The New York Times’ ‘Ways You Can Still Cancel’ Student Loan Debt
After a June 2023 Supreme Court ruling on student debt forgiveness, the New York Times stealth edited an article advising readers that “death” was one way out of debt.
After a June 2023 Supreme Court ruling on student debt forgiveness, the New York Times stealth edited an article advising readers that “death” was one way out of debt.
As protesters gathered outside Supreme Court justices’ homes following the Roe v. Wade draft leak, claims that the court had previously ruled to allow protests at the homes of private citizens began to appear.
Readers spotted a purported reference to a “domestic supply of infants” by Justice Alito in the footnotes of the leaked Roe draft in May 2022.
In May 2022, Sen. Bernie Sanders tweeted that Congress “must pass legislation that codifies Roe v. Wade as the law of the land in this country NOW.”
Gorsuch’s refusal to wear a mask was covered on legal blogs earlier in January 2022.
Myriad Facebook posts and tweets declared that Amy Coney Barrett had only been a judge for “2 years, 10 months, [and] 23 days.”