” Post: If a “Doorway” to truth is corrupted by billionaire interests, and with a man with real authoritarian impulses on a hair trigger, it is no longer a doorway; it is a wall. For me, the Post now has DO NOT ENTER signs.
    • Fund Independent Journalism: Our American Democratic Republic depends on newsrooms that are not beholden to corporate authorities. Find voices that sound the missing pieces again, loud as we can.

    Names and Work Areas for the Post Wednesday Massacre

    While the Washington Post has not released a formal master list of the 300+ employees affected by the February 4, 2026 layoffs, many journalists and editors have confirmed their departures publicly. Source of this information: Google’s Gemini.

    Below is a compiled listing of names and roles identified through newsroom reports and public statements as of today, February 5, 2026.

    International & Foreign Desks

    The entire Middle East team and several major foreign bureaus were reportedly eliminated.

    NameRole / BureauIshaan TharoorSenior International Affairs ColumnistGerry ShihJerusalem Bureau ChiefClaire ParkerCairo Bureau ChiefSiobhán O’GradyUkraine Bureau ChiefLizzie JohnsonUkraine CorrespondentAaron WienerBerlin Bureau ChiefPranshu VermaNew Delhi Bureau ChiefEva DouChina Correspondent / TechnologyNilo TabrizyVisual Forensics Reporter (covering Iran/Middle East)

    Technology & Corporate Coverage

    These cuts notably included reporters covering Jeff Bezos’s own company, Amazon.

    NameRoleCaroline O’DonovanAmazon Beat ReporterJoseph MennTechnology Reporter (Cybersecurity/Disinformation)Heather KellyTechnology Reporter (San Francisco)Geoff FowlerTechnology ColumnistNix (First name pending)Tech ReporterDanielle AbrilTech Reporter

    Metro & Local Coverage (D.C., MD, VA)

    The Metro desk was reduced from over 40 staffers to approximately 12.

    NameRoleMichael Brice-SaddlerPeople and Politics ReporterMarissa LangEnterprise ReporterRachel WeinerTransportation ReporterEmma UberCrime and Criminal Justice ReporterKarina ElwoodVirginia Education ReporterDan Rosenzweig-ZiffHigher Education & Youth Culture Reporter

    Specialty Desks (Sports, Books, Culture)

    The Sports and Books sections were shuttered as standalone departments.

    NameRoleJacob BroganBooks EditorNeil GreenbergSports Journalist / AnalyticsJada YuanNational Culture and Entertainment WriterEmmanuel FeltonRace and Ethnicity ReporterBrianna TuckerNational Politics ReporterDino GrandoniClimate/Environmental ReporterJesus RodriguezEditorial Writer / Lifestyle

    Editor’s Note: Contact me via the About Page to remove your name or information from this listing.

    Tactical Notes

    • The “AI Strategy”: Executive Editor Matt Murray explicitly cited AI-generated content and declining search traffic as the primary reasons for this “strategic reset.”
    • The Sports Desk Legacy: The shuttering of the High School Sports operation ends a department that had run for over 100 years.
    • Ideological Critique: Several departing reporters, including Emmanuel Felton, have publicly challenged the “financial” necessity of the move, characterizing it instead as an ideological shift.

    Multimedia Evidence

    The Defense of Silence: Watch Jeff Bezos’s direct response to the endorsement crisis that served as the harbinger for this dismantling.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=007rGogqDNo

    [WATCH] Jeff Bezos defends the Washington Post’s decision

    The Fourth Estate (Our Media) Responded as well.. they see what is being done to a legacy national newspaper, over politics and money. It did not fail in its mission. It was no longer allowed to be the Post.
    Below is a PDF snapshot of Google News coverage (late night, 2/4/26). You can see the headlines and the sources and the reactions. –DrWeb

    Google News – Search – news.google.com Washington post Editorial 2 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/Download

    Bibliography (MLA Style)

    SEE ALSO: Additional Deep-Dive Sources

    Additional Historical Links

    #2024Signal #300Outcasts #America #BenBradlee #CNN #democracy #DismantlingThePost #DonaldTrump #Education #FourthEstate #GoogleNewsCoverage #History #JeffBezos #KamalaHarris #KatherineGraham #MattMurray #NationalNewspaper #NewsCoverage #OneThirdOfNewsroom #PentagonPapers #Resistance #Surrender #TheWashingtonPost #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates #WarningForAmerica #WillLewis #YouTube
  10. A National Newspaper Falls — and Democracy Feels It

    Why the Dismantling of The Washington Post Is a National Warning

    By DrWeb, assisted by AI. All content, images edited and approved. Some images are also public domain, as noted in the captions.

    AI image, created by Sora. Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    On February 4, 2026, the American people lost a vital organ of their democracy. It didn’t happen in a courtroom or through a legislative act; it happened on a Zoom call.

    When Executive Editor Matt Murray and CEO Will Lewis announced the termination of over 300 journalists—one-third of a newsroom that once stood as the world’s watchdog—they used the bloodless language of corporate “restructuring.” They spoke of search engine algorithms, the rise of Generative AI, and the “disappointing realities” of the media market. But we must see through the fog. This was not a business adjustment; it was a surrender.

    The Washington Post has, for over 150 years, been a “living laboratory” of modern journalism. It was the place where the impossible stories were told, where “Darkness” was fought with a relentless, expensive, and often dangerous pursuit of the truth. By gutting the foreign desks and local Metro coverage, leadership has essentially declared that the world—and the citizens of the nation’s capital—no longer deserve to be seen.

    II. A Legacy Forged in Fire: Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers

    To understand the depth of this betrayal, one must remember what the Washington Post used to be. In 1971, the paper faced a choice that would define the First Amendment for a generation. When the Nixon administration secured an injunction against the New York Times to stop the publication of the Pentagon Papers, it was Katherine Graham and Ben Bradlee who stepped into the breach.

    They knew that publishing those top-secret documents—which proved the government had systematically lied about the Vietnam War—could lead to criminal charges or the financial ruin of the paper. They did it anyway. They understood that the press’s duty is to the governed, not the governors. That Post saved this country by exposing the “GIGO (Garbage in, Garbage out” of the military-industrial complex. It proved that a newsroom, armed with the truth and the courage to print it, could stop a war machine. Today, that same newsroom is being hollowed out by a billionaire who appears more concerned with federal contracts than with the legacy of Graham.

    III. The Specter of Anticipatory Obedience

    The layoffs of 2026 are the completion of a bow toward power that began in October 2024. When Jeff Bezos spiked the Post’s endorsement of Kamala Harris, he was signaling a pivot toward compliance.

    As his other companies —Amazon and Blue Origin— depend on massive federal contracts, the Post’s editorial independence has become a “rounding error” on a billionaire’s balance sheet. We are seeing a return to the dark days of “anticipatory obedience,” where the press silences itself to avoid the wrath of a vengeful administration. When the reporter covering Amazon itself is among the first to be fired, the watchdog is no longer guarding the public; it is guarding the owner.

    IV. The Human Cost: Fired in a War Zone

    The cruelty of these layoffs is exemplified by the case of Lizzie Johnson. A dedicated Ukraine correspondent, Johnson was notified of her layoff while on the ground in a war zone—working without heat or power in sub-zero temperatures to bring the reality of the Russian invasion to American doorsteps. To fire a journalist while they are literally under fire is the ultimate indictment of modern corporate “news.” By erasing the entire Middle East roster, the Post is blinding the American public to global realities at a moment when awareness is a matter of national survival.

    V. What Can We Do?

    Washington post Editorial 1 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    My small site, a small but growing blog, remains (for now) a small, independent voice, but we are not silent, nor will we be. The death of the Post as we knew it means the burden of truth-seeking falls back onto We the People, and other media, and the resources they can use to report news and facts and fact-checking.

    • Follow the Outcasts: Support the 300+ journalists who still have the truth but have lost their platform. [See below for the listings we have already of fired staff.]
    • Reject the “New” Post: If a “Doorway” to truth is corrupted by billionaire interests, and with a man with real authoritarian impulses on a hair trigger, it is no longer a doorway; it is a wall. For me, the Post now has DO NOT ENTER signs.
    • Fund Independent Journalism: Our American Democratic Republic depends on newsrooms that are not beholden to corporate authorities. Find voices that sound the missing pieces again, loud as we can.

    Names and Work Areas for the Post Wednesday Massacre

    While the Washington Post has not released a formal master list of the 300+ employees affected by the February 4, 2026 layoffs, many journalists and editors have confirmed their departures publicly. Source of this information: Google’s Gemini.

    Below is a compiled listing of names and roles identified through newsroom reports and public statements as of today, February 5, 2026.

    International & Foreign Desks

    The entire Middle East team and several major foreign bureaus were reportedly eliminated.

    NameRole / BureauIshaan TharoorSenior International Affairs ColumnistGerry ShihJerusalem Bureau ChiefClaire ParkerCairo Bureau ChiefSiobhán O’GradyUkraine Bureau ChiefLizzie JohnsonUkraine CorrespondentAaron WienerBerlin Bureau ChiefPranshu VermaNew Delhi Bureau ChiefEva DouChina Correspondent / TechnologyNilo TabrizyVisual Forensics Reporter (covering Iran/Middle East)

    Technology & Corporate Coverage

    These cuts notably included reporters covering Jeff Bezos’s own company, Amazon.

    NameRoleCaroline O’DonovanAmazon Beat ReporterJoseph MennTechnology Reporter (Cybersecurity/Disinformation)Heather KellyTechnology Reporter (San Francisco)Geoff FowlerTechnology ColumnistNix (First name pending)Tech ReporterDanielle AbrilTech Reporter

    Metro & Local Coverage (D.C., MD, VA)

    The Metro desk was reduced from over 40 staffers to approximately 12.

    NameRoleMichael Brice-SaddlerPeople and Politics ReporterMarissa LangEnterprise ReporterRachel WeinerTransportation ReporterEmma UberCrime and Criminal Justice ReporterKarina ElwoodVirginia Education ReporterDan Rosenzweig-ZiffHigher Education & Youth Culture Reporter

    Specialty Desks (Sports, Books, Culture)

    The Sports and Books sections were shuttered as standalone departments.

    NameRoleJacob BroganBooks EditorNeil GreenbergSports Journalist / AnalyticsJada YuanNational Culture and Entertainment WriterEmmanuel FeltonRace and Ethnicity ReporterBrianna TuckerNational Politics ReporterDino GrandoniClimate/Environmental ReporterJesus RodriguezEditorial Writer / Lifestyle

    Editor’s Note: Contact me via the About Page to remove your name or information from this listing.

    Tactical Notes

    • The “AI Strategy”: Executive Editor Matt Murray explicitly cited AI-generated content and declining search traffic as the primary reasons for this “strategic reset.”
    • The Sports Desk Legacy: The shuttering of the High School Sports operation ends a department that had run for over 100 years.
    • Ideological Critique: Several departing reporters, including Emmanuel Felton, have publicly challenged the “financial” necessity of the move, characterizing it instead as an ideological shift.

    Multimedia Evidence

    The Defense of Silence: Watch Jeff Bezos’s direct response to the endorsement crisis that served as the harbinger for this dismantling.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=007rGogqDNo

    [WATCH] Jeff Bezos defends the Washington Post’s decision

    The Fourth Estate (Our Media) Responded as well.. they see what is being done to a legacy national newspaper, over politics and money. It did not fail in its mission. It was no longer allowed to be the Post.
    Below is a PDF snapshot of Google News coverage (late night, 2/4/26). You can see the headlines and the sources and the reactions. –DrWeb

    Google News – Search – news.google.com Washington post Editorial 2 by Michael McCulley is marked CC0 1.0 Universal. To view a copy of this mark, visit https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/Download

    Bibliography (MLA Style)

    SEE ALSO: Additional Deep-Dive Sources

    Additional Historical Links

    #2024Signal #300Outcasts #America #BenBradlee #CNN #democracy #DismantlingThePost #DonaldTrump #Education #FourthEstate #GoogleNewsCoverage #History #JeffBezos #KamalaHarris #KatherineGraham #MattMurray #NationalNewspaper #NewsCoverage #OneThirdOfNewsroom #PentagonPapers #Resistance #Surrender #TheWashingtonPost #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates #WarningForAmerica #WillLewis #YouTube
  11. CW: UK benefits system, death

    "The question was, what did government ministers know, and when?"

    Good piece on UK deaths linked to disability benefit decisions, the investigative work of John Pring of Disability News Service, and the reluctance of mainstream media to pick up this kind of story.

    (Content note: brief description of the death of Errol Graham a few years ago)

    cjr.org/the_media_today/deaths

    #UK #government #disability #benefits #media #DisabilityNewsService #JohnPring #ErrolGraham

  12. When I first started thinking about a star design months back, I wanted one to decorate masks with. And voila, today I completed the project. The magnet holds it pretty snugly, and it's actually barely noticeable while wearing. That's a cheap disposable mask, and it's not like the star is tugging it down.

    Gonna be the fashion with all the ninjas this winter.

    #Blender3D #3DPrinting #Selfie #PotatoCamera

  13. Looking for an art theme for the day? How about #TopplingGiants. I would like to see and boost lots and lots of pictures of tiny heroes climbing up and vanquishing monstrous beasts. Any medium, any style. Brave little fighters charging on Godzilla-sized behemoths like awfully determined fleas. Doesn't even have to be graphic. Write a poem. Play a song. Abstract is cool too. You could do a text treatment, or splash color on a page. #ArtPrompt #CreativeMasto

  14. Looking for an art theme for the day? How about #TopplingGiants. I would like to see and boost lots and lots of pictures of tiny heroes climbing up and vanquishing monstrous beasts. Any medium, any style. Brave little fighters charging on Godzilla-sized behemoths like awfully determined fleas. Doesn't even have to be graphic. Write a poem. Play a song. Abstract is cool too. You could do a text treatment, or splash color on a page. #ArtPrompt #CreativeMasto

  15. Looking for an art theme for the day? How about #TopplingGiants. I would like to see and boost lots and lots of pictures of tiny heroes climbing up and vanquishing monstrous beasts. Any medium, any style. Brave little fighters charging on Godzilla-sized behemoths like awfully determined fleas. Doesn't even have to be graphic. Write a poem. Play a song. Abstract is cool too. You could do a text treatment, or splash color on a page. #ArtPrompt #CreativeMasto

  16. Looking for an art theme for the day? How about #TopplingGiants. I would like to see and boost lots and lots of pictures of tiny heroes climbing up and vanquishing monstrous beasts. Any medium, any style. Brave little fighters charging on Godzilla-sized behemoths like awfully determined fleas. Doesn't even have to be graphic. Write a poem. Play a song. Abstract is cool too. You could do a text treatment, or splash color on a page. #ArtPrompt #CreativeMasto

  17. So, this one... I was convinced it was a glitch or a weird bounce, and had to go back and watch the footage frame by frame. At full speed, I can hardly see the shot, but it sure looks like I did it on purpose once it's slowed down.

    Especially tasty that the player's name was EpicTrollMan.
    #Overwatch #PCGaming #Junkrat

  18. I'm so heart broken that this wasn't play of the game. Oh, also, we didn't win or whatever.
    #Overwatch #PCGaming #Junkrat #ShitLookAtThatMidair

  19. This will almost certainly always rank as one of my best #Overwatch clips, recorded during pre-round deathmatch. That's a pretty fertile ground for trick shots, actually. Presented in Super Slow-Mo, but you'll have to imagine the NFL clipshow music yourself.
    #Junkrat #PCGaming

  20. @cjrando @maddiefuzz eh. I wouldn't dare. I actually read the Alan Dean Foster novelization before I saw the movie, so if anyone was to write a sequel, it would have to be #AlanDeanFoster

  21. Remembering the futuristic 80s when it was more fun than the futuristic 2000s.
    Planet Earth? Girls on film?
    Duran Duran was a good band at the time this album come out.

    I still listen to other stuff like Japan and keep them around... a bit of nostalgia I guess!

    Did you mentioned Classic Nouveaux? 😆
    Neo-romantic scene was big at the time.

    What was your favourite band in the 80s?

    #duranduran #nostalgia #japan #neoromantic #80smusic #music #video

    youtu.be/CJRjb5pWi6k?si=aHEe0R

  22. Remembering the futuristic 80s when it was more fun than the futuristic 2000s.
    Planet Earth? Girls on film?
    Duran Duran was a good band at the time this album come out.

    I still listen to other stuff like Japan and keep them around... a bit of nostalgia I guess!

    Did you mentioned Classic Nouveaux? 😆
    Neo-romantic scene was big at the time.

    What was your favourite band in the 80s?

    #duranduran #nostalgia #japan #neoromantic #80smusic #music #video

    youtu.be/CJRjb5pWi6k?si=aHEe0R

  23. – extrait de l'article –

    La Cour de justice de la République a effectivement classé sans suite deux signalements effectués par des député·es pour non dénonciation de mauvais traitement sur mineurs. En revanche, la procédure pour entrave à la justice ouverte après le signalement de l’avocat palois Jean-François Blanco n’est pas classée. Ce signalement fait suite aux révélations (le 16/02/2025 sur TF1) du gendarme chargé de l’enquête sur l’ex-directeur de l’institution catholique, visé par une plainte pour viol en 1998, qui a témoigné d’une possible intervention de François #Bayrou dans l’affaire.

    #CJR 🙈 🙉 🙊 #FrancoisBayrou 🤥 #Betharam

  24. – extrait de l'article –

    La Cour de justice de la République a effectivement classé sans suite deux signalements effectués par des député·es pour non dénonciation de mauvais traitement sur mineurs. En revanche, la procédure pour entrave à la justice ouverte après le signalement de l’avocat palois Jean-François Blanco n’est pas classée. Ce signalement fait suite aux révélations (le 16/02/2025 sur TF1) du gendarme chargé de l’enquête sur l’ex-directeur de l’institution catholique, visé par une plainte pour viol en 1998, qui a témoigné d’une possible intervention de François #Bayrou dans l’affaire.

    #CJR 🙈 🙉 🙊 #FrancoisBayrou 🤥 #Betharam

  25. – extrait de l'article –

    La Cour de justice de la République a effectivement classé sans suite deux signalements effectués par des député·es pour non dénonciation de mauvais traitement sur mineurs. En revanche, la procédure pour entrave à la justice ouverte après le signalement de l’avocat palois Jean-François Blanco n’est pas classée. Ce signalement fait suite aux révélations (le 16/02/2025 sur TF1) du gendarme chargé de l’enquête sur l’ex-directeur de l’institution catholique, visé par une plainte pour viol en 1998, qui a témoigné d’une possible intervention de François #Bayrou dans l’affaire.

    #CJR 🙈 🙉 🙊 #FrancoisBayrou 🤥 #Betharam

  26. I was more surprised to learn that both the Chinese bought the blast furnaces and they hadn't already closed down (perhaps there is a case to renationalise this industry? Steel is a vital material and we shouldn't be so dependent on importing it in an increasingly uncertain world..)

    - #Scunthorpe #Yorkshire #Steel #BritishSteel

    bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjryeq