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Notes -
Why do you think Indian Twitter situation was brought up?
How does Taibbi’s “unwillingness” to attack Musk affect his Taibbi’s credibility? Is it his general credibility or Twitter specific? If Twitter specific, then any story in particular?
The theory is that Taibbi was happy to cover what Old Twitter did because it made Musk look good, but he doesn't want to cover what New Twitter does with India because it makes Musk look bad. In the absence of Taibbi providing a more convincing explanation for his actions (he hasn't) that's the conclusion the evidence I outlined above leads me to.
His unwillingness to attack Musk is not really the issue, it's the lack of curiosity about Twitter's actions that I find suspicious as I said above. He seems to be deliberately keeping his head in the dark about a story central to his beat, most likely to avoid having to (negatively) opine on New Twitter's actions and upsetting Musk. It's Not Good when journalists choose to avoid covering certain topics because they're worried about upsetting the wrong people because it might lead to some stories being suppressed. That's Bad.
Both, but primarily Twitter-related. Given how much aversion he has demonstrated to upsetting Musk, I'd be worried that if he came across a Twitter scoop that happens to make Musk look bad he'd be inclined to bury the story. There are a few journalists who I would be inclined to take at their word when they report something via anonymous sourcing or something similarly unverifiable but I wouldn't trust Taibbi's reporting on a given topic without some serious corroboration.
As I said before: "For whatever cannot be corroborated by outside sources, we have to trust that a journalist is engaging in enough due diligence in vetting sources and investigating claims." In terms of past Twitter stories, I don't have any reason to believe there were based on fabrications. I didn't pay attention closely but Taibbi appears to have provided authentic documents and none of the employees involved disputed their authenticity as far as I am aware. I am also not aware of any follow-up reporting by others that poked any significant holes in Taibbi's reporting. The only remaining concern would be matters of omission but I'm not aware of any issues at the moment.
With respect to your first paragraph, what incentive did Taibbi have to make Musk look good? Musk didn’t pay him. He was associated with Musk before Twitter.
Maybe one could say that after getting a really good story from Musk Taibbi would be reluctant to hit back at Musk. But you seem to have started the story too soon.
Moreover, your logical inference is off (end of first paragraph and start of second). Taibbi is an American journalist who primarily (though of course not exclusively) focuses on the US. To my knowledge, he has never written about India. Contra your belief, this Indian issue isn’t central to Taibbi’s beat. Taibbi’s beat (if there was one) was how the US government was effectively (with the help of media) circumventing the 1A.
Moreover, as has been pointed out the whole “Indian Twitter story” was a red herring designed to try to ignore Taibbi’s reporting. It wasn’t that far from someone writing about say the problem of crime increasing in American cities and someone who wants to end that narrative ask “why haven’t you reported about crime in Poland” with the subtext being “you only care about American crime and not Polish crime because you want to report on black people so we can ignore your reporting.” After getting these numerous drive bys that were complete BS, Taibbi fired back. He should’ve been more clear “Warsaw ain’t my beat but you can’t use that to discredit the honest reporting I’ve done on XYZ.
But even if you think Taibbi doesn’t want to resort negatively on Musk (not that there is a shortage of reporters willing to take on that beat), you are ignoring the context of where this came up. Given the timeline, none of the Twitter files would implicate malfeasance by Musk. He barely owned the company when this whole thing started. So Musk is irrelevant to this whole story in terms of Taibbi’s credibility.
Taibbi has no history of fraud or making spurious claims that don’t check out. But you are using an entirely dishonest, red herring to cast aspersions? I think that is shameful.
Finally, do you trust mainstream media on say covid vaccines?
Yes exactly on the first sentence. I don't understand what the last sentence means, too soon for what?
This is a plausible explanation for Taibbi's omission and if he just said "The reason I don't cover the issue is because XYZ" I might be inclined to believe him depending on the reason. That he chooses to stay silent instead makes me suspicious, combined with the other evidence I outlined.
Sure, Hasan's intent was probably to find an excuse to ignore Taibbi's reporting. I don't share Hasan's intent, as is obvious with what I said about the Twitter Files. But it's not a red herring if the topic is whether Taibbi's is avoiding covering certain topics because he's worried about upsetting the wrong people. That's central to the argument and here's the relevant part of my conclusion again:
I'm still not clear if you disagree with any of it. I put numbers to make it easier.
What is dishonest? What is shameful? I've already said my piece about the Twitter Files but you still seem to think I have this hidden agenda. I've read your post several times and while I understand you strongly dislike my conclusion I can't summarize much beyond that. It would be helpful for you to be specific and avoid conclusory language (e.g. "darkly hinting" "bullshit Indian story" etc).
This is a very broad question: do I trust who on what exactly? Generally speaking I have very low trust in most science journalism, with very few exceptions.
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