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Follow-up on the doxxing of Carson King by the reprehensible Des Moines Register

By: Beldin in FAKE NEWS | Recommend this post (0)
Sat, 28 Sep 19 12:34 AM | 311 view(s)
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Msg. 00672 of 00716
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Reporter Who Dug up "Racist" Tweets on Hospital Donor Fired; Still No Apology

http://pjmedia.com/trending/newspaper-fires-reporter-who-dug-up-racist-tweets-on-childrens-hospital-donor-still-no-apology/

By Megan Fox
PJ Media
September 27, 2019

The Des Moines Register is even more unpopular than the New York Times, if you can believe it. They drew everyone's ire by running a hit piece on some poor guy, Carson King, whose viral sign to raise money for more beer accidentally raised a million dollars and he decided to give it all to sick children. As Jim Treacher reported earlier in the week, you have to destroy that guy.

To recap: A guy donated $1 million to a children's hospital, so his local newspaper dug up some bad tweets from when he was a teenager. He did a good thing and gained national attention for it, and our moral, ethical, and intellectual betters in the press had to put him in his place.

The Register received a huge backlash for this and online investigators discovered that the reporter who dug up the tasteless tweets had several of his own that were far worse. Naturally, everyone demanded he be fired. They eventually fired him, but not before they went back to writing profiles of Carson King, to everyone's horror. First they drag the guy through the mud, then they write about him like they didn't do that to him in the first place, for clicks. On Thursday they published an article titled "Carson King raises more than $500,000 for children's hospital amid controversy," and then never bothered to say that they themselves created the controversy! (Note: I would normally link the source, but in this case, I don't think they deserve the clicks on the back of that man they tried to destroy, do you?)

The editor, Carol Hunter, published a long explanation (again) on Thursday night, trying to explain the paper's decision. Noticeably absent in this second explanation was an apology to King.

The Des Moines Register staff has heard from hundreds of people in the past few days upset over our handling of a story on Carson King, the 24-year-old whose Busch Light sign on ESPN's "College GameDay" show launched more than a million dollars in donations to an Iowa children's hospital.

We've listened with an open mind to everyone, but especially Iowans, the people who are our neighbors, who care as much as we do about our state and everyone who lives here.

And we hear you: You're angry, you're disappointed and you want us to understand that.

Hunter spent an enormous amount of ink trying to release the paper from responsibility because she claims they never published King's tweets. No, that's right. They didn't. Instead, their reporter went to King personally and told him they had the tweets and presumably would use them, so King went to the press begging for forgiveness, knowing how this would play out. In Hunter's mind, this absolves them from any culpability, since King told on himself.

King's generosity is a great story, and the Stead Family Children's Hospital is a great cause. The story shifted Tuesday evening, however, when King held a news conference with local TV stations to acknowledge racist tweets from his past, and Busch Light, one of the companies bankrolling his fundraising, distanced itself from him.

The Register reporter writing the profile had discovered the tweets on King's public timeline earlier in the day, and he asked King about them. King, to his credit, expressed immediate regret.

Your reporter DISCOVERED 16-year-old Carson King's 8-year-old tweets???!!! ROTFLMAO! Your ass-wipe reporter went dumpster diving for them, you shameless c*nt. 

Rolling Eyes

Worse, Hunter claimed that they do this to every feel-good human interest story. I don't believe her.

Some of you wonder why journalists think it's necessary to look into someone's past. It's essential because readers depend on us to tell a complete story.

The story was complete. 24-year-old was having fun on ESPN's "Game Day." His send-me-beer-money stunt produced over $1 million of cash-flow, so he unselfishly committed to turn over this windfall to a children's hospital. THAT'S IT, you heinous c*nt - the headline and the story writes itself, "Young Man's TV Prank Results in Over $1 Million to Stead Family Children's Hospital." But you, your reporter, and your sleazebag rag of a newspaper are so jaded and malicious that you couldn't be happy with the extraordinary generosity of a young man who could have easily kept all of that money for himself. So, you hatefully had to go about trying to find some way to discredit this noble young man. PATHETIC! 

In this case, our initial stories drew so much interest that we decided to write a profile of King, to help readers understand the young man behind the handmade sign and the outpouring of donations to the children's hospital. The Register had no intention to disparage or otherwise cast a negative light on King.

ABSOLUTE HORSESHIT! And guess what, Carol? Your readers IMMEDIATELY knew that your profile was nothing more than a sleazy hit job. And now, you are a scalded cat dancing around on a hot tin roof, you lying c*nt. 

In doing backgrounding for such a story, reporters talk to family, friends, colleagues or professors. We check court and arrest records as well as other pertinent public records, including social media activity. The process helps us to understand the whole person.

There have been numerous cases nationally of fundraising for a person experiencing a tragedy that was revealed as a scam after media investigated the backgrounds of the organizer or purported victim.

As journalists, we have the obligation to look into matters completely, to aid the public in understanding the people we write about and in some cases to whom money is donated.

This is nonsense. And no one is satisfied. Readers do NOT depend on newspapers to ruin our neighbors' lives with their intrusive doxxing. That is exactly what everyone hates about the media. Remember Don Henley's song? "Kick 'em when they're up, kick 'em when they're down...we want dirty laundry." That wasn't a love ballad. It was a scathing review of the way the average person sees the news media, gleefully reporting murder and mayhem and doxxing people and destroying reputations. It's not supposed to be your theme song, Ms. Hunter.

Hunter forgets that other journalists are watching this go down. You don't spend hours or days digging into the past of a person who isn't accused of anything other than donating money to sick kids.

As for criminal background checks, I simply do not believe they do that to every single person they profile. I have used criminal background checks on my subjects before but only in cases where there was some allegation and I needed to make sure that the person wasn't a serial offender or something. This would come in handy if the subject was accusing someone else of wrongdoing. In that case, you check that one very thoroughly to make sure you're not being lied to. There is NO REASON to do a criminal background check on a guy who donated money to a hospital. None. And anyone who tells you that is necessary is not telling the truth.

Finally, there is no apology to King in this twisted screed. Why not? They know what they did was wrong. They're losing subscribers over it in large numbers and yet they refuse to apologize and seem as if they are doubling down on their policy to thoroughly investigate any person they ever name in print. You people in Iowa better stay out of the news unless you want your garbage gone through by Des Moines Register staffers! They are the most thorough reporters on earth, except when it comes to investigating their own staff members who put the n-word all over their Twitter feeds.

I have laughed at the media with their bias and obvious agenda in the past, but today I'm actually embarrassed and angry to be associated with these people. This is shameless and unconscionable. The editing staff here at PJ Media say no to irrelevant witch hunts all the time. We don't torch people for tweets they made when they were 16 (unless you're one of these awful Des Moines Register reporters who think it's okay to do that to others. In that case, it's open season). What Hunter is describing is not journalism. It's journo-terrorism. There's a difference.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Anheuser-Busch Drops Association with Carson King over High School Tweet
By: Beldin
in FAKE NEWS
Thu, 26 Sep 19 7:45 PM
Msg. 00671 of 00716

http://www.breitbart.com/the-media/2019/09/25/nolte-anheuser-busch-cancels-carson-king-high-school-tweet/

... On September 13, [Carson] King, who is now 24, was featured on ESPN College Game Day holding a sign that read "Busch Light supply needs replenished. Venmo Carson-King-25." The national attention resulted in donors from all over contributing money to King's Venmo account.

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Rather than keep the money, King said he would donate it to the children's hospital. This is when Anheuser-Busch and Venmo agreed to match his donation.

So here's a young man turning a goof that could have personally enriched him into a legitimately good thing ...

Enter the media.

Specifically the Des Moines Register.

For whatever sadistic reason, the Register decided to do a "background check" of a private citizen thrust into the national spotlight and, lo and behold, what they uncovered were a couple of racially-insensitive tweets King fired off when he was 16, when he was still a sophomore in high school.

The paper contacted King to tell him they were going to run with the story. Obviously worried about his reputation, King tried to get ahead of the scandal by releasing the following statement:

It was just 10 days ago that I was a guy in the crowd holding a sign looking for beer money on ESPN Game Day.

Since then - so much has happened. Especially when I announced all of the money would be donated to the Stead Family Children's Hospital in Iowa City.

Thousands of people have donated and today the account is at 1.14 million dollars. Much of this has happened thanks to social media - it has the power to bring people together for a common good.

It also can make your life very public.

And that is why I wanted to share with you that eight years ago - when I was a sophomore in high school, I made some social media posts with my friends that quoted and referenced the show Tosh.0.

One of those posts was brought to my attention by a member of the media today. I had no recollection of it. In re-reading it today - eight years later - I see it was an attempt at humor that was offensive and hurtful.

I am so embarrassed and stunned to reflect on what I thought was funny when I was 16 years old. I want to sincerely apologize.

Thankfully, high school kids grow up and hopefully become responsible and caring adults. I think my feelings are better summed up by a post from just 3 years ago:

"Until we as a people learn that racism and hate are learned behaviors, we won't get rid of it. Tolerance towards others is the first step." - July 8, 2016

I am sharing this information tonight because I feel a responsibility to all of the people who have donated money.

I cannot go back and change what I posted when I was a 16-year-old. I can apologize and work to improve every day and make a meaningful difference in people's lives.

And, I am so very thankful for the generosity of the thousands of people who have donated to our fundraising push for the Stead Family Children's Hospital.

Apparently the tweets, which are no longer available, compared black people to gorillas.

The ever-gracious King later released a statement saying he was not angry at the Des Moines Register. King continued:

The Des Moines Register has been nothing but kind in all of their coverage, and I appreciate the reporter pointing out the post to me. I want everyone to understand that this was my decision to publicly address the posts and apologize. I believe that is the right thing to do.

No, Carson ... the Register has NOT been kind to you ... they are, in fact, vile assholes going far out of their way to destroy your reputation over absolutely NOTHING ... just because you want to facilitate millions of dollars in donations to a children's hospital. How nauseatingly loathsome of them! 

Almost immediately, those profiles in courage at Anheuser-Busch cut all ties with King. The company says it will still match his contribution. King says he will still donate the money.

Here's the statement from the beer company:

Carson King had multiple social media posts that do not align with our values as a brand or as a company and we will have no further association with him. We are honoring our commitment by donating more than $350,000 to the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics.

And then, in a fascinating turn of events that personifies our unforgiving Woke Culture, after the Register piece ran, the Internet dug up a number of offensive tweets published by the same reporter, Aaron Calvin, who dug up King's tweets.

Ah ... Karma is a BITCH!!! BWHA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!!! What goes around, comes around, eh, Aaron? By all rights, your tweets should get you sh!t-canned from your position at the disgraceful libtard rag, The Des Moines Register. 

Calvin has now locked up his Twitter account and the Register says it is aware of the tweets and is looking into them.

Oooh, Aaron ... what's the matter, there, Mr. Social Justice Warrior??? You can do a deep dive to rake up PC muck on a kid simply trying to do a good deed, but when the tables are turned and you're shown to be a hypocritical ASSHOLE with your own offensive tweets ... well ... you lock up your Twitter account? What about the ideals of transparency in journalism, eh, Aaron?! 

One of Calvin's tweets from 2012 reads, "Can I be a guest instructor at your theater camp teaching the kids how to abuse substances and 'turn tricks.'"

A tweet from 2013 says, "I want to grow up and read sex stories to high school students."

According to Twitchy, one of Calvin's 2011 tweets uses the word "niggas."

Welcome to the future, y'all ...

Anything King might have tweeted after he became a legal adult ... Fine. If you must ... Fine. Let's not forget we are talking about an everyday guy guilty of doing nothing more than turning a joke at a sporting event into an objectively good thing, but ... Fine.

But now we live in a world where your juvenile criminal record is expunged, but not your juvenile tweets, which means a whole lot of good people who made some dumb mistakes as minors (as we all have) are going to see their reputations burnt to the ground in this unforgiving, witch-hunt culture of ours.

And nothing can be done about it, because there is no way to turn the Twitter Fascists and Virtue Signalers into decent human beings, and there's no way to inject a spine or sense of decency into big companies like Anheuser-Busch.

Aaron Calvin = worthless asshole.

The Des Moines Register = worthless assholes.

Anheuser-Busch = worthless assholes. 


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