Careercow Taylor Lorenz - Crybully "journalist", self-appointed Internet Hall Monitor, professional victim, stalks teenagers for e-clout

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I assume a similar effect happens to those of us in the first world when we're asked to think of starving Africans who literally live in dirt?
I would think so. Most Americans (myself included) have no idea what real poverty looks like.

Even the fucking homeless in my town have tents and the ability to syphon electricity from the grid to keep their phones charged. We don't even go homeless like the rest of the world.
 
That's not very environmentally conscious of Taylor. What would Saint Greta think of this most egregious of sins?!
The Climate Goblin™️ doesn't think. I'd imagine she just sits in her padded room, eating her bean paste and staring at the wall until her tard wranglers/parents parrot her out in front of the media for her next prepared speech chastising the world for all sorts of sins, both real and imagined.
 
Screenshot_20221219_193536_Babylon Bee.jpg

https://babylonbee.com/news/journalists-warn-of-frightening-trend-where-rules-apply-to-them Archive
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Journalists have become increasingly concerned about a rising trend of journalists having to follow the same rules as everyone else.

"It's not fair that we're being treated the same as other people," sobbed Washington Post reporter Taylor Lorenz. "I'm literally shaking with rage."

The troubling trend came to a head this past week as several journalists who had endangered a man's life were then made to endure a Twitter suspension, just like any other person. "It is absolutely unacceptable to silence the press like this," said Taylor Lorenz, still sobbing. "We journalists are supposed to be able to invade other people's privacy and put their lives at risk, while no one is allowed to do the same thing to us. I am deeply troubled by the sudden expectation for the press to follow the same rules as any common citizen."

While journalists have repeatedly expressed concern over their loss of recognition as a source of truth, having to now suffer the consequences of their own actions has confirmed their deepest fears. "This is exactly like the Kristallnaacht, the opening salvo of the Holocaust," cried Taylor Lorenz, grabbing a third box of tissues. "The government, led by Elon Musk, has handed me a one-week Twitter suspension merely for stalking people like prey. He might as well be firing up the gas chambers."

At publishing time, sources report that Taylor Lorenz had continued sobbing, drenching her 55th birthday cake with tears.
 
Alejandra caraballo was made fun in front of the judges.
Taylon Lorenz got rekt.
Ben Collins got a vacation from NBC for being a lazy fuck.
You know what they had in common? they posted their hatred for kiwifarms and are getting their karma charged with interest.
:null::null::null::null::null::null:
The slobbermutt always wins in the end.
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Saw this in reddit earlier. Man that suspends account for prior doxxing gets hated by people that admit she has....doxxed people in the past.
View attachment 4108491

Is this real life?
You asking me questions I don't want to answer: sealioning, "just asking questions", neo-Nazi tactics, etc.
Me asking you questions you don't want to answer: "Really makes it look like somebody has something to hide"
 
Journalists do not have friends. They rarely (if ever) have fans. At best, they have a network of contacts and acquaintances. The more charismatic ones might even be on cordial terms with their colleagues, but in true "no honor among thieves" fashion there is absolutely no loyalty among journalists unless it's beneficial in the moment and they will happily backstab each other to be first to break a story or curry favor with someone who can bolster their career.

Many, many years ago, I worked as a journalist for a shortish while. Freelancing, but for some big name publications. It was something I'd always wanted to do -- until I actually did it.

The problem is, the people you write about/put on camera have no idea what the consequences are going to be -- and they're almost never good. If you're lucky, it'll be an insignificant thing that nobody notices and everyone forgets about the next day. But that's rarely the case -- because the media wants a shitshow for a story, and they want real human beings to illustrate that shitshow. And something like six out of ten people will suffer negative consequences as a result of your writing about them.

And that's when you're attempting to look out for them and try and avoid fucking them over. Most people in the game aren't doing that. Most journalists just see the people they write about as nameless, faceless scum whose only purpose is to serve their needs.

I lasted a year or two, but I had to stop doing it. Nobody who has an actual soul could do this for a living. The job is all about quickly forming close relationships in order to then betray/sell out the people you've made those relationships with for money/status. You have to be a narcissist or a sociopath to do it for any period of time.
 
Alejandra caraballo was made fun in front of the judges.
Taylon Lorenz got rekt.
Ben Collins got a vacation from NBC for being a lazy fuck.
You know what they had in common? they posted their hatred for kiwifarms and are getting their karma charged with interest.
:null::null::null::null::null::null:
The slobbermutt always wins in the end.
:null::null::null::null::null::null:
Who would win? A tenacious guy who singlehandedly manages a forum dedicated to make fun of weird and mentally challenged individuals or weird and mentally challenged individuals who can't do anything by themselves and cry, bitch and moan when they do stupid shit and they get laughed at?

Yeah, the slobbermutt always wins in the end.
 
You asking me questions I don't want to answer: sealioning, "just asking questions", neo-Nazi tactics, etc.
Me asking you questions you don't want to answer: "Really makes it look like somebody has something to hide"
I'm really starting to miss the internet in 2006. This shit just didn't happen
 
I'm pretty sure it's a direct reference to this (now deleted) tweet from account @duty2warn:
I know it happens so often it's practically a joke but really it's nauseating for these evil freaks even to make such a comparison. Absolutely fuck every last one of these "people" if they can even be called that.
 
Many, many years ago, I worked as a journalist for a shortish while. Freelancing, but for some big name publications. It was something I'd always wanted to do -- until I actually did it.

The problem is, the people you write about/put on camera have no idea what the consequences are going to be -- and they're almost never good. If you're lucky, it'll be an insignificant thing that nobody notices and everyone forgets about the next day. But that's rarely the case -- because the media wants a shitshow for a story, and they want real human beings to illustrate that shitshow. And something like six out of ten people will suffer negative consequences as a result of your writing about them.

And that's when you're attempting to look out for them and try and avoid fucking them over. Most people in the game aren't doing that. Most journalists just see the people they write about as nameless, faceless scum whose only purpose is to serve their needs.

I lasted a year or two, but I had to stop doing it. Nobody who has an actual soul could do this for a living. The job is all about quickly forming close relationships in order to then betray/sell out the people you've made those relationships with for money/status. You have to be a narcissist or a sociopath to do it for any period of time.
not I, not anyone I've ever worked with, has been properly quoted by the press
 
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