lapcat a day ago

Newspapers publish opinions for the same reason that they publish comic strips: people want to read them. Readers seek them out. Newspapers are a business and have to give their customers what they want.

The problematic aspect here is that the current business owner, Jeff Bezos, has a conflict of interest. Bezos is making a bad business decision for The Washington Post, sacrificing it and losing readers for the sake of his other business interests, i.e., government contracts. It's unlikely that an independent owner with no conflict of interest would make the same decision.

  • nickff a day ago

    You seem to be implying that he made a decision based on other business interests, against those of the Post, but there is no support for that in the article. Do you have a source which describes this motive?

    It seems like not endorsing candidates might be good for the Washington Post's business, by improving its perceived impartiality. In addition to this, the WaPo seems to have spent much of its history not endorsing candidates, and it has been doing (financially) poorly recently; perhaps this is a return to more profitable and credible roots.

    • sgnelson a day ago

      While you may not take this as proof it affected this exact decision, it's hard to ignore it as a possible reason.

      https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/10/amazon-wants-to-depose-presi...

      • dmix a day ago

        Bezos wants to help elect someone who (his lawyers allege) killed a gov contract favourable to his own business? Or did I misread your comment.

        • a123b456c a day ago

          I think the implicit argument is that he wants to avoid more canceled contracts, along with other forms of retribution like personal attacks he experienced a few years earlier.

          • dmix a day ago

            Maybe but Bezos is not lacking money. That contract was $1B/yr contract over ten years. They make $600B+ a year. Not exactly going to tip the scales of his stock options.

            These billionaires usually buy money losing newspapers, or social networks, for personal reasons. If I was going to bet on it I’d very much lean on a personal motive beyond money.

            • DonHopkins a day ago

              Not lacking money does NOT imply not so obsessed with making more money that he will do absolutely anything.

              • fuzzfactor a day ago

                A very easy decision for some, depending on their own strength of conviction. Anybody knows that Harris is not running to retaliate against those who do not agree with every policy that her people can get her party to support, but Trump is and he makes it very clear that if elected he intends to do harm that Harris will not do. Bigly.

                So without consideration for upside[0], one of the most emotionless decisions a top executive can make is when there is no downside versus when there is.

                [0] After all, further upside is not necessary if you already have experienced enough to where the needle can not move any further.

            • dragonwriter a day ago

              > They make $600B+ a year.

              Are you confusing revenue with profit? Yeah, a lot of money pumps in one end of Amazon retail and out the other, but there is very little margin: the $550+ billion in revenue on the retail side, as I understand, brings in significantly less net than the $90 billion in revenue on the cloud side.

              And government contracts, where one might expect support or opposition from a potential cheif executige who has made overt promises of purges and other uses of office to punish enemies and reward friends to make a big difference, are an important part of that (not just that one $1B contract.)

              • dmix 14 hours ago

                The $1B/yr is revenue too

                ...probably at a way lower profit range than most corporate contracts given how demanding gov deals are.

              • chgs a day ago

                I say I make $100k year. That’s my salary, it’s my revenue. To do that I have to do things like paying taxes, rent, electric costs etc.

            • DiscourseFan a day ago

              Its a general posture. Amazon is an industrial powerhouse and Trump has signaled that he can and will attack his political opponents no matter how rich they are. If he wants to, Trump may actually nationalize Amazon; the alternative is presumably becoming his toady.

              • cryptonector a day ago

                See "the steel cases". The POTUS cannot unilaterally nationalize any businesses.

                • kalleboo a day ago

                  The current Supreme Court has been pretty clear that there is no such thing as settled case law anymore

                • dragonwriter a day ago

                  See Dobbs and Loper Bright, past precedent previously viewed as solid and well-established is no guarantee of future outcomes with this Court.

                  • cryptonector a day ago

                    Or Brown vs. Board of Education. The courts can change their minds once in a while. There are no indicia that this court wants to overturn the steel cases.

              • anonzzzies a day ago

                Trump has signaled he will get the military involved against his opponents. And people are still going to vote for him.

                • valval a day ago

                  And by the looks of it, the majority of people. Is this your signal that the majority of people are uneducated swines, or know something that you don’t?

                  • dragonwriter a day ago

                    > And by the looks of it, the majority of people.

                    Where are you getting this? He is down against Harris in most polls, and neither candidate is clearing a majority. There are projections that he has a narrow edge in winning the Presidency due to the electoral college, but that's not the same as being most likely to win a majority (or even plurality) of the votes (e.g., 538 gives Trump currently a 53% chance to win the electoral college, while Harris has a 65% chance to win the popular vote.)

                    • valval 18 hours ago

                      Betting odds.

                      • dllthomas 18 hours ago

                        Betting on winner, or on popular vote? Because even assuming the betters have the odds right, those are not the same thing.

                        • valval 2 hours ago

                          To me the popular vote is irrelevant and in my original post I meant the winner, despite saying the majority which you interpreted to mean “more than 50% of the population of the US”. We have a system in place to counterbalance the fact that large numbers of likeminded people concentrated in one area could otherwise rule over everyone else through tyranny of the majority. To me the majority therefore just means “most of the US”.

                          If you think betters do not have the odds right, you should start betting right now.

                      • dragonwriter 12 hours ago

                        Even the betting sites where Trump is extremely (as in, much more than in the poll-based forecast sites) favored to win the electoral college, like Polymarket, have Harris a strong favorite to win the most votes, just as the poll-based forecasts generally do.

                        E.g, Polymarket, which gives Trump a 65% chance to win the EC compared to 538s 53%, has Harris at 58% to win the popular vote compared to 538s 65%. (And while it is possible for the popular vote winner to have a mere plurality of votes, it is not possible to get a majority of votes and not be the popular vote winner, so, no, the source of evidence you cite does not support the claim that "by the looks of it, the majority of people" will vote are going to vote for Trump, but instead support that the majority will most likely not do so.)

                        • tdhz77 9 hours ago

                          At the end of the day, you will find this prediction markets to be as successful as sports betters. We would be wise to remove all money from politics.

                          • defrost 9 hours ago

                            Rational well managed sports betters are quite successful.

                            Paddy Power (as one example) has grown in 36 years to now have > £11 billion revenue per annum with a net income of some £1.2 billion.

              • lenkite a day ago

                When did Trump threaten to nationalize any business ? His argument has always been for the opposite.

                • dymk a day ago

                  His behavior has been he’ll do whatever he wants; he has almost no consistent political positions.

                  • lenkite a day ago

                    [flagged]

                    • dymk a day ago

                      He makes arguments that change with the wind. If you haven’t been paying attention to his erratic behavior for the last eight years, that’s not something I can fix for you.

              • alvah a day ago

                "Trump has signaled that he can and will attack his political opponents"

                You write this, apparently sincerely, as if the other side of politics do not and will not attack their political opponents.

          • chipdart a day ago

            > I think the implicit argument is that he wants to avoid more canceled contracts, along with other forms of retribution like personal attacks he experienced a few years earlier.

            That makes no sense at all. If the primary concern was avoiding canceled contracts, it would be in his best interests to ensure that the guy who is threatening to cancel contracts out of spite would not be elected.

            Pressuring the Washington Post to not endorse the candidate who does not pose that threat goes exactly against that.

            It's something else.

            • FrojoS a day ago

              It sure makes sense. The endorsement is extremely unlikely to decide the election. On the contrary, the chance that the endorsement will lead to retribution after a lost election is arguably much higher. They think it happened last time around. You can say it's cowardly to act like this. But it does make sense.

              • heresie-dabord 20 hours ago

                > say it's cowardly to act like this. But it does make sense.

                So cowardice has been the greater virtue all along?

                Has it come to this, that political cowardice makes sense? That it makes sense when Democracy itself is at risk?

                That it makes sense in Journalism?

                That it makes sense at the newspaper of Bob Woodward [1] , now run by a billionaire with no guts to stand for Democracy itself?

                That other oligarchs are tilting the election towards the obvious insanity of a leader who, in word and deed, will dismantle Democracy to indulge himself and his cronies?

                We have sanewashed madness and the end of Democracy.

                [1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democracy_Dies_in_Darkness

        • ipaddr a day ago

          He wants to avoid the wealth and capital gains tax on unrealized assets.

        • dclowd9901 13 hours ago

          It can be hard to understand something if you wish not to understand it.

          It’s pretty simple here: he didn’t endorse Trump. But he doesn’t want to get on his bad side in the case he is elected.

          Make sure you take a moment to comb your moral fabric and see if that jibes with how you think the world should work.

        • unethical_ban 18 hours ago

          The theory is that Bezos is scared of endorsing Harris then seeing Trump elected.

    • JKCalhoun a day ago

      > In addition to this, the WaPo seems to have spent much of its history not endorsing candidates

      In recent history, apparently the last time they did not endorse a candidate was the 1980's.

    • perihelions 18 hours ago

      - "You seem to be implying that he made a decision based on other business interests, against those of the Post, but there is no support for that in the article. Do you have a source which describes this motive?"

      There's support in that Trump personally met with Blue Origin's C-suite, on the same day the Washington Post spiked their Harris endorsement—an apparent reward to Bezos, and one that put his business interests in the spotlight.

      https://www.washingtonpost.com/elections/2024/10/25/2024-ele... ("Trump met with Bezos’s Blue Origin executives after The Post’s non-endorsement")

    • edm0nd a day ago

      >by improving its perceived impartiality

      Can WaPo really be perceived as "impartial" if we know they already were going to endorse Harris?

      • markvdb a day ago

        That is possible if their editorial staff honestly believe two things:

        - The rule of law and the republic as a process are superior to anything else.

        - One of the candidates does not subscribe to these sufficiently.

        In that case, and given the political duopoly, they could still claim to be impartial towards candidates. Their only allegiance/partiality would lie with the rule of law and the republic as a process.

        • smsm42 13 hours ago

          Thinking that one of the candidates will literally destroy the country is some weird meaning of being "impartial" that I have never encountered before.

        • valval a day ago

          You’re thinking about this too hard. It’s a definitional question. If you have two candidates and you endorse one of them, you’re de facto partial with nothing else playing any role in the definition.

          • Supermancho 6 hours ago

            > If you have two candidates and you endorse one of them, you’re de facto partial with nothing else playing any role in the definition.

            Endorsing on a specific issue, party, gender, or any specific quality that a large number of individuals share, is not uncommon. The specific individual is not what the endorsement must be partial to. Maybe the choice (since it's inherent to the process), but that's the distinction that was being made.

      • hoppyhoppy2 20 hours ago

        There's a difference between the opinion staff and the news staff.

        >The Post’s decision has roiled many on the paper’s opinions staff, which operates independently from The Post’s news staff, a long-standing tradition of American journalism designed to separate opinion writing from day-to-day news coverage.

        https://www.washingtonpost.com/style/media/2024/10/25/washin...

        • SpicyLemonZest 17 hours ago

          I understand the internal logic of newsroom design, but if it was ever a genuine firewall it's not in modern times. The NY Times opinion editor was famously forced to resign in 2020 when he published an op-ed that the newsroom found unacceptable.

    • smsm42 a day ago

      It would take way more for WaPo to not be in a position where mentioning it in one phrase with "impartiality" wouldn't sound like an absurdist joke. They can walk this road, but so far there's absolutely no indication they want to, and Bezos twisting their arms can't be taken as such evidence.

    • tempestn a day ago

      There is direct support in the article. Amazon lost a $10B contract because Trump doesn't like Bezos, which is because he owns the WP, a paper that is generally critical of Trump. By killing this endorsement, he's buying some goodwill from Trump, at the cost of alienating the bulk of WP's readers.

    • ZeroGravitas a day ago

      Bezos was blackmailed by Trump ally and National Enquirer boss David Pecker a few years ago. He resisted then and it led to the most expensive divorce in history.

      Just some context worth adding.

    • lapcat a day ago

      > there is no support for that in the article.

      Untrue. At the top, "KEY POINTS: In a 2019 lawsuit, Amazon claimed it lost a $10 billion Pentagon cloud computing contract to Microsoft because Trump used “improper pressure ... to harm his perceived political enemy” Bezos."

      • ipaddr a day ago

        If the capital gains / wealth tax plan goes ahead it would cost Jeff much of his fortune. $10 billion over ten years is peanuts.

        • acjohnson55 a day ago

          But it would also cost his peers proportionally.

          • ipaddr 4 hours ago

            Not someone like Bill Gates who moved his wealth into non-profits he controls. Jeff can't just sell Amazon and move out so easily.

      • nickff a day ago

        [flagged]

        • lapcat a day ago

          > We cannot deduce Bezos’ motives from Trump’s vengefulness.

          Why not?

          You personally can refrain from any speculation, if you wish, but it's nonetheless the most obvious explanation. Moreover, your own speculation is implausible:

          > perhaps this is a return to more profitable and credible roots.

          This last-minute backpedaling makes The Washington Post look much worse than an endorsement. The new non-endorsement "policy" wasn't announced in advance. It came only after the editors had already drafted an endorsement of Harris, and at least one editor resigned as a result. The Post now appears less credible rather than more.

        • cryptonector a day ago

          What is Trump seeking vengeance for?

    • fenomas a day ago

      > not endorsing candidates might be good for the Washington Post's business, by improving its perceived impartiality

      You're at the wrong meta level - if the paper's owner is making the editorial decisions, there's no impartiality to perceive in the first place.

      I mean, if the question at hand was "should the editors endorse someone?" then what you're saying could stand. But that's out the window if they're being overruled by somebody without even a presumption of impartiality.

      • nomel a day ago

        I think one could claim that the editorial department was trying to make a decision that could/would be interpreted as a company stance, rather than a department stance, to the average person. Sure, you could blame the average person.

        I also can’t comprehend the benefit of a biased editorial department, from a business or quality perspective. A diverse set of views is always more interesting to read, but I’m surely in the minority with that perspective. If someone could explain the benefit, I’m very interested.

        I don’t see this is any different than the media black out that nearly all corporate employees enjoy, that exists for one reason: don’t make your opinions appear as those of the whole. Looking at the mixed responses to all of this, across the internet, that does seem to be the case, where people are confusing it all.

        • fenomas a day ago

          1. Publishing an editorial endorsing a candidate is extremely common, both for US papers generally and for this paper specifically. The reasons for that are various but they have nothing to do with what we're discussing here.

          2. Moreover, that whole question is irrelevant when the editors aren't even making the decision. If Bezos is willing to override them, then effectively he is the paper's editorial board - so there's no "diversity of views" to talk about, except within the confines of what he's decided to allow.

          • AYBABTME a day ago

            (1) might be both common and also wrong. (1) being why I dislike most of these media outlets. (2) the editorial board may be wrong and suffering groupthink, and ultimately slowly killing the paper.

            • fenomas a day ago

              The fact that editorial endorsements are extremely common is relevant because it means that no typical reader would mistake them for being the position of the paper's parent corporation, like GGP suggested. Whether endorsements are right or wrong in the abstract isn't relevant, and I didn't say anything about it.

        • chipdart a day ago

          > I think one could claim that the editorial department was trying to make a decision that could/would be interpreted as a company stance, rather than a department stance, to the average person.

          This makes no sense whatsoever. It is the editorial board deciding what candidate is endorsed by the paper. It is a company stance, made by the company's representatives on behalf of the company and based on the company's editorial guidelines.

      • valval a day ago

        We can easily bring the meta level down one more step to conclude that given the editorial staff are individuals with different beliefs, this dictates that they’re impartial to the extent of the (weighted) average of their beliefs.

        I’d argue impartiality isn’t a thing in any human domain anyway.

    • jasonlotito a day ago

      There is support for that reasoning in the article linked.

    • dhruvrajvanshi a day ago

      From the article

      > In a 2019 lawsuit, Amazon claimed it had lost a $10 billion cloud computing contract with the Pentagon to Microsoft because Trump had used “improper pressure ... to harm his perceived political enemy” Bezos.

      The implication being that endorsing Harris might cause Amazon to lose out on government contracts in case Trump wins the presidency.

    • standardUser a day ago

      Trump has repeatedly threatened media companies he thinks have wronged him with specific actions he's said he will take as president. Bezos has a whole business empire to worry about that goes way beyond WaPo. He doesn't need a petty president trying to wreck his bottom line for 4 years. And with a business that big, Trump has a lot of ways he could cause trouble.

      • mensetmanusman a day ago

        Media companies that stitch sentences together to make an interview coherent might be misleading.

      • nickff a day ago

        This is definitely a potential motive, but there are many of those, and we have no reason to believe this is actually what led to Bezos’ decision.

        • thimabi a day ago

          Regardless of the motive, I do not view favorably his interference in the newspaper. If anything, he should have left editorial decisions to the staff.

        • yks a day ago

          We have a potential future president who, putting it very charitably, espouses the ideology of "For my friends — everything, for my enemies — the law", and in the least surprising development ever, billionaires suddenly warm up to this guy. Many such cases.

        • standardUser a day ago

          Yes we have a reason. Trump threatens media companies and individuals he believes have wronged him - loudly and often. If someone came to you and said they aren't going to a party, and you knew someone at that party had specifically threatened to beat them if they attend the party, do you have "no reason" to believe that the threat of a beating is a likely cause of the action (or in these cases, inaction). Especially if that person has a long history of attending that specific party?

    • noncoml a day ago

      It takes a lot time to build the reputation of impartiality. To be honest only BBC comes into mind when I think about a somewhat impartial medium.

      What I see is a traditionally Democartic leaning newspaper, choosing "impartiality" as an excuse, because they cannot come out and support Republicans. And of course I believe that this is the choice of the owner.

      • strunz a day ago

        This has nothing to do with them being unable to support Republicans, it's them choosing not to support a Democratic nominee (which they've done for the past 50 years) because they don't want to anger the possible Republican nominee because the owner is afraid of retribution affecting his other businesses.

        • lmz a day ago

          As the cancel brigade often says: freedom of speech is not freedom from consequences.

          • Paradigma11 a day ago

            True, but said consequences are the possibility of a revenge streak of a petty US president called Trump. That is the real problem and story. And nobody really seems to dispute that possibility.

          • chgs a day ago

            Trump fans boycotting Amazon is a consequence.

            The US government punishing Amazon is not.

            The first amendments limits the governemt in its actions, not the people.

          • mindslight 16 hours ago

            And why should we be using cancel brigades' definitions? If freedom of speech is not freedom from consequences for your speech, then freedom of speech automatically exists everywhere and the concept is meaningless.

            Obvious there is judgement for when consequences rise to the level of being coercive - someone giving you a dirty look is not, the de jure government sanctioning you is. But trying to define rights binary-axiomatically is really just creating lemmas for cryptofascism when the preconditions have been met but yet the rights are still missing (which is exactly what the cancel brigades are pushing).

      • zeroonetwothree a day ago

        Not saying the BBC is Fox News or CNN but I wouldn’t really call it impartial.

        • thrownv7032g a day ago

          What the BBC does really well is trash itself in reporting after scandals from within break

        • noncoml a day ago

          "somewhat impartial"

          I can not really think of any truly impartial news source. Can you? At least no in the countries I have lived in

          • impossiblefork a day ago

            No public impartial news source, but organisation-internal news sources that work for the reader himself, those probably exist and probably very good. A bank's analysis department can work like one for the traders for short-term things.

            Such organisations for the general public are possible. You'd need a group that is interested in correct judgements on some matter and willing to form an organisation to pay for investigations on it.

          • oezi a day ago

            I believe many of each countries top news papers aren't 'spinning' news. Murdock/Berlusconi-style news agencies do.

          • AYBABTME a day ago

            FT does much better.

      • jll29 a day ago

        > To be honest only BBC comes into mind when I think about a somewhat impartial medium.

        The BBC is pro-UK government, who fund them.

        To me only Reuters (disclaimer: I once worked there) and AP come to mind when I think impartial news.

        What do others think? https://www.purevpn.com/blog/unbiased-news-sources/

        The Guardian is a great source of news, and it has a curageous team of reporters, but even it has its biases. I recommend reading multipe news outlets and being aware what he individual biases might be.

        • guiriduro 20 hours ago

          The Guardian was a reasonably good source of news under Rubsbridger, under Viner its biases have worsened and its most courageous reporters, opinion writers and even cartoonists have been either sidelined or fired. Avoid.

        • tredfjgkkl543 a day ago

          > The BBC is pro-UK government, who fund them.

          You are not British, are you :-)

        • gotoeleven a day ago

          Was it the AP or reuters that shared an office building hamas? Or was it BBC ?

      • 0x457 10 hours ago

        BBC stopped being impartial shortly after start of Iraq's invasion in 2001. It's not as polarizing as Fox News and CNN, but it's _far_ from being impartial.

        Their coverage of international events only impartial if those events have no effect on UK.

      • wsintra2022 a day ago

        The BBC recently wrote a piece on the executives at Harod’s who kept Mo’s pervert behaviour secret. Don’t think they done yet that for the many perverts they have kept secrets for.

      • alwayslikethis a day ago

        The problem for BBC is that it's government-funded. It can't really take a stance without potentially upsetting the next government.

        • aix1 a day ago

          > The problem for BBC is that it's government-funded.

          That's not factually accurate. The BBC is principally funded through the licence fee (i.e. directly by the viewers).

          • impossiblefork a day ago

            It's inherently dependent on the government. The viewers don't get together and voluntarily decide to fund it.

            Unfortunately I don't think there's a single such organisation in the world-- controlled-by-members newspaper. Even almost-controlled-by-members newspapers here in Sweden aren't fully subject to member control, with this typically being indirect through some board or similar organisation.

            • chgs a day ago

              Guardian comes to mind.

        • II2II a day ago

          A lot of that depends upon the government in question. Some want publicly funded news organizations at arms length. Others want to dismantle them. Some want at least the image of impartiality (and will take some criticism). Others want them to be a mouthpiece. It's not terribly different from the private sector. I would go as far as saying it is no different from the private sector given the consolidation of news organizations over the past few decades.

        • WatchDog a day ago

          Why is that a problem?

    • DonHopkins a day ago

      Ignoring the objective fact that Trump is a fascist is not "objective", it's delusional.

      • dxdenton 15 hours ago

        What is your definition of fascist? If it includes dictatorial control of the economy, suppression of dissenting opinions, and aggressive persecution of political opposition, Id have an easier time arguing modern progressives are fascists. Off the top of my head.

        * Effectively shutting down large swathes of the US economy during COVID, while allowing "essential" business to remain open. Where "essential" is arbitrarily determined based on the state governors political leanings.

        * Biden-Harris admin strongly encouraging (ie strong-arming) social media companies to suppress what they deemed "disinformantion".

        * Progressive state AGs using legal loopholes and technicalities to prosecute Trump, aka Lawfare. For example, a fraud case for overvaluing real estate properties. A fraud case with no victims that resulted in a $450 million judgment? The textbook definition of excessive fines as defined by the 8th amendment.

        * Progressives stated goal to pack the Supreme Court, effectively neutering an entire branch of government. Thereby, consolidating power in the remaining two branches.

        You believe people who don't consider Trump a fascist are delusional (close to half the electorate, if we believe the polls)? What actions or policies has Trump implemented that fit under that definition? In short, Trump being a fascist is not self-evident: It is your (and many others) strongly held opinion. One that is rarely backed by more than shallow progressive talking points.

  • culi a day ago

    Really this is a lesson in why the corporate news model is doomed to fail. Upping my contributions to serious investigative journalist organizations like ProPublica

    • primitivesuave a day ago

      One of ProPublica's greatest recent victories (in my opinion) was the FOIA lawsuit to secure public release of PPP loan information, along with other COVID relief loans like EIDL. Aside from the sheer scale ($1 trillion) and the rampant fraud [1], there were politicians from both sides of the aisle who took these forgivable business loans while delaying other forms of government relief.

      1. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3906395

    • seizethecheese a day ago

      I disagree. This is the exception rather than the rule. The more corporate, the more likely to give the people what they want.

      • digdugdirk a day ago

        Isn't that contrary to the purpose of news organizations? They should give the people what they need to know, not what they want.

        • seizethecheese 16 hours ago

          My point is the more corporate the organization, the more they’ll only care about profit rather than what the public needs to know. Nonprofits, and orgs owned by individuals, are more likely to sacrifice revenue for such considerations.

        • valval a day ago

          Who’s to be the judge of what people need to know?

      • goosejuice a day ago

        How do you square that with social media being the source of news for many?

        • seizethecheese 16 hours ago

          Social media is lambasted for presenting people with the most engaging information rather than what experts think they need to know, and social media companies are largely just maximizing revenue. I think it squares nicely.

  • dfxm12 a day ago

    I just hope this will finally put to bed any ridiculous mentions of "liberal media bias", or that the tech sector has some liberal bias.

    • theWreckluse a day ago

      I think new-tech/mass-consumer-facing tech is always going to have a liberal bias - that just plays well with the dynamics of getting new users to use your procuct. It's only once a company/organization establishes itself as a mega Corp will we see the conservative idealogy exerting it's want to sustain/conserve the accumulated power.

    • mensetmanusman a day ago

      Why would it put it to bed? It’s worth people knowing that the media leans over 90% left from all the stats that exist.

      • DonHopkins a day ago

        [flagged]

        • yieldcrv a day ago

          and the profession is also populated by people that went to specific universities, in specific cities and have a specific voting record

          that's the standard people are using and can be corroborated

          • DonHopkins 18 hours ago

            So what? That's an incoherent irrelevant response that doesn't address any of the points I raised. Are you just trying to pull off "The Weave" by emulating Trump? You do realize that's just a lame excuse for incompetence and dementia, not an intentional debate strategy, don't you?

            • yieldcrv 16 hours ago

              I don’t care about the conversation you were having with the previous persons actually

              It was a response solely to your first paragraph about what left leaning might be in contrast to, when it’s also true that everyone else is like “or their voting record”

              • DonHopkins 13 hours ago

                So that's an incoherent irrelevant response that doesn't address any of the points I raised, and you admittedly don't even care about the conversation or have a point to make, you're just incoherently doing "The Weave" to hear yourself talk, not participating in an actual conversation with anyone. Sorry if I interrupted your tangled thread of demented consciousness. Please proceed with your warp and weft unraveling, Sir.

                • yieldcrv 10 hours ago

                  I added to the discussion, when viewed from a differing but valid perspective. after your long, unnecessary exposition and diatribe, I pointed out that the shared concept of “left” people were referring is simply their voting record, schooling and geography.

                  you are the only one hoping for a fight or debate. you got it from some comments, naively assuming everyone that isnt affirming your feelings is a far right extremist, and somehow you have grouped this comment thread in with that immature pursuit

                  you sought to define what the “not left” is, as if suddenly it will matter and the senate will pass the filibuster for your party of choice instead of being 50-50 for 10 years straight, and I sought to define what everyone else was talking about: the journalist’s voting records.

                  but sure, keep trying your approach, its working so well.

    • rayiner a day ago

      The media isn't even just liberal. It's off the charts liberal even among liberals. Among journalists, Democrats outnumber Republicans 10 to 1: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/dec/30/only-34-us-....

      This is reflected in news coverage. Consider how they cover things like Voter ID or proving citizenship to vote, which 80% of people support: https://news.gallup.com/poll/652523/americans-endorse-early-...

      Or consider how papers coverage policies like affirmative action that supermajorities of Americans oppose: https://www.forbes.com/sites/vinaybhaskara/2023/07/10/americ...

      • oezi a day ago

        > Among journalists, Democrats outnumber Republicans 10 to 1

        This seems to be a general observation when looking at college educated people that they lean more towards the Democratic party.

        Hard to combat such a bias.

        • rayiner a day ago

          White college graduates voted for Biden only by 55-45.

      • paul7986 a day ago

        Funny in terms of liberal technology is testing Chat GPT of any political biased.

        Based off asking it the following 3 questions it might just be...

        "Hey GPT, whose your spirit animal between Barrack Obama and Donald Trump?" It provided a neutral answer providing the pros of both dudes.

        "Hey GPT, whose your spirit animal between Obama and Hitler?" It clearly chose Obama saying how rightfully so awful Hitler was.

        "Hey GPT, whose your spirit animal between Trump and Hitler" It did not choose Trump at all rather just gave the rightfully so negative feedback about Hitler.

        No fan of Trump or politics in general but if it happily chose Obama yet avoided Trump that seems odd (Trump is no way close to a genocider).

        • oezi a day ago

          From Trump's rhetoric and flaming hatred for the 'enemies within' it seems not far fetched to imagine him setting up internment camps. It is a slippery slope as Germans can attest.

          • mike_hearn 19 hours ago

            The rhetoric has been equally flaming from Trump's self-declared enemies. Just a couple of years ago Democrats were telling pollsters they supported internment camps for their enemies:

            https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/par...

            > Fifty-nine percent (59%) of Democratic voters would favor a government policy requiring that citizens remain confined to their homes at all times, except for emergencies, if they refuse to get a COVID-19 vaccine.

            > Forty-five percent (45%) of Democrats would favor governments requiring citizens to temporarily live in designated facilities or locations if they refuse to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Such a policy would be opposed by a strong majority (71%) of all voters.

            That's a demand for internment camps. One famous academic went further and said it'd be fine to engage in mass starvation:

            https://nationalpost.com/news/world/noam-chomsky-says-the-un...

            The US needs to cool down the rhetoric on both sides, because it's an endless spiral of escalation right now. Trump isn't uniquely bad at this and the "slippery slope" was already slid a long way down, when he wasn't in charge.

    • kernal a day ago

      Ridiculous is thinking there is no legacy liberal media bias. Take the top 100 political articles from WaPo and the NYT from this year and tell me how many are anti Republican. I’m guessing nearly all of them.

      • michaelhoney a day ago

        it’s true that reporting the facts about what the 2024 incarnation of the GOP does makes them look bad

        • kernal 8 hours ago

          Not really. The liberal legacy media are just democrat shills that will do anything to get their party over the line.

      • defrost a day ago

        Many express fondness for Reagan era Republicans and lament their absence.

        There's support for Liz Cheney, a former chair of the House Republican Conference, coming out against Trump et al.

        Are you sure "anti-Republican" is what you're seeing and not just calling out the MAGA faction for their behaviour?

        • kernal 8 hours ago

          The fact the you would bring up Liz Cheney pretty much invalidates any opinion you might have of the Republican Party. There’s a reason that disgusting and vile thing is now “teaching” at a radical left wing training school.

      • pokerface_86 20 hours ago

        why don’t you take a look at the republican party’s policies and think about why that is?

        • kernal 8 hours ago

          Why don’t you take a look at the past 4 years and reflect upon the train wreck the democrats have caused?

          • pokerface_86 8 hours ago

            train wreck? i’m in the top 10% household income bracket in the country and life is better than ever.

            • kernal 7 hours ago

              Good for you. Too bad that you don’t have compassion for the majority of the population that have been affected by high food prices, high fuel costs and record crime levels. The tax from your 10% household income will come in handy for paying the living expenses of illegal aliens and the reparations you will owe.

              • pokerface_86 2 hours ago

                > high food prices

                not really my problem the general population is unable to comprehend second and third order effects of a global pandemic and the subsequent money printing that followed

                > high fuel costs

                gas is 2.39 around me. major metro area with population > 8 million

                > record crime levels

                where? last i checked crime levels are back to or below 2019

                >illegal aliens

                yeah? they’re the same ones serving me at the convenience stores, the restaurants, and the ones performing the vast majority of the labor that produces our food. america runs on the labor of illegal aliens, like it or not

                >tax

                my taxes are fairly low

    • fma a day ago

      Conservatives keep moving the goal post. I see a less criticism of conservatives due to the fear of being labeled as bias. i.e. the coverage of Biden's cognitive decline vs Trump's cognitive decline.

  • graemep 20 hours ago

    > Jeff Bezos, has a conflict of interest

    He is the outright (ultimate, through a holding company) owner of The Washington Post.

    Therefore there is no conflict of interest. He gets to decide what its interests are.

    I think it is worth asking whether it is in the public interest to allow people with other extensive business interests to own influential media businesses, but that is usual these days. Most media is owned by media (and sometimes more) conglomerates with many interests around the world.

    • lapcat 19 hours ago

      This is unhelpfully pedantic.

      My point is that Bezos would likely make a different decision for The Washington Post if he wasn't concerned about retaliation against his other business interests, and in fact he allowed the paper to make political endorsements in the past.

    • j_maffe 20 hours ago

      > He gets to decide what its interests are.

      No he doesn't. He can choose to do with it whatever he may like. But whether it's in its interest or not is a property purely derived from the current state of the journal and the market. Whether he likes it or not.

      And, yes, the issue stems from business ownership of a so-called "independent" news outlet which has clear conflict of interest. Which is something that we should not accept and continue fighting against, whether it's usual or not.

      • lurking15 20 hours ago

        > so-called "independent" news outlet which has clear conflict of interest

        If a majority of staff at a news outlet are liberal/progressive isn't that clearly a bias and hard to call independent?

        I just notice that people tend to only call out institutional bias in one direction

        • j_maffe 18 hours ago

          Independent doesn't mean unopinionated. As long as they're transparent about a set of ideals and principles that they follow through, being opinionated is perfectly fine for journalism.

      • graemep 19 hours ago

        "But whether it's in its interest"

        How do you define "its interest"?

        It is a business. It does not have interests of its own. its owners have interests - in this case its the one owner who has that. Its staff may have interests, as may other people, and there is always a public interest.

        > the issue stems from business ownership of a so-called "independent" news outlet which has clear conflict of interest. Which is something that we should not accept and continue fighting against

        I agree it is a problem, but, as far as traditional media goes, it is a lost cause. Can you see anything that will cause big media businesses to split themselves?

        • j_maffe 18 hours ago

          Well, it is an entity of its own that claims to strive for certain objectives (including the obvious one of being profitable). The owner could decide to change those objectives and make something new of it. The WSJ definitely has a set of interests that managers have a duty to satisfy, until the owner decides to change those interests. If they change their motto to "whatever Bezos needs" then it's problem solved. I don't see that on their about page, though.

          > Can you see anything that will cause big media businesses to split themselves?

          Who said anything about it needing to be voluntary. Regulation is a thing.

        • ImPostingOnHN 18 hours ago

          > It is a business. It does not have interests of its own. its owners have interests - in this case its the one owner who has that. Its staff may have interests

          You nailed it here: bezos, as the dude who owns the paper has a vested interest in his personal success, whether the paper succeeds or not. If it came down to him or the paper, he would choose himself.

          The editorial team, as the people who run the paper and are responsible for its quality, has a vested interest in the success of the paper. They decide what the interests of the paper are.

          If bezos goes against the editorial team, that is bezos' interests conflicting with their interests, and thus the paper's interests.

          • graemep 17 hours ago

            > has a vested interest in the success of the paper

            What defines the success of the paper? Why do employees rather than the owner (who ultimately appoints them) get to decide?

            It is a business. If it was a non-profit organisation you would have a point (although I do not personally think much of the big non for profit media organisations I can think of). Even if it had a structure designed to promote other values over profits (as Reuters does) you would have a point. In this case, AFAIK, it is simply the property of its owner. People get to decide what to do with their property.

            • ImPostingOnHN 17 hours ago

              > What defines the success of the paper?

              The people who run it, day-in and day-out, are best-equipped to answer this question.

              > Why do employees rather than the owner (who ultimately appoints them) get to decide?

              Because each employee fits the above criteria, and is thus better-poised to make such a judgement compared to one single person who is not. And when it comes to multiple-such, better-equipped judges, the disparity becomes starker.

              > People get to decide what to do with their property.

              This is a red herring. Nobody is saying bezos can't decide what to do with his property. He's just not as well equipped as Post employees, to judge whether his decision is good for The Post.

              After all, having money obviously doesn't mean you have better info, or have more context, or make superior judgements. In some cases it just means you got a good head-start because your dad owned an apartheid emerald mine, or a portfolio of new york slums.

    • make3 7 hours ago

      this is absolute BS. Journals are meant to have a split between the editorial board and their owners, because the credibility and ethics of the journal comes first. People don't read, or shouldn't want to read anyways, a paper that is just whatever the fuck Bezos decided was good that week; things should be as unbiased as possible.

  • bjourne a day ago

    > Newspapers publish opinions for the same reason that they publish comic strips: people want to read them. Readers seek them out. Newspapers are a business and have to give their customers what they want.

    The customer is predominantly the advertiser. Newspapers publish opinions to have something to fill the empty space surrounding the advertisements.

    • dingaling a day ago

      Indeed, I'd assumed paper use opinion columns because they're cheaper than news.

  • heresie-dabord a day ago

    > Newspapers are a business and have to give their customers what they want.

    If this is all we expect of journalism in a Democracy, then the current state of the "business" of "news" in the US should be satisfactory to all.

    • lapcat a day ago

      > If this is all we expect of journalism in a Democracy

      Straw man. I didn't say that.

      It's not a maximum, but it is a minimum. Newspapers require money to operate, and they're competing for attention in a capitalist economy. No attention. no money, no newspaper. In a democracy, you can't force-feed newspapers to the population. They voluntarily choose to read or not read.

      The "good news" is that many people in a democracy are interested in the hard truth. Nonetheless, it helps to package that along with softer marketing and entertainment.

  • akira2501 a day ago

    > Newspapers are a business and have to give their customers what they want.

    Isn't that supposed to be news and not worthless institutional opinions on the presidential office?

    > It's unlikely that an independent owner with no conflict of interest would make the same decision.

    An unconflicted owner wouldn't endorse either candidate. In general, hopefully, but in this election, particularly.

    • reverius42 a day ago

      Having an editorial opinion is not the same thing as having a conflict of interest. In general readers don’t expect newspapers to contain only news, but also opinions and editorial decisions. Candidate endorsements are a typical part of what’s expected.

    • 0x457 10 hours ago

      > Isn't that supposed to be news and not worthless institutional opinions on the presidential office?

      That's the goal of Journalism. Newspaper only goals: sell newspapers, sell ads in those newspapers (and since it we live in the age of internet - their website).

      > An unconflicted owner wouldn't endorse either candidate. In general, hopefully, but in this election, particularly.

      unconflicted owner's opinion shouldn't effect editorial staff opinions.

    • yieldcrv a day ago

      that's my stance as well

      WaPo needed someone to make a difficult decision, conflict of interest or not, to just rip the bandaid off of their imprisonment of endorsing candidates

      that's over now. the end. the market is going to forget this was ever a thing.

  • dazc a day ago

    '...sacrificing it and losing readers for the sake of his other business interests, i.e., government contracts.'

    Sound point unless you figure Bezos is accepting government may be about to change?

    • 0x457 10 hours ago

      WaPo takes a hit if they don't endorse, but that's not Bezos's core business. If they endorse Kamala and Trump wins - other businesses of Bezos would suffer. Basically it's safer to not endorse anyone.

  • AYBABTME a day ago

    I don't think it's a bad business decision. I stopped reading the WaPo when I got sick of its partial treatment of everything. And I'm not talking about supporting one candidate or another, I'm talking about sticking to facts and not ideological positions.

    This decision by Bezos is a shot across the bow in the right direction, in my opinion. Clear eyed news are needed and aside from FT.com (which these days is also trending toward alarmism) there's precious little left out there. I don't care about a journos' opinion, I really don't. I just want them to report about facts on the ground and not pick sound pieces for clickbaits.

    • lapcat a day ago

      > I just want them to report about facts on the ground and not pick sound pieces for clickbaits.

      There's no evidence of an overall change in the newspaper's direction. Bezos did not fire all of the opinion editors, for example. Neither did Bezos announce this "policy" in advance. It was a last-minute retraction after the editors had already drafted an endorsement.

    • reverius42 a day ago

      I think you’re reacting to alarmism as though it’s unwarranted. Have you considered it might actually be warranted?

      • AYBABTME 3 hours ago

        I did, and I feel like only long and cold headed analysis brought me out of it. It's easier to believe that alarmism is warranted than to think it isn't.

        The entire public sphere is freaking out about everything all the time, and catching sound bites, taking things out of context, lacking empathy for opposing viewpoints and clearheadedness. Alarmism these days is the default state. WaPo is participating in this hysteria campaign. Letting the hysteria come into your brain unchecked is not good, but that's the default situation for most people and it leads to alarmism.

        I think things are much more boring than people make them out to be, and that it's much harder to keep this perspective. You can't make good decisions when your brain is conditioned to believe in a reality and near-future that is much worse looking than what the actual current reality and near-future looks like.

        All this to say, I used to give into this alarmism. Post-extrication from this disposition, I try to be more self-aware and reticent to give in. It starts by seeking more facts and primary sources, or consuming summarized content from entities that are incentivized to, and with a culture of, sticking to the facts.

  • gonzobonzo a day ago

    > Newspapers are a business and have to give their customers what they want.

    This is true, but it shouldn't be viewed as unproblematic. Audience capture is a huge problem, and news organizations telling their audience what they here to the point that people get siloed in their own echo chambers is one of the main reasons why things are such a mess.

    • lapcat a day ago

      A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down.

      I'd say it's definitely possible to be in business and at the same time have business ethics, to care about the truth. I don't think it's inherently wrong to publish honest opinions, as well as funny comic strips, along with the other news, if it helps sell papers.

      The problems occur when business ethics, and the truth, honesty, get tossed out for the sake of profit and/or partisanship.

  • rayiner a day ago

    It's the editorial board that has the conflict of interest--between running a newspaper, and using the newspaper as a vehicle to advance their personal political ideologies. I grew up in the D.C. area reading WaPo. It went from being a milquetoast paper to being a vehicle for political radicals. And that's been a disaster for the business. The paper was on pace to lose $100 million last year, and has lost 500,000 subscribers since 2020: https://www.foxnews.com/media/washington-post-lose-100-milli....

    WaPo's business is catering to D.C. professionals. The nature of the country's electoral politics is that roughly half of those are going to be batting for each side. It's a good business decision not to seem like you're rooting for one side or the other.

  • seydor a day ago

    the result of 'business' decisions can be measured in more than just profits. News media routinely make 'bad business decisions' because they are tools of their owners. Hence why they go bankrupt often

  • waihtis a day ago

    Calling it a "bad business decision" just reveals your political preference. People who get their opinions from journalists is a constantly shrinking crowd. Today I mostly see only people of age 50+ who still actively think journalists can provide an accurate worldview for them.

    • lapcat a day ago

      > Calling it a "bad business decision" just reveals your political preference.

      It absolutely does not. You have no idea what my political preferences are, and I'm quite confident that your guesses are wrong.

      • waihtis a day ago

        [flagged]

        • lapcat 21 hours ago

          > Given people now have a choice of exactly 2 different political positions

          False, and ridiculous.

  • silexia 7 hours ago

    Newspapers are supposed to be about news, you can't trust someone who tries to tell you how to think about things. I just want news and I want to figure out how to think about it myself.

  • vakkermans a day ago

    > Newspapers are a business and have to give their customers what they want.

    I really want to challenge this idea. Businesses can have missions quite distinct from what the majority of their prospective customers would want.

    If I had practically unlimited money I wouldn't ever think of funding a news organisation and then only have it produce content that customers wanted. I would have a purpose for it, stemming from my own ethics.

    I think it quite naive to consider Bezos has not done the same and that this decision is simply in line with his personal political interests.

    Neoliberalism is a really poor substitute for personal morality and accountability.

    • lapcat a day ago

      > Businesses can have missions quite distinct from what the majority of their prospective customers would want.

      Failing businesses.

      > I would have a purpose for it, stemming from my own ethics.

      I never said that business is inherently in conflict with ethics, and I, as an entrepreneur myself, believe that ethics are necessary for business: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41951447

      > I think it quite naive to consider Bezos has not done the same and that this decision is simply in line with his personal political interests.

      I claimed that his decision is simply in line with his personal interests. Whether those are financial interests or political interests is difficult to determine. Nonetheless, the decision was bad for The Washington Post. Compare to Twitter/X: Elon Musk is indisputably using the social network he acquired for his personal political interests, and that has indisputably been bad for the business, driven away users and advertisers, and his creditors have vastly downgraded the value of the investment.

      > Neoliberalism is a really poor substitute for personal morality and accountability.

      This seems like a nonsequitur. How is "Neoliberalism" relevant? Is that what you believe I proposed? If so, you're wrong.

      • vakkermans 18 hours ago

        I quoted the bit I wanted to react to, namely the idea that businesses have to give customers what they want. I read that as strongly influenced by an economically driven - rather than morally driven - world view.

        Leaving money on the table does not necessarily mean a failing business, except for some extreme definition of 'failing'.

        I meant to argue against your first assertion, not your second; I'm not concerned with whether it's a bad financial decision or not.

        • lapcat 18 hours ago

          > I quoted the bit I wanted to react to, namely the idea that businesses have to give customers what they want. I read that as strongly influenced by an economically driven - rather than morally driven - world view.

          It's simply practically driven. You can try to give people what they "need" rather than what they want, but in a free country and a free market system, people cannot be force-fed. They can choose whether or not to buy what you're selling. All the good intentions in the world will go nowhere if nobody is listening.

          > Leaving money on the table does not necessarily mean a failing business

          True, but I wasn't referring to that. Ruthless profit maximization is not the same as giving the majority of prospective customers what they want. The former isn't required, but the latter is usually required to sustain the business.

          Imagine if a grocery store stocked only healthy food and got rid of all the junk food. It would go out of business, because people want their junk food and will go elsewhere for it.

  • supergirl a day ago

    that’s some mental gymnastics. so newspapers are free to publish opinions, it is in their business interest………………(but only if the opinion is the one I want otherwise it is not good business)

    • lapcat a day ago

      > so newspapers are free to publish opinions

      That's a strange way of putting it. Newspapers are free to publish anything, by the first amendment to the Constitution.

      > but only if the opinion is the one I want otherwise it is not good business

      I didn't say that. I said that people want to read opinions. Sometimes they enjoy reading opinions that they disagree with, and arguing with those opinions.

  • rufus_foreman a day ago

    [flagged]

    • devindotcom a day ago

      You want them to name... readers of newspapers?

      Editorials, by an outlet's editorial board or otherwise, have consistently been among the most popular content in news for over a century. That includes endorsements.

      • rufus_foreman a day ago

        >> You want them to name... readers of newspapers?

        Obviously not.

        I want them to name readers who seek out newspaper opinions.

        One name to start with.

        Do you seek out newspaper opinions?

        • kasey_junk a day ago

          Yes. I read the opinion sections on all 4 of the major newspapers I subscribe to. Why wouldn’t I?

        • JadeNB 14 hours ago

          > Do you seek out newspaper opinions?

          I do.

    • tbrownaw a day ago

      Opinion articles aren't about the opinion (well, technical sw dev articles where I'm looking for the standard way to do something are, but not non-industry news stuff) unless the writer is in a position to make their opinion matter, they're about the reasons for the opinion. They're interesting if there are reasons that are interesting, or if the writer's choice of reasons is interesting.

Molitor5901 2 days ago

To play Devils Advocate for a moment: Why do we need, or even want, a newspaper to endorse a President? How does it not undermine a paper's journalistic ethics to be neutral and fair?

  • coldpie 2 days ago

    I actually agree with you, newspapers really shouldn't be doing this. Our major local paper in the Twin Cities basically torched its reputation by endorsing wildly unqualified candidates for city offices (like, one guy they endorsed for Minneapolis city council didn't even live in Minneapolis). They recently decided to stop doing endorsements at all, which I think is the right decision.

    But that's not what happened here. The editors did their normal endorsement process, but the owner of the paper stepped in and personally overrode their process for this one particular endorsement. That's a way different story from deciding to stop doing endorsements.

    • Molitor5901 2 days ago

      Another point that just occurred to me: Who is the endorsement supposed to influence? I think in America at least, the national media has become so hyper partisan in the eyes of its readers, that an endorsement of a newspaper is really just preaching to the crowd. What difference does that endorsement really make?

      At the national level, I don't think it really makes a difference if a newspaper endorses a candidate for President. Those who read and value the opinions of that newspaper are more inclined to vote for the endorsed candidate anyways.

      • throwaway48476 a day ago

        I think it's like wearing a jersey for your favorite sport franchise. It's not meant to influence anyone outside the group but reinforce group cohesion.

      • kcplate a day ago

        It influences no one, but it sends a pretty loud message to the Democratic party that (now two, LATimes did same thing) normally reliable media orgs have lost confidence in the democrat party’s ability to bring forth a competitive candidate against Donald Trump.

        • Hasu a day ago

          > it sends a pretty loud message to the Democratic party that normally reliable media orgs have lost confidence in the democrat party’s ability to bring forth a competitive candidate against Donald Trump.

          It's not two media organizations. Both wrote endorsements of Harris.

          Two self-interested billionaires decided that they and their personal fortunes would be better off if those endorsements were not published.

          The message this sends to the Democratic party is: suck up to the rich guys if you want power. It's bad for society.

          • kcplate a day ago

            > suck up to the rich guys if you want power

            You don’t think this is a recent lesson? Pretty sure every politician already realized this. Since literally forever. Hell, I worked for a company whose wealthy owner had a steady stream of politicians flowing in and out of our offices promising the world for a handout, support, and help. Seemed like every week there was a tour or two for somebody. I have met literally 3 governors, several senators, US reps, state reps, county commissioners, multiple presidential candidates, sheriffs, mayors, wannabes for all and scores of political support staff who excitedly walked in my office while trying to schmooze the old man.

          • elcritch a day ago

            > It's not two media organizations. Both wrote endorsements of Harris. > Two self-interested billionaires decided that they and their personal fortunes would be better off if those endorsements were not published.

            How is it worse than a small cadre of elitist mono-culture editors using the reputation of WaPo for their chosen candidate?

            Bezos didn't force WaPo to endorse another candidate, I think it's actually good they don't endorse anyone at all.

    • bogantech a day ago

      > But that's not what happened here. The editors did their normal endorsement process, but the owner of the paper stepped in and personally overrode their process for this one particular endorsement.

      He owns the paper, they just work there.

      • kcplate a day ago

        Honestly it’s surprising to me that people really think that the news side of a media company operates with complete autonomy from the business side. They might claim it exists but that’s a fallacy.

        I worked at a major daily newspaper 30 years ago and I personally know of two cases in my short tenure there where news stories were killed because they didn’t want to piss off important advertisers. I am also aware of a story involving a family member of one of the executives that was let’s say “barely” reported. Other local media organizations interestingly had much more detail than we carried.

        News has always been and will always be first—a business.

        • mjcl a day ago

          Then I'd suggest their tagline of "Democracy dies in darkness" is pretty self-important and misleading.

        • noobermin 21 hours ago

          Advertisers is one thing, but where's the business sense in not reporting on an executive? That sounds like a little fiefdom, not something that makes "business sense."

          Whenever people say stuff like this it reminds me why I'm wary whenever people mention things being business friendly or pro-market because it has a lot to do with protecting certain people who already have a good position over merely following market forces.

          • kcplate 20 hours ago

            Point was that leadership of a media company might make editorial decisions that are in its best interest—whatever that interest might be. Not necessarily profit, but could be personal.

        • johnnyanmac a day ago

          We didn't give freedom of the press to protect businesses from government scrutiny. We did it to keep free information flowing.

          There's definitely some very hard and frank questions we need to ask if free information decides to focus on profits over communication.

          • kcplate a day ago

            The press is free to report on whatever they want. That freedom however is not a mandate that they must report on everything. Newspapers and other media companies have ALWAYS focused on profit. Nothing new there.

            Plus in this day and age there is literally no restriction on the flow of public accessible information at least in the US. Even when it was tried recently (twitter, FB, YouTube) during the pandemic the public backlash to that attempts at information control was so great that it might literally sway this election.

            • johnnyanmac a day ago

              > Nothing new there.

              like most of the 21st century: Nothing new, just getting more efficient and less subtle with it. 20th century corruption would have had this announced way back in 2023 to make the timing not so obvious at the bare minimium instead of having editorial waste its time on a story that was pulled last minute.

              >the public backlash to that attempts at information control was so great that it might literally sway this election.

              but nothing much changed. I don't know if public outcry vs output was always this poor, but that certainly seems to have changed over the decades. Too many people uncomfortable enough to complain but not enough to get up and get out.

              • kcplate a day ago

                > but nothing much changed

                Two of the three platforms (and the former CEO of one) have publicly admitted what was done at their companies was a mistake and the third has quietly reversed much of the topic controls around pandemic and vaccination content.

                I’d say that is something.

          • okr a day ago

            (correction: no one "gave" press freedom. instead it is protected against government overreach. just like any other free speech. thank you.)

    • TMWNN 2 days ago

      [flagged]

      • gatvol a day ago

        I would argue that endorsement while currently normalised, is not normal.

    • bitshiftfaced 2 days ago

      [flagged]

      • drewbug01 2 days ago

        “Had”, not “has”, a long history of not endorsing candidates. They’ve been endorsing since the 80s.

        The proper framing is “the owners stepped in to change the policy, to mirror the same policies they had before the 80s”.

        Whether that’s right or wrong to do is a separate question. But framing this as though it has been editors going rogue or something is just not what’s happening at all.

        • bitshiftfaced a day ago

          > But framing this as though it has been editors going rogue or something is just not what’s happening at all.

          Of which I didn't do. Granted, 40 years is a long time. But given that the company has had the policy of not endorsing for over two-thirds of its existence, I believe the "undo" framing is accurate.

      • Molitor5901 2 days ago

        I saw that but I'm not sure I see the "long history". From Eisenhower to Carter, then from Carter to now, that's not much of a long history of non-endorsement. The Post is taking a very strong stance here and it will be interesting to see if this stands up in 2028. The LA Times may have left the door open to future endorsements, but not the Post.

        Better question: Why now? What changed for them? Was it declining revenue/readers, an overhaul of ethics or process? I can't wait to read the tell all some day about these decisions.

    • transcriptase a day ago

      [flagged]

      • johnnyanmac a day ago

        you see how incedisive so many people are and sadly realize that yes: an endorsement from a big newspaper can mean a lot.

  • zmmmmm a day ago

    Endorsements are published by the editorial section which is specifically separated from the rest of the newspaper so to not undermine the neutrality of the journalism in the other sections.

    Opinion and analysis has always been part of news publications, and plays an accepted role in adding layers of interpretation onto the raw "facts" that is crucial in making those facts interpretable by readers who aren't expert in the subject matter.

    • smsm42 a day ago

      The idea that editorial team has some kind of expertise, unavailable to general population, that allows them ecxlusive ability to properly understand current events, seems to have no factual support at all. They are professionals in giving their opinions, it doesn't make their opinions be better that anybody else's. Experience suggests they are usually worse.

      • zmmmmm a day ago

        > The idea that editorial team has some kind of expertise, unavailable to general population

        That doesn't make sense to me - they literally spend all day every day absorbing, summarising and writing about context as their full time job. They are trained formally at assessing, evaluating and questioning facts. You can criticise the end result, but I can't see how it's reasonable to say they aren't far better positioned to have an informed opinion than the average reader who gets up in the morning with no training and tries to understand a slew of facts dumped on them without context.

        • akira2501 a day ago

          > all day every day absorbing, summarising and writing about context as their full time job.

          Something the people they are writing to and ostensibly on behalf of do not get to enjoy. Perhaps people with grounded perspectives would be more worthwhile. Guest opinions are logical, an actual editorial opinion department? That's just an early retirement plan for writers who don't have what it takes to produce news anymore.

        • rayiner a day ago

          Except in practice their editorial opinions boil down to value judgments that aren’t amenable to such analysis. They weren’t endorsing Harris because of the nuances of tax policy; it’s because they share her views on abortion, immigration, white liability for past racism, etc. These are the subject of moral and political philosophy, not expert analysis.

          That’s why WaPo has consistently endorsed the same party—even when that party’s policies have changed dramatically over time. WaPo would endorse Harris regardless of her policies.

          • armada651 a day ago

            > They weren’t endorsing Harris because of the nuances of tax policy; it’s because they share her views on abortion, immigration, white liability for past racism, etc. These are the subject of moral and political philosophy, not expert analysis.

            A candidate's social policies may be more important to some people than their fiscal policies. So an analysis of their social policies would be more useful to those readers than an analysis of their fiscal policies.

            You can make an expert analysis of a candidate's previous stances and track record on those subjects. Politicians will routinely lie about their previous stances, so that seems like a useful analysis to me.

            • rayiner a day ago

              There’s little meaningful “analysis” to be done about such policies. Just pledging agreement or disagreement with those philosophical beliefs. And that’s why such endorsements by journalists tend to undermine trust.

              • Clamchop 9 hours ago

                This doesn't make any sense. Of course social stuff like abortion and immigration first of all matter to readers, and second can amount to actual, written policy with great detail and nuance, and the consequences of such policies are complicated and meaningful.

                On abortion, there's now a national patchwork of policy. You could write a damned book analyzing their implementation and consequences.

                • rayiner 6 hours ago

                  We’re talking about endorsements. The nuances of those things don’t materially affect who the paper endorses, or readers’ views of those issues, which are rooted in morality and philosophy, not factual intricacies.

            • smsm42 13 hours ago

              Could you point me to such analysis published in WaPo? I mean seriously, it would be nice to have a list of policies that Harris supported before she was VP, during the time she was VP, and now that she is a presidential candidate. Side by side - is the wall stupid or is it necessary? Do we need higher taxes or tax breaks? Do we need to jail marijuana users or leave them alone? Is Israel a genocidal war criminals or our most important ally? Is our immigration policy broken or are we doing the right thing? Is the free speech the foundation of the democracy or dangerous chaos which needs to be controlled? There are a lot of confusion that may be clarified with proper analysts of the candidate's position on such questions.

              An article listing analysis like this, with appropriate quotations and explanations would be great. Does WaPo publish stuff like that, consistently, over the length of the campaign? Or would it rather do another "17 reasons why Trump is exactly like Hitler" level analysis?

        • smsm42 a day ago

          > they literally spend all day every day absorbing, summarising and writing about context as their full time job.

          I have no idea what "absorbing" means and how it's different from any random dude spending his day sitting on a couch glued to CNN/MSNBC screen. But the fact that they are professional writers doesn't give them any special quality in the insightfulness of their writings - you can be a professional writer and a complete doofus, to which we have an ample number of examples.

          > They are trained formally at assessing, evaluating and questioning facts.

          No they are not. Maybe they used to, somewhere in ancient times, but there's no slightest trace of any of it in most of the content produced by major press outlets. If they can do it - which I very much doubt - they certainly aren't bothering to.

          > You can criticise the end result

          By their fruits you will know them. The end result is the only criteria worth considering.

          > I can't see how it's reasonable to say they aren't far better positioned to have an informed opinion

          Some of them - with access to sources unavailable to regular people - may be better position to form an informed opinion, if they wanted to. But as soon as that information has been published, they do not have that better position anymore. And in addition to that, what is frequently happening is that they do not just publish the information available to them - instead they distort it and modify it to fit their pre-conceived opinion, and publish that, in hope that the public doesn't know any better (it usually does). If there is any truth to separation of news and opinion sections that we were told so much about it, then by that mere fact the opinion writers don't have any special informational insights - only the news people, working with confidential sources, might.

          > the average reader who gets up in the morning with no training

          What is that mythical "training"? I see no evidence of any relevant "training" in anything I read in the press. Most of them know how to handle basic grammar and write somewhat coherent text, but any person with basic education can. Beyond that, I don't see any special "training" there. And certainly there is an ample number of people who undergo much more rigorous training about how to handle facts, e.g. when studying hard sciences. Most press opinion writers do not undergo anything like that.

          > tries to understand a slew of facts dumped on them without context.

          What is that mythical "context" not available to regular people and where does it come from? Is there some secret "context sources" that are only opening if you work for WaPo? What is stored in those "context" treasuries?

          I think their existence is a complete fiction. There's just a bunch of people who are getting paid for publishing their opinions because they have a degree saying "journalism" on it or just because they applied to the job and got hired, but they don't have any special insight or "context". I mean, some of them might be just good at thinking and making conclusions (they usually don't survive in the press long) but that would be just random luck. Given the selection pressure, I'd expect lower chance to find such people among professional press than just in a random selection of people with the same class and education level.

      • bjtitus a day ago

        That would seem to negate the entire point of any editorial column then, right? If we don't care about their opinion, what's the point of reading in the first place?

        • smsm42 a day ago

          Well, somebody may care, and by random chance or a strike of luck they may just hire somebody whose opinion is worth hearing... I am just saying we shouldn't assume it upfront just because there's a bunch of guys that is paid for doing it. If there's a blog on the internet and it is interesting, I read it. If not, I ignore it. I don't stand in awe or cower in reverence just because some guy has a blog. Same should be done for opinion pages - it should be afforded reverence only after proving its worth, not upfront.

      • fma a day ago

        So - cancel the opinion section while we're at it I guess?

        • smsm42 a day ago

          Well, US is still a somewhat free country, so anybody can publish any opinion they want to publish, anytime they want to. I have nothing against that, in fact, I must admit I am guilty of it myself - I have a blog where I publish my opinions. It would be very hypocritical to me to deny anybody else the vices I enjoy myself. I think just realizing those people aren't better or worse than anybody else and do not deserve any special consideration is enough.

    • bee_rider a day ago

      It seems like the newspaper editorial section really ought to endorse somebody to make their biases clear, if nothing else. What are we to believe, that a bunch of people whose job it is to write opinion pieces don’t have an opinion about the election in their own country? Haha, yeah, sureeee…

    • zahlman a day ago

      >the editorial section which is specifically separated from the rest of the newspaper

      It hasn't felt like this to me for many years, for pretty much any outlet.

    • keiferski a day ago

      In practice there is little or no distinction. The list of top articles always includes opinion pieces, the choice of “neutral” fact articles to publish (and the headlines used) signals bias, and on a basic common sense level a newspaper isn’t going to publish an opinion piece that goes against the opinions of their workers/owners. Every time an opinion piece is published that goes against this, it’s a huge brouhaha.

      Interestingly on another note, opinion writers are often actually less qualified than you’d expect, because the business model of a newspaper doesn’t really work for accumulating expertise vs. a specialized magazine/Substack / etc. The only way to have consistent opinion pieces is to have a generalist, not a specialist.

    • Cyph0n a day ago

      Layers of interpretation = surfacing the bias of the editorial team so you can look for it in the non-oped sections of the paper

      • zmmmmm a day ago

        You can take that way if you want. But you aren't doing it justice if you just view it as purely cynical deliberate manipulation rather than a true effort at enhancing the reader's understanding.

        Essentially they offer a framework of reasoning around the facts presented that the reader can use to make their own evaluation. Like if someone reports that 122,211 electric vehicles were sold last year. Is that a lot? Is that not a lot? You would need to start comparing to previous years, what external factors might be influencing sales. There is intrinsically no way to do that without introducing selective bias about what is considered or not. But the reader at least gets that context to enhance their own understanding.

    • colordrops a day ago

      > crucial in making those facts interpretable by readers who aren't expert in the subject matter.

      That's pretty charitable. In my experience most opinion and "analysis" is typically heavily biased and in service of some agenda.

    • ekianjo a day ago

      > to not undermine the neutrality of the journalism in the other sections.

      There is no neutral publication. Of there is an editorial board there is by definition no neutrality.

    • wordofx a day ago

      [flagged]

      • zmmmmm a day ago

        > If trump said 1+1=2

        He says things like "I wish I had general's like Hitler's" or his political opponents are the "enemy within" and he would harness the military against them if he gets in power, and that migrants are criminals.

        I really don't know how you can equate something as uncontroversial as "1+1=2" with such controversial and divisive statements.

      • rat87 a day ago

        It is a neutral statement that Trump is objectively terrible. By contrast it is propaganda to defend him when he claims 2+2=5, which he does on a regularly basis.

        And this doesn't have anything to do with "the left" a ton of conservative Republicans have admitted that Trump is objectively terrible.

        https://www.wpr.org/news/conservative-commentator-charlie-sy...

      • fma a day ago

        [flagged]

      • strunz a day ago

        He lies about absolutely everything, so everything he says should be met with skepticism.

    • ww520 a day ago

      If it were the editor's opinion, how is it any different from the opinion of anybody off the street? Why do the editors get the newspaper platform to publish their opinions?

      • krapp a day ago

        >Why do the editors get the newspaper platform to publish their opinions?

        Because they work for the newspaper and that's part of their job?

        • generalizations a day ago

          Then we're right back to the original question:

          > How does it not undermine a paper's journalistic ethics to be neutral and fair?

          • hluska a day ago

            Writing opinion and reporting on events are different things. Opinions are usually denoted at masthead, preamble and postscript.

            Why do you think that readers don’t understand that?

          • vehicles2b a day ago

            It's rather naive to think that newspapers ought to be neutral (or fair) in everything they produce. What kinds of neutral is desirable? There's neutral tone or neutral political bias -- there are many different ways for a newspaper to be or not be neutral.

            Assuming neutrality isn't something that we should expect newspapers to value, then I think transparency is an good alternative. A presidential endorsement can be a good thing in that the newspaper staff are being openly transparent about their political bias.

          • krapp a day ago

            Opinions aren't meant to be neutral and fair, and it isn't a violation of journalistic ethics to publish them as such.

            If they had tried to disguise opinions as journalism by introducing intentional bias and distortion into a story, then that would be a problem. But newspapers have published opinions for ages.

  • janalsncm a day ago

    I guess we need to think about what it means to be “neutral”. If half of Americans believe the earth is flat, is the neutral stance to say it’s unclear? Or is it to figure out what the truth is? In my mind there’s a difference between journalists and pollsters.

    Of course with endorsements you can technically bring up the is/aught dichotomy. The facts may be what they are but that doesn’t necessitate any particular action. While this is technically true, I never see anyone complaining about the ethics of testing products and endorsing good ones. Wirecutter is basically doing the same thing with headphones and running shoes. Yet I only ever see pushback on political endorsements.

    In short, umpires are neutral and fair but the fact that some teams win a lot more than others doesn’t mean they’re not doing their job.

    • christophilus a day ago

      That’s because if you praise a terrible toaster, life for most Americans is unaffected. If you endorse a political candidate, and nudge the election in one direction or other, roughly 50% of Americans will see that move as hostile.

      • janalsncm a day ago

        The principle is the same though, whether you’re recommending candidates or toasters. Just because one has more impact than the other, doesn’t make it less ethical to investigate and recommend.

        • valval a day ago

          Your last sentence isn’t grounded in reality. Negatively impacting the lives of millions of people is less ethical than negatively impacting the lives of a few.

    • mensetmanusman a day ago

      Politics is simply preference. The shape of the earth is not.

      • janalsncm a day ago

        It’s a bit more than that in my mind. Political candidates at this point are telling vastly different stories about the reality we live in. The changes they want to make follow from the story they are telling.

        It’s not that politicians share a common set of facts and just have differences of opinion about how to best accomplish the same goal. They are telling vastly different stories. In some sense, the more compelling story wins.

        So I see a pretty direct connection between facts and political preference.

        • reverius42 a day ago

          To put a finer point to it, some politicians use “alternative facts.”

  • maxerickson a day ago

    It's not automatically unethical for a journalist to advocate for something.

    I guess if they entirely stopped publishing self authored editorials it might be "neutral" to not publish a particular one. But that isn't what is happening.

    • jll29 a day ago

      The main thing for journalists is to strictly separate news reporting from editorial opinion pieces and clearly mark which is which.

    • Dalewyn a day ago

      A journalist's job is to journal something, nothing more and nothing less.

      If a purported journalist wants to influence or otherwise lead his audience somewhere, he is many things (commentator, advocate, activist, influencer, etc.) but he is not a journalist.

      • maxerickson a day ago

        Declaring your misunderstanding doesn't make it so.

        "Engineers make implements of war" or so.

        • jdgoesmarching a day ago

          It’s very strange how many people here have confidently incorrect ideas about what journalism purports to be or do.

        • Dalewyn a day ago

          An engineer is someone who develops and implements engines.

          What is an engine? Citing Merriam Webster[1]:

          >3a: something used to effect a purpose

          So yes, an engineer can make implements of war among many other implements. The people who actually wage war are called other things.

          [1]: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/engine

      • ignoramous a day ago

        > If a purported journalist wants to influence ... he is not a journalist

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advocacy_journalism

        • blackeyeblitzar a day ago

          That seems to just describe activism, not journalism. What makes it journalism to you - the association with a company that punishes a newspaper?

          • janalsncm a day ago

            That’s a pretty low bar for “activism” in my mind. Activism is more about organizing people, organizing events, coordinating action, raising money, protesting, etc. although good journalism enables activism.

            The entire point of journalism is holding powerful people/groups accountable. This is why countries like China hate journalists. Big companies like “journalists” who don’t ask tough questions. But the job of journalism isn’t just to reprint a press release with slightly different phrasing.

      • adriand a day ago

        Journalism and a robust news media are a critical part of democracy. We can’t have a functioning democracy without them, just like we also need an independent judiciary, independent educational institutions and so on. As such, journalists are on the “side” of democracy. It is no accident that fascists and authoritarians attack the news media. They have to in order to gain and keep power.

        The correct posture, therefore, of the free press when a charismatic authoritarian is on the cusp of power is opposition. So-called “neutrality” is not just foolish, it betrays their entire reason for being!

      • johnnyanmac a day ago

        Devil's advocate: you can be more than one thing at once. And newspapers never promised to only be for journalism.

      • vr46 a day ago

        This is a completely wrong and perhaps deliberately misleading impression of journalism and journalists. Healthy journalism absolutely provides critical analysis.

        • skellington a day ago

          lol....a key tenet of journalism is objective reporting:

          Objective Reporting: Journalism aims to report events truthfully, objectively, and fairly, without bias. This involves verifying facts, seeking multiple perspectives, and presenting information clearly.

          Activist-journalism is an oxymoron. There are very few journalists anymore.

          • vr46 a day ago

            You can find countless lists describing principles and tenets of journalism that differ from each other.

            Accuracy, verification, impartiality, yes, but seeking the truth upsets people, and the usual attack on that is to claim bias, prejudice, activism and “fake news” on the part of the journalist/organization

          • maxerickson a day ago

            Is it activism to report on a rape survivors group and not an ice cream social?

            Are there a clear bright line tests for things like "objective" and "bias" and "fair"?

      • sleepybrett a day ago

        These are not journalists, these are the OPINION EDITORS. You know, the op-ed page, the page that contains NO journalism.

        It has been a long tradition for the OPINION EDITORS of newspapers to endorse one or more positions of various political races, especially the presidential race.

        • Dalewyn a day ago

          This is regarding endorsements by the outlet as a whole. If someone wants to go out and publicly endorse a candidate on their own name, nobody's stopping them.

          What Bezos did is say, no, you cannot and will never again slap the Washington Post's name onto your personal endorsement. I think that's fair, he owns the brand, and I think it's also good for journalism overall because it's not a journalist's job to push opinions.

  • karmakurtisaani 2 days ago

    > How does it not undermine a paper's journalistic ethics to be neutral and fair?

    Where did you get this? Every news source has some bias, journalists, editors and owners of the media house are not some ideal beings. The good ones are honest about their bias.

    As to endorsing a candidate, it's absolutely for the paper to decide. Endorsing a candidate might alienate some readers, not endorsing others.

  • sbuttgereit a day ago

    To play Devil's Advocate to the Devil's Advocate... I would posit that journalistic neutrality isn't possible: and if that's the case I'd rather the journalist or publication wear their biases on their sleeve.

    I can read a biased story, with values very different to my own, and still draw conclusions that are still meaningful. Mind you, I would expect omissions and couching that is flawed, but understanding the thinking of those I oppose is valuable and allows me to see their blind spots (or my own for that matter).

    But a news organization or journalist being clear about their values and politics also disposes of the harmful notion that they've actually achieved some sort of objective reading or that they're being complete and well rounded. There's a deceptiveness in that pretense which some readers (watchers) may actually take for truth and not think more critically about what they're consuming than that.

  • anyonecancode a day ago

    I think if Bezos had announced this change in policy in, say, Feb 2021, it would have landed differently.

    • quesera a day ago

      I think this is exactly right.

      I'm 100% on board with impartial reporting, with the caveats that a) endorsements are of the Opinion section, and b) the fact of the matter is that only the higher-minded news orgs would attempt impartiality -- so it's really just ceding the argument.

      And LATimes and WaPo endorsements almost certainly won't have an effect on this election.

      But, this reeks of cowardice. If you wanted to return to the journalistic standard of impartiality, that's a great thing to do when the pressure is low. Feb 2021 would have been perfect.

      Less than two weeks before the most contentious election in modern history? And specifically when one candidate has threatened news organizations and their owners with retribution (legal, commercial, extralegal) for stories they don't like?

      That's capitulation, not impartiality. If you believe in the mission of journalism, the honorable option would be to anti-endorse any candidate who threatens that mission.

      If you don't believe in that mission, then what are you doing operating a newspaper?

      Bezos is a coward.

    • johnnyanmac a day ago

      100%. Or even January 2024. Shutting down the operation last minute is simply suspect in so many areas.

    • ein0p a day ago

      [flagged]

  • foogazi 2 days ago

    The editorial page runs on opinion - I expect them to opine

  • laidoffamazon a day ago

    Spiking an endorsement that's already written is not neutral either. They could have made this decision in January or years ago. They did not.

  • bitshiftfaced 2 days ago

    I think people "need" their publications to do this in the sense that the publication may worry about losing readership for not "doing their part to support the morally correct candidates." But you're right. Ideally a publication would report the objective reality and let its readers decide what to make of it.

  • dekhn 2 days ago

    Newspapers have several different departments- a news reporting department, which ostensibly attempts to be neutral and fair (but often isn't), and an editorial department, which is neither neutral, nor fair. The endorsement comes from the editorial side.

    I can't answer why we would want newspapers to endorse presidents- except that historically, newspapers played a big role in shaping public opinion (now mostly replaced by social media).

  • UncleMeat a day ago

    The editorial board is separated from the newsroom and consistently writes persuasive opinions in the editorial page. "We think you should vote for X" is not structurally different from anything else that appears on the editorial page.

  • dehrmann a day ago

    My gripe with endorsements is they imply people can't think critically for themselves.

    • 6yyyyyy 9 hours ago

      I find endorsements very valuable when voting in down-ballot elections. A good endorsement includes the reasoning behind the decision. I read the endorsements of multiple outlets and find myself agreeing more with one or the other.

      What's the alternative, do comprehensive research on the record of 20 candidates? I don't have time for that. Read the blurbs they write about themselves in the voter's guide? Why should I trust that, they can write anything there.

    • reverius42 a day ago

      Supposedly some voters are undecided. Perhaps they would be swayed by a persuasive argument; this doesn’t necessarily mean they can’t think critically.

      I say supposedly because I find it hard to believe the WaPo endorsement would actually sway anyone.

  • mperham a day ago

    “He gets to be lawless while she has to be flawless.”

    It’s not biased to call a spade a spade.

    • mensetmanusman a day ago

      [flagged]

      • reverius42 a day ago

        Until your second paragraph I thought you were talking about putting a certain 34-count felon behind bars.

  • jfoster a day ago

    I would extend that to all businesses. For the sake of the business & their customers it's usually best to keep politics out of it.

    • mandevil a day ago

      As long as the Post has an editorial page, with people employed to share their opinions, what are they supposed to do?

      Opinion and reporting are separate- famously the WSJ reporting is quite strong and their opinion section is ... often wrong- but as long as an opinion section exists that's kinda their job, to share their opinion. If you want to get rid of opinion that might be a reasonable thing (with cable news and the internet no one has a shortage of opinion these days!) but doing it in such a ham-fisted way so close to the election is not a sign of a carefully thought-out business decision, it's a sign of cowardice.

      • jfoster a day ago

        They could share their opinions on the policies of each candidate. That could be great at helping people see perspectives other than their own, so that they can weigh it all up and make their own decision. Doing an endorsement is kind of the opposite of that, because it is essentially telling readers "you don't need to decide, we have done it for you."

        • mandevil a day ago

          Counterpoint: the biggest problem facing opinion journalism today is the competition. Actual news reporting is expensive and slow and sometimes doesn't pan out, isn't very profitable and there isn't that much of it. But you can get opinion everywhere these days- cable TV news, internet streamers, internet articles, it's everywhere. That suggests that there is actually a huge demand for highly opinionated work (and also that it is remarkably cheap to produce), but whether it's something like Daily Kos or Free Beacon or Alex Jones or Newsmax, it seems like everyone can find their own personal brand of opinion journalism that both flatters their own pre-existing opinions and at the same time molds them. Lots of narrowband broadcasting in that space, and the daily papers are really struggling with their goal of broad reach- they are getting outcompeted in each specific niche by a specialty player that caters to a much smaller, more specific set of opinions. (They try to have a diverse range of OpEd columnists, hoping that if you don't agree with Paul Krugman maybe you'll like David French, but that's a hard thing to pull off these days when your competition is just people of one specific ideological wedge.)

          In theory your idea would be good, except when I look at the market I don't see anyone actually succeeding at that, which suggests to me that it's not actually a very large market of consumers.

  • deepsquirrelnet a day ago

    It wouldn’t be interesting or newsworthy to me personally if they had done that.

    Given that editorial boards at newspapers like WaPo traditionally do, I find it notable when the billionaire owner steps in to stop them from publishing the endorsement, due to fear of retaliation from one of the candidates.

    To me, that’s worth knowing about.

  • neves a day ago

    There's no neutral human being.

  • majani a day ago

    And it's also bad for business. I think people on either side of the aisle underestimate just how tilted the other side can get when you go against them

  • swatcoder a day ago

    The idea is that these people spend their days in the weeds, working over stories and leads, getting to know people personally, absorbing information and insight that doesn't make it to print, seeing the connections and threads between all the things they publish, and are literally professional news people the way many of us here are professional technology people who might have some insight on technology topics.

    You can make the case that they might be disingenuous or manipulative in sharing what they claim to be their opinions, or that their opinions reflect cultural indoctrination rather than professional assessment, etc -- and so you don't have to take their endorsements seriously.

    But it's not a crazy idea that they have something valuable to share for all the time they spend very close to news and politics, and it's not bad to know what their big picture view of topics and people are as they write and select stories for the rest of the paper as it helps you contextualize them in their subjectivity.

    • oceanplexian 6 hours ago

      Those people working in mass media are going to have massive biases and blind spots the same way tech people do. That’s because news isn’t an accurate representation of reality, it’s representing the most extreme examples and outliers in society. If you have a group of people reading about outliers all day they aren’t going to be grounded in what ordinary people are actually experiencing.

    • tightbookkeeper 2 hours ago

      But it’s sold as keeping you informed about the world. When it actually is just about what journalists think.

      Like you said, that can be valuable, especially in politics, when one hopes they aid your messaging. But it’s not a moral or even practical imperative to keep up with journalism.

      Imagine learning about sports through ESPN commentary and never actually watching a game.

      A similar professional blindspot occurred when many engineers thought twitter would collapse when Elon fired all those people. Because they see twitter as a piece of software, not a brand and organization.

    • selimthegrim a day ago

      This reminds me of when The New Republic had a bunch of staff quit en masse because the new imported editor was blatantly bullshitting them. He didn’t realize that he was talking to a bunch of professional journalists who knew exactly what being bullshit was like.

      • tightbookkeeper 2 hours ago

        Was that the story they wrote about themselves?

  • Glyptodon a day ago

    I think there's arguments either way, but I also think as a certain point there is an obligation to point out that Trump is basically an anti American who probably takes more notice of a roll of toilet paper than the constitution. I'd argue that maybe it would behoove an institution of trust to make an endorsement only rarely, but it's also long been part of the means of public discourse for papers to put out opinions and endorsements.

    More so than that question, I think it's more obvious to ask "if you're going to have that argument, is the year Trump, the nation destroying clown, is running, the year to suddenly make a change after something like > 3 decades? Especially when it seems like your owner might be making the change because he wants to curry favor for contracts?"

    It's a pretty pathetic look, but I don't particularly expect any civic virtue from Bezos, so not shocked.

    No doubt this will be portrayed as Bezos reigning in "Democrat" conspiracies and used to normalize Trump by the denizens of that delusional universe.

  • metabagel a day ago

    It’s a statement of the values of the newspaper. This is what we stand for, and we are endorsing this person because of those values. It tells people about the paper and about the candidate being endorsed.

    The issue here is that Trump is a threat to our democratic system of government. It’s not the time to be changing policies and refusing to endorse. It’s a time for taking a stand.

    • reverius42 a day ago

      Clearly the values of the newspaper (as determined by the owner) aren’t what the employees, or many of the readers, thought they were.

  • krapp 2 days ago

    Which is worse, a newspaper expressing an opinion or a newspaper being forbidden from expressing an opinion?

    • batch12 a day ago

      Forbidden by whom? Forbidden by its owner vs forbidden by an external party like the government are two different situations.

      • toofy a day ago

        the article says when trump was president , he interfered and caused bezos’ business to lose a government contract due to the newspaper’s coverage of trump.

      • johnnyanmac a day ago

        Given this context, I don't give much BOTD for the "external party".

      • krapp a day ago

        I'm not aware that the government has forbidden any news outlet from endorsing Kamala Harris. It would be weird if they did.

        • batch12 a day ago

          I'm not aware of any either, just trying to understand the point you're making with your comment.

          • krapp a day ago

            I was referring to the context of the comment to which I was replying, and asking a rhetorical question regarding the relationship between the free speech rights of the press and the implication that the press should be prevented from expressing editorial opinions.

            • batch12 a day ago

              The paper is self-censoring. My confusion is around how the free speech rights of the press are being infringed. As I understand it, the paper willingly gave up its own rights. The point I was trying to make (poorly) is that this seems like less of an issue than, for instance, being compelled by a third party.

              Edit: lots of changes to try and clarify my point

              • krapp 16 hours ago

                I disagree that the paper is self-censoring. Editors wrote and intended to publish endorsements of Kamala Harris. They didn't choose to censor themselves, nor willingly give up anything. The decision was made by management.

                That may be less of a problem than government goon-squads raiding the Washington Post but I still think it's a problem.

                • batch12 11 hours ago

                  Isn't management the paper too?

    • skellington a day ago

      [flagged]

      • krapp a day ago

        I can respect that private corporations have the right to "censor" (I put that in quotes because nowadays literally any moderator action is considered censorship) while disagreeing with specific decisions by corporations to do so. I wouldn't say newspapers shouldn't endorse candidates if they endorsed Trump (as some papers have done,) but I would think that was a bad idea given Trump's animosity towards the press.

        I can also distinguish between the value of the press and the value of a social media platform. Banning an account on Twitter doesn't carry the same social weight as banning journalists. To me, while both are legal and within the bounds of free speech, one is distinctly worse for society than the other.

  • dclowd9901 a day ago

    It’s a disingenuous question: newspapers endorse presidents. That ship has sailed and it’s sailed a long time ago.

    The issue at hand here is what happens to objective news reporting when a rampant vindictive psychopath enters the office of the President.

  • lysace a day ago

    I don't know for sure, but I suspect that this phenomenon of news media endorsing political candidates is almost entirely unique to the US. Please prove me wrong.

    • mandevil a day ago

      I am monolingual but here is Le Monde's English edition endorsing an anti-RN (far right party) plan in the recent French Parliamentary elections:

      https://www.lemonde.fr/en/opinion/article/2024/06/28/french-...

      It was done under the name of the Director of Le Monde, rather than as an unsigned editorial as is common in English language newspapers, but it sure looks similar to my American eyes.

    • arp242 a day ago

      Making a big song and dance about the entire business of "endorsements" seems to be a very US thing as far as I know. I am of course not familiar with all democracies of the world, but it doesn't seem common anywhere else I've seen.

    • hluska a day ago

      The Globe and Mail is a Canadian paper. Here is its history of endorsements since 1984:

      https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/federal-electi...

      There is an entire Wikipedia page devoted only to endorsements in the 2024 United Kingdom general election:

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endorsements_in_the_2024_Uni...

      • lysace a day ago

        Yeah, it does seem big in anglo-saxon countries. (I already posted that Wikipedia page, btw.)

        • hluska a day ago

          I have an eight year old so there’s a big gap between actually starting a comment and posting it. That’s a pretty weak thing to criticize me for.

          • lysace 11 hours ago

            You're not the only one with kids, but I'm not sure how that is relevant.

    • mongol a day ago

      I can't prove you wrong, but I think political alignment of newspapers come in many flavors. Many countries have more parties than two, and as the choice ls less binary, the endorsements can be more subtle.

  • unethical_ban 17 hours ago

    Your question is irrelevant. If Bezos or the leadership of the post had an ideological issue with endorsements, they should have decided that 6 months ago or one month from now.

    It is blatantly obvious that this decision was done solely for Bezos business interests. Ignoring this and leaning into a theoretical debate to defend the decision is insulting.

  • 2OEH8eoCRo0 2 days ago

    Let's do an extreme example. If one candidate were to say, "I will burn down the Washington Post" would you expect the Washington Post to be neutral? Seems fallacious.

  • frugalmail a day ago

    The mask about current media being "neutral and fair" came off long ago.

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    That’s a bit beside the point in this case. Newspapers are supposed to have a first amendment right to say whatever they want and the key concern is that Bezos spiked the editorial to curry favor with Trump.

    • cryptonector a day ago

      Bezos own the paper, so it's _his_ first amendment right, not the editorial board's.

      • eapressoandcats a day ago

        Sure but the concern is that he did it to appease the government which will retaliate against speech under Trump.

    • danans a day ago

      Whatever his reason, this isn't a first amendment issue because it's a private entity constraining its own speech, not the government.

      • eapressoandcats 15 hours ago

        The first amendment issue is that he is doing it because of fear that the government will retaliate against his other companies.

        A lot of folks are exhorting him to resist in order to protect the norm, but it his true that _his_ choice is caused by first amendment violations, not causing them.

iambateman a day ago

Let’s zoom out from the present election and remember how Bezos took over…

The first thing he said was “The paper’s duty will remain to its readers and not to the private interests of its owners.”

We, the readers, should require an apology from Bezos for breaking his promise to keep this separate from his other concerns.

Until that happens, one must assume that WaPo is permanently compromised in the favor of Bezos’s interests.

It’s not about Kamala, it’s about literally everything.

  • fallingknife a day ago

    I don't doubt that, but what company isn't compromised in favor of its owner's interests?

    • kuschkufan a day ago

      Never will I not be not astounded by this kind of reasoning. What the hell are you implying here? Others do it all the time so it's nothing special, or rather it's even okay or fine because others do it. Great. What an argument. Most basic whataboutism ever.

      • adr1an a day ago

        I took the same comment on a different way. To me they're referring to the fact that there are many other media outlets. Not only the big ones that do the same. But the smaller, "independent", that deserve more readers.

        granted, they may also have interests or agendas. They point is we need decentralization!

      • fallingknife a day ago

        You do it too. You act in your own interests. You are not special. You are not better than Jeff Bezos or anyone else.

  • Teever a day ago

    Does an apology matter? Do we really need one?

    How will an apology from Bezos improvement life?

    What would improve mymlife are clear concrete actions not measly words.

    • iambateman 20 hours ago

      Honestly, it’s all words unless the paper itself is sold to an independent nonprofit solely devoted to journalism.

      • mc32 19 hours ago

        Independent journalism that delves into both/all sides and does not rely on soundbites and extracting things out of context and has no agenda but the truth Like during Covid they would allow vigorous debate about efficacy, lockdowns, deplatforming, etc.

        It's a dream but would not last. All sides would attack it for being for whoever the boogeyman they think is.

screye a day ago

The Venn diagram of those who'd be influenced by a WaPo endorsement and committed Kamala Harris voters is a perfect intersection. For 50 years, WaPo has endorsed the democratic candidate [1] for president. No mystery here. It's a pointless endorsement.

[1] https://noahveltman.com/endorsements/

  • lostdog a day ago

    The endorsement lets them write why they support the candidate. Laying out the reasons is what could be convincing, and is what's also being blocked here.

    • warner25 a day ago

      I think the intuition of the parent comment is right, but you also make a fair point[1]. I just wonder if you genuinely believe that any prospective Trump voter could be convinced by any argument to vote for Harris at this point. I mean after all the things that have already been written and said by so many, even by Trump himself, and have failed to convince ~47% of Americans that he's unfit to be the president.

      Honestly, I look at the billions of dollars being poured into political ads, and I can't help but think that it's all a tremendous waste because it's hard to imagine that there's anybody left who didn't already form a strong opinion about Trump at some point over the past ten years.

      [1] Like even assuming that prospective Trump voters don't read this newspaper, an especially novel or powerful argument could get picked up and spread by other outlets that do reach prospective Trump voters.

      • llamaimperative 19 hours ago

        Undecided voters will decide the election, yes they exist and yes they can change opinions

      • smokedetector1 a day ago

        Political ads have many purposes, including convincing people to vote for their candidate, instilling a sense of urgency/motivation/purpose to actually get out and vote, and then second order goals like general PR/familiarity for the party, etc.

    • refurb a day ago

      But this change doesn't stop any of the journalists from writing editorials endorsing a candidate, including laying out reasons, correct?

      The difference is that the paper as a whole won't endorse a candidate?

  • metabagel a day ago

    On the other hand, Trump is using the L.A. Times non-endorsement to attack Harris. So, it does matter.

    Endorsements express the values of the paper and gives people more information about the candidates and what is at stake.

  • rozap a day ago

    And it opens to them up to retribution from Trump if he wins, which is his entire method of operating. From a game theory perspective it doesn't make sense for them to do an endorsement when a mob boss type character is about to get elected.

    • noirbot a day ago

      Let's be clear who "them" is. It's Bezos. The people at the paper wrote up the whole thing and then were blocked by Bezos and the CEO of the paper.

      You can argue it's game-theory sensible, but it certainly tells you that Bezos doesn't care to put any of his vast money at risk for any cause at all.

      • rozap a day ago

        Yes but we know this about him.

        • noirbot a day ago

          Sure, but let's not pretend the writers at the paper are deciding this is better for their future. And let's not even give Bezos the grace that this is about if the Post succeeds. It's clear this is about if Amazon or Blue Origin gets contracts in the future under Trump and he's willing to burn down the Post to avoid that downside.

    • addandsubtract 21 hours ago

      "Lets not oppose nazis in case they gain power again."

      You're morally and humanly bankrupt if you believe and act this way.

      • JeremyNT 12 hours ago

        > You're morally and humanly bankrupt if you believe and act this way.

        Those characteristics are, if not strictly required, at least overrepresented in billionaires. It seems like a reasonable approximation for how Bezos might perceive his situation here.

        You don't usually get to be a billionaire by caring very much about morality.

      • llamaimperative 19 hours ago

        Well, lots of people did and do and will behave that way. Cravenness runs amok.

  • selimthegrim a day ago

    1988 isn’t 50 years

    • unethical_ban 17 hours ago

      They skipped 88 because the editorial board decided they didn't want to endorse.

Ankaios a day ago

Well, I guess now democracy dies in anticipation of darkness.

  • euroderf a day ago

    Things that go trump in the night.

daft_pink 2 days ago

Is anyone really changing their mind based on some newspaper endorsement? I’m pretty sure everyone knows who they’re gonna vote for at this point.

  • mandevil a day ago

    This is extremely similar to the sudden announcement of policies by all the major newspapers that they were not going to publish documents that they thought were stolen by foriegn intelligence services from political campaigns: it is a reasonable position to have, and if announced well before the election season started would be completely unobjectionable. Doing it when they announced it, however, is significantly changing the rules in favor of one candidate.

    Doing it after the board had already written up a document endorsing a candidate (demonstrating clearly that it was not a policy of anyone but the owner, who decided to be an utter coward at the last minute) sends a clear message that even one of the richest men in the world is scared of possible backlash against him.

    • nickspag a day ago

      It should also come with a reckoning on their role in the recent history that led to this change and it should be clearly communicated.

      And the standard to/not publish should be clearly laid out and justified in their own words.

  • moduspol 2 days ago

    Now we'll never know who the Washington Post's editorial board would have endorsed.

    At least Taylor Swift was able to make her recommendation, so I know I'm all set.

    • cflewis a day ago

      Actually we do, the reporting in WaPo itself said they had already put together the copy for Harris and were ready to run it.

      The newsroom basically did all they could to say it without saying it.

      • ImJamal a day ago

        The person you are replying to understands this and was being sarcastic. Everybody already knew who they wanted to endorse well before this came out.

        • johnnyanmac a day ago

          Sarcastically asked or not, the answer is sadly yes. That's why every dang US election comes down to some undecided voters in 10 states.

          But that's a societal issue that's only given lip service at most.

          • tstrimple a day ago

            It's just remnants of DEI for former slave holding states. Supposedly they are ideologically opposed to it, but as usual it turns out that only applies when convenient. Practically every conservative achieving office does so thanks to DEI giving huge advantages to rural areas over places where people actually live and business actually happens.

    • AStonesThrow 2 days ago

      [flagged]

      • justinclift a day ago

        I'm pretty sure the poster you're replying to was being sarcastic. ;)

      • bitwize a day ago

        Taylor Swift is a billionaire from record and concert ticket sales alone. Between that and her endorsement of Harris, we're lucky to have one billionaire out there with legitimate wealth, unafraid to use it to effect positive change.

        • BaculumMeumEst a day ago

          She came from wealth, dude, her parents manufactured her success at a young age. Did you seriously listen to that music and think it was grassroots success from raw talent?

          • bitwize a day ago

            What it is is highly marketable. There's no denying she has talent -- as a savvy businesswoman -- to crack the code of what her audience wants to hear so well she can churn out music that people will pay top dollar to see performed live.

  • standardUser a day ago

    It's more about how a presidential candidate has repeatedly made credible threats to go after specific media companies using the power of his office if he wins. That candidate also happens to have a terrifyingly broad idea of what those powers are. That's in the context of a 9-member Supreme Court where 3 are his own appointments and 2 are appointments from a previous president with similarly broad ideas about presidential power.

    And no, not everyone knows how they're going to vote, as crazy as that seems, but I agree that newspaper endorsements are a tiny factor, especially in this election.

  • dymk a day ago

    That’s what an undecided voter is, and that demographic is the one effectively deciding the next president, so yes these endorsements are consequential.

  • tbrownaw a day ago

    > I’m pretty sure everyone knows who they’re gonna vote for at this point.

    I already did (yay early voting), but I was pretty close to just flipping a coin. Not for red vs blue, but for the lesser evil vs one of the more amusing third parties.

  • neves a day ago

    The problem is the the billionaire owner of the newspaper is censoring it, not the number of votes that will change.

    • SavageBeast a day ago

      Is it censorship when your boss forbids you publishing your personal opinion as the official position of his company?

      It's funny reading the comments here but has anyone considered that Bezos may in fact support Trump? Bezos is a billionaire and Harris seeks to target them to fix the deficit.

      Its just possible Bezos supports Trump and it makes economic sense too, though its terribly unfashionable to come out and say such a thing.

      • jdgoesmarching a day ago

        Yes, that is censorship. It used to be unpopular around here. Maybe you’re fine with it when an anointed shareholder does it, but that’s what it is.

        It’s a big deal that a major historic news organization’s editorial board is overruled by the owner, whether or not you agree with the decision.

        • silexia 6 hours ago

          It is NOT censorship when the owner of a company decides what his company will and will not say. It IS censorship when the government squashes a protest again a possibly falsified election and sentences the protestors to decades in prison on trumped up charges.

      • voltaireodactyl a day ago

        Yes. Censoring is an action, the power dynamic at play is not relevant to whether something is or is not censoring. What you’re asking is “is this specific act of censorship somehow immoral or illegal?” And the answer is no, as I expect you already believe.

        But it wasn’t censored for no reason, and it’s entirely reasonable to question the motives that led to this specific act of censorship.

      • EasyMark a day ago

        A newspaper isn't a "regular" business. There's a reason why the press has explicit protection in the Constitution. It is a special entity, and now Bezos has killed a 40 year tradition because he's afraid Trump will come after him if he wins. So this is likely a Hail Mary to try and save himself from potential imprisonment and fines from a Trump administration. I would have preferred they just come and support Trump if that's what Bezos wanted instead of waffling.

      • mandevil a day ago

        If all Bezos cared about was having lower taxes for billionaires he could have simply hired a bunch of people who believed in that and had them be the editorial board, and they would endorse whomever he wanted.

        The fact that he had the editorial board he had (1), which wrote up an endorsement of Harris several weeks ago for his approval, and then he suddenly decided it was better not to endorse at all? That fits cowardice much more closely than it does pure economic interest.

        This isn't government censorship, obviously, but do remember that the only point of the Editorial Board is to write opinion pieces and have them published in the paper. That is their entire job! They aren't reporters, they don't go out and ferret out news. They have opinions, and they write them out and get published in the paper. And they wrote out an endorsement of Harris, and suddenly it was announced (to the board only slightly before it was announced to the rest of the world, according to published reports) that they weren't going to endorse for President any more. That's a fact pattern that leads one strongly to Jeff Bezos' personal cowardice as the most parsimonious explanation.

        1: At least before the resignations come in, I expect the board to be very different in a few weeks.

  • meowster a day ago

    I know at least one person who votes based off a publication. As for changing minds, I have no idea if this person even considered who to vote for until the publication releases their endorsements.

  • greenthrow a day ago

    It's east to think that way but if it didn't matter, Bezos wouldn't have squashed it.

    • chairmansteve a day ago

      It matters to Trump, therefore it matters to Bezos.

      Probably not a single voter cares.

      • unethical_ban 17 hours ago

        I care that half the country is preparing to elect a man who blackmails newspaper owners due to their own vanity.

  • chairmansteve a day ago

    Probably nobody would have changed their mind.

    But it exposes the fiction that Bezos allows editorial freedom at the WaPo.

  • jprete 2 days ago

    It's relevant on the margins. WaPo not endorsing Harris would be a very negative signal about Harris for fence-sitters and lukewarm voters - this is the paper that hated Trump so much they changed their motto to the apocalyptic "Democracy Dies in Darkness"!

    • nickff 2 days ago

      How many fence-sitters and lukewarm voters are following WaPo? It’s the third-most popular newspaper (in the US), but seems to attract people who are either very politically aware, or partisan.

    • fullshark a day ago

      It's mostly relevant to the media class that still clings to the self-perception of soft power to sway culture/politics.

  • burkaman 2 days ago

    If they had announced in 2022 that the paper would no longer be issuing presidential endorsements because they aren't useful or aren't a good use of resources, I think that would be a reasonable and much less controversial decision. Doing it now, when the paper had already drafted an endorsement of Harris and was about to publish it, is in fact an endorsement of Trump.

    That's why this is news, it's not about a paper changing a policy, it's about one billionaire blatantly burying criticism of a fellow billionaire because they are having a personal fight (or they were having a fight and this is how they've resolved it).

  • krick a day ago

    This really is an interesting question. You are asking it rhetorically, and it's not like I'm going to argue with the implication, that it "basically doesn't matter", but then one could ask the same about Trump working at McDonald's as a part of his campaign, and pretty much about everything these guys do. Unless it's a major fuckup, it almost doesn't matter, because it doesn't convert anybody but one hypothetical guy who says "you know what, I'll pick a random newspaper right now, and the first guy I'm gonna see, I'll vote for him!"

    At some level of approximation it doesn't even matter who the candidate is at all. An established trend in the USA is that the public is divided pretty much 50/50 between 2 colors, and hardly sways no matter what happens. Which makes it all pretty laughable way to make the choice (seeing votes as weights, and God makes a choice using these weights to make a decision) on an important question. If we assume the elections in the USA are "fair", it's pretty much flipping a coin every time. (But then, most people are already settled on the idea that it isn't an important choice, hence the "giant douche and turd sandwich" joke is so relatable.)

    So while it largely doesn't matter indeed, at some low enough level any small detail might matter. I don't imagine who is that guy who was going to vote Kamala based on WP endorsement, but, well, maybe there is one. Really, I have no idea.

  • ajross a day ago

    > Is anyone really changing their mind based on some newspaper endorsement? I’m pretty sure everyone knows who they’re gonna vote for at this point.

    Clearly Bezos thinks they are[1], otherwise he wouldn't have gone through the trouble of killing it 11 days before an election.

    People in this thread are badly conflating the idea of "Newspaper Opinion Journalism is Bad" with "It's OK for an owner to arbitrarily influence newspaper coverage in real time". You can agree with the former and still agree the later is a horrifying precedent.

    [1] Or, "Bezos thinks that Trump thinks they are" might be closer to the truth.

    • quesera a day ago

      > "Bezos thinks that Trump thinks they are"

      This is the key.

  • HarHarVeryFunny a day ago

    I'm sure you're mostly right, but there are no doubt a few still on the fence, which can only either be people who have not been exposed to the truth about Trump (e.g. people who only watch Trump sane-washed sources like Fox), or republicans who are well aware of the danger he poses, but are having a hard time accepting that the responsible thing to do is vote against him.

    For the few that are still on the fence, then more straight shooting reporting, from any source, can only help.

    To me this is a total cop out, and very irresponsible, for the Washington Post to not want to "take sides" and express an opinion. I guess they would've let Hitler win election too, rather than want to "take sides" and say anything bad about him. It's like not wanting to express an opinion on whether a grizzly bear or a hamster would be a better pet for a 5 year old, because you're afraid of upsetting the grizzly bear.

    • zeroonetwothree a day ago

      I haven’t decided myself. My vote doesn’t especially matter because of the state I live in but I do like to vote as an experience.

      It’s not that I particularly like Trump as an individual (quite the opposite), but Harris is just very unappealing to me from a policy standpoint.

      I do think that the Hitler comparison undermines any point you are trying to make so maybe tone it down a bit.

      • HarHarVeryFunny a day ago

        This isn't a normal election, or anything remotely close to it. It'd be lovely if we had TWO relatively normal candidates and could vote for them in our normal partisan ways.

        You may have noticed that basically everyone in Trumps first term cabinet has come out and called him things ranging from "moron" to "fascist" to a "danger to the country". This is not normal. It's extremely abnormal. It's a warning to the country.

      • unethical_ban 17 hours ago

        What policies are unappealing to you from Harris? What policies do you like from Trump? His tariffs , his plan to create internment camps for undocumented residents? His sycophancy for Putin? His willingness to ramp up offensive capabilities for Israel, or his preference for shutting down Ukraine? Or perhaps you like his "tough on dissidents" policy where he is documented to have wanted to use live rounds from active US military on protesters in DC? Are you one of the millions of people who think that Trump will make egg prices go back down to $2 a dozen? Do you think Trump is going to continue the Democratic legacy of making health care more affordable for citizens?

        Just trying to gather details.

        Edit: I'm gonna have to spin up alternate accounts again for the first time in a decade if I get told one more time to "slow down" my posts.

        • HarHarVeryFunny 16 hours ago

          I don't think he gets it.

          This election is not a normal election, sadly far from it. It's not business-as-usual about policies, personalities and partly loyalties.

          This election is, sadly, about paying heed to the warnings that have been given to you by the cabinet members, incl. military generals, that worked most closely with Trump in his first term, and the senior Republicans who are voting Democrat.

          When multiple generals, who have worked directly with/for Trump, tell you that he is a fascist and "danger to the country", then it would be wise to pay attention.

          If you care about the future of America, and want to safeguard democracy, then, sadly, you need to step up and vote to keep Trump out of office.

          • unethical_ban 8 hours ago

            It looks like that account never engages in conversation after they've made their statement.

      • HarHarVeryFunny a day ago

        Given that Trump keeps a copy of Mein Kampf on his bedside table, has said that he wants generals as loyal to him personally (not to the country/constitution) as Hitler's, has said that Hitler did some good things... Uses language from Hitler such as dehumanizing immigrants as not human, talks about the "enemy within"... It seems that Hitler is in fact exactly who we should be talking about when discussing Trump, and exactly the "danger to the country" that Trump represents that Gen.Miller and Gen.Kelly are concerned about.

superultra a day ago

If the Post endorsed Harris but then added an addendum that this was the last election they’d be endorsing, this would make sense and seem a lot more impartial to a now 40-year tradition.

I went to return something to Amazon and though it was clearly their fault for sending the wrong item, the rep said “we’ll make a one time exception here” and I said fine whatever. Seems like there’s a Bezos precedent for this kind of “last time” approach lol

  • FrontierProject 16 hours ago

    To be fair they always say that. Everybody gets the "one time exception."

jrflowers a day ago

I like that many people here have speculated that Bezos simply wants to avoid the ire of a possible Trump administration. This is very charitable, so much so that it ignores another reasonable guess a person could make based off of the same objective information that we all have — that this action is an endorsement, and the person that chose to endorse a candidate did so because he wants them to win.

On one hand you can imagine that Bezos somehow wants a Harris presidency but doesn’t want to appear that way out of fear, but that sounds more fantastical and wishful than “The guy whose company is currently trying to wholesale eliminate the National Labor Relations Board(1) likes Trump’s policies and wants him to win”, especially when you think about what’s going on with the other guy(2) that’s trying to destroy the NLRB.

Sometimes when people indicate they want something to happen it is because they want that thing to happen.

1

https://www.reuters.com/technology/amazon-joins-companies-ar...

2

https://gizmodo.com/elon-musk-leaps-into-the-meme-history-bo...

  • unit_circle a day ago

    This is so obviously the nail on the head. Shocked how far I had to scroll

  • laidoffamazon a day ago

    I think the act of spiking the endorsement sends a stronger signal than the lack of endorsement. He could always make his own endorsement, but he didn't.

    I don't know what's in his head. I just know that Trump sources are saying it's because of fear of reprisal [0]

    [0]: https://x.com/gabrielsherman/status/1849960615197966648

  • matwood 21 hours ago

    I think it can be both. In scenario planning it makes sense for billionaires with large business empires to vote for Trump. One, the few details that can be determined from his platform are around lowering taxes on the very rich and making it easier for them make more money. Two, Trump has been pretty clear in his rhetoric he holds a grudge and will use the government to punish anyone who he perceives is against him. Taken together, there is little to no downside in supporting Trump, even if Harris wins. It's not like Harris is threatening to throw people she doesn't like out of the country. Whereas vocally supporting Harris where Trump wins runs the risk of becoming a target.

    By the way, I think Musk did the same math. He likely thinks/knows Trump is an idiot, but it's almost all upside supporting him and little downside. Plus, Musk is likely still upset he was left out of a Whitehouse summit on EVs a few years ago. Regardless of what people think of Musk that was BS, and I wonder if that snub is part of what led him to come out in support of Trump so vocally.

    • jrflowers 16 hours ago

      > By the way, I think Musk did the same math.

      “Elon Musk has been in deep-cover WWE-level kayfabe for the past several years” is an opinion you literally have to make up out of thin air and hopes. There is nothing public indicating that that is true. His enthusiastic and wholehearted embrace of the value set endemic amongst Trump supporters has been and continues to be very much on public display. The dude posts nonstop about culture war bullshit all day when he’s not showing off that he’s carrying around two shields in Elden Ring for some reason.

      Billionaires are not aircraft carriers or nation states. They do not have a special type of existence that bestows their opinions or decisions with a deeper complexity or meaning than any other person exercising whatever level of power they have access to. “Jeff Bezos is a guy that has the power to decide what’s printed in a newspaper and exercised it in support of his preferred candidate” as an opinion only sounds outlandish to a non-billionaire because people aren’t comfortable with the idea that for one guy, changing what goes in the newspaper is easier than buying a bumper sticker.

loongloong a day ago

A while ago, the failing/risks of banks that were too exposed to particular sectors (crypto/blockchain) brought some discussion on the merits of diversification of key risks.

In a highly partisan landscape with increasing geopolitical tensions, is ownership a key risk to objective news? Is diversification of ownership of news sources a good way to help mitigate that? If so, any good ideas from the HN crowd?

raindeer2 a day ago

Funnily Bezos has probably made more for Harris by stopping the endorsement then if he let it go through. No one would have cared about the endorsement, now this story is everywhere..

karmasimida a day ago

It is ironic because Washington Post is the most left leaning of all major news paper. Their endorsement is really a no-op, because there is really only one candidate they could ever consider.

  • deepsquirrelnet a day ago

    And yet here we are without an endorsement. Significant by your own admission.

    • refurb a day ago

      That doesn't logically follow at all.

      We're "here without an endorsement" because the media machine decides to talk about it, not because it's significant.

      The most influential power the media has is what they decide to write about and what they don't. They don't report the news, they make the news.

      • addandsubtract 21 hours ago

        It doesn't need to follow any logic. Trump is going to use it as an argument and his base is going to parrot it.

        • refurb 5 hours ago

          > It doesn't need to follow any logic.

          Sure it does, when someone says "logically it follows" then there needs to be a logical argument.

chrisco255 a day ago

Endorsements have never been without the blessing and influence of the owner of that paper or institution. The extent that an owner lets the editorial team pick an endorsement is the same extent to which they align philosophically. It's an illusion of choice or independence.

If papers were meant to be more neutral, I suppose they would need to be owned as cooperatives by the subscribers themselves, assuming the subscribers were balanced and philosophically diverse.

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    The key point here is that despite all their biases, the Washington Post and The New York Times were at least perceived as independent, with both of them famously publishing articles that would upset those in power. If their owners feel the need to spike articles unfavorable to the administration, then no more Pentagon Papers etc.

    • silexia 7 hours ago

      Both publications pretty much only employ far left journalists, and have terrible reputations with Republicans for biased reporting.

  • thijson 21 hours ago

    I agree. I was reading about Rupert Murdock's start in Australia. He was able to swing an election there through his ownership of a few newspapers. Newspapers don't have the same pull as they did back then. Now I guess it's the online platforms like Facebook, X, or Reddit. Reddit seems to be captured by the Democratic party.

    There used to be a concept of journalistic integrity, to just report the facts, not to put any spin on them. These days that's totally abandoned, it's considered entertainment.

  • ajross a day ago

    Has an owner ever killed an already-written endorsement 11 days out from an election? You're right that there is an implicit assumption that an owner condones the paper's operation. But to exert control like this so specifically and in such a baldly partisan way is unprecedented, thus the resignations both at the Post and the LA Times.

    It's one thing to hire an editorial staff with whom you agree, it's quite another to step in and overrule their attempt to do the job you hired them to do.

ryankshaw 14 hours ago

WaPo endorsing Harris would have changed exactly 0 minds. Everyone that would have read it already agrees with them. But it would have made them feel good about their existing world view.

Them _not_ endorsing _will_ change minds. There are people that read Washington Post that would take that as a sign that not even their trusted left-leaning paper is 100% comfortable with the candidate they should have endorsed, so maybe there's something there they should have hesitancy about too.

dbsmith83 a day ago

I find it strange that people are so upset about the absence of an opinion piece from this newspaper. What is the reason? Either you want to be told what to think, or you want everyone else to be told what to think. I think it is the latter. Would there be any outrage here if Fox news decided not to endorse a candidate? I highly doubt it. Some people may like being challenged on what they believe, which is good, but that's probably the edge case

  • w0de0 a day ago

    Perhaps one wants to be told what they - the paper as institution, to include both owners and editorial staff - think. What values do they hold, and why? These inform their reporting content and choices.

    Moreover, no one thinks well in isolation. Others’ ideas challenge and inform one’s own. To engage, to converse, to question: this is not being told what to think, but rather a catalyst of unique thought. Else why are you posting here?

  • metabagel a day ago

    That’s not exactly what happened. What happened at both the L.A. Times and the Washington Post is that the editorial staff was prepared to endorse Harris until the owner quashed it. That’s what people are upset about.

    Endorsing Harris is a no-brainer. Quashing an endorsement of Harris reeks of cowardice.

whatever1 a day ago

I thought that having billions buys you freedom. Turns out you still have to lick the boot.

  • latexr a day ago

    Only if your greed is bigger than your pockets. Which is bound to be true for anyone who accumulates this much money and still exploits workers to the degree Amazon does.

  • throwaway48476 a day ago

    Politics is the new religion. Everyone is cowed by the power if the zealots.

  • xenospn a day ago

    “Fuck you money” is a myth.

    • reverius42 a day ago

      It’s only a myth if your greed is unbounded. Double digit millions USD should be actual FU money almost anywhere.

kbos87 a day ago

For me, seeing a person or business consciously claim neutrality this year is reprehensible and impossibly out of touch. Whether Bezos likes it or not the business he is in comes with the assumption of an endorsement, and silence is an implicit endorsement. I’d never hold an individual to that standard but power comes with responsibility and this choice is putting his privilege on full display.

xyst a day ago

A single man issued an edict and ended decades of precedent/history. All for the sake of the mighty dollar and ensuring his multibillion dollar fortune doesn’t take a tumble by a 5-10B in the _possibility_ the wrong candidate gets elected.

Everything is awful about this. What would it take WaPo away from this horrible person?

dotnet00 a day ago

I like this trend of taking neutral positions that seems to be picking up again, although the timing for this doesn't look good.

Just as how universities are starting to adopt neutrality, so should news outlets.

  • mandevil a day ago

    "What is truth?" asked the powerful Roman governor of Judea, of a man accused of blasphemy two millennia ago, and we still don't know. What is "neutrality" for a university? Is creationism "neutral"? It was a huge political deal in the US for decades (though it seems to have died down recently), but in the 1980's, 1990's, and into the 2000's there were plenty of people who wanted creationism taught in science classes, or at least to "teach the controversy." Was picking sides on that topic in science class "neutral"?

    Is the superiority of phonics based literacy approaches "neutral" or criticism of teachers unions? If a economics professors research indicates that, say, supply-side economics doesn't work under current circumstances, is it "neutral" for her to tell her class that? If a law professor thinks that judges only make ad hoc arguments to achieve whatever ends they desire, can they teach their class legal nihilism?

    "Neutral" is the sort of thing that someone who has never actually tried to teach or inform can think is reasonable, until you actually try and do it and realize that there are people out there who strongly want to contest whether the earth is round, and that either you throw up your hands and accept epistemological nihilism or you accept that you have to pick sides, and try and do a good job of picking the right sides.

    • didibus a day ago

      I think it depends how people interpret neutral. Choosing what to talk about or not in itself has influence. It's impossible to be a newspaper and not in any way help or support one side over another in a conflict, even if you don't intend too, you will be, you might even be helping the side you don't cheer for inadvertently, because it's also hard to predict what direction what you say will influence others.

      In that sense, I agree with you.

      But you can interpret neutral more as not attempting to influence. In that sense, it does not mean the result will be neutral, but that you tried to be. Neutrality is an effort, like trying to be kind to others, or to be positive. It's an attempt at curbing bias. And I think that's something you'd want journalists to practice. Just like it's beneficial to have people try to be kind and positive, even if it's impossible for them to truly be at all times and to the most extent, it does make the world a better place still when people try.

      Now, if you tried to read news, and wanted to form your own opinion, would you rather read the one from someone purposely siding with one side, and specifically choosing their words and what to say in a conscious effort to bring you over to their position? Or would you rather read the one from someone attempting to be impartial, disclosing their bias from the start so you can weigh it in, attempting to show the arguments against theirs, as well as their own, spend some time to discuss the other viewpoint, have quotes from both sides, etc.

    • calf a day ago

      Neutrality is a problematic ideology because it serves the powerful and the status quo, the first question to ask back is are they (an authority, an institution) really neutral/impartial?

      • rightbyte a day ago

        I don't think neutrality serves the powerful. Neutrality serves the 'truth' otherwise it wouldn't be neutral in the first place. Your point only stands if you assume that the partial source would side with the 'good' side on average.

        And being perfectly neutral is not possible, no.

        • calf a day ago

          Neutrality is problematic because in practice it serves the powerful, like every instance of bureaucracy and scientism we can point to through civilized history. Instead you are appealing to some politics-free context-free notion of neutrality which might as well be a made up word then. Humans and institutions are not truth objects, so your incorrect argument is in conflating this with a discussion of access to truth. Universities are human processes, not mathematical theorems for which good and bad are irrelevant, which is a different issue than neutral.

          • rightbyte a day ago

            The powerful by definition control us. Otherwise they wouldn't be powerful. I don't see your point. To me the notion of trying to be neutral seem to give the powerful less power than being "political".

            I.e. it is better if the puppets think they are living in a fair democracy, since they might act like they do, decreasing the power of the puppet masters. The opposite is concepts like the series "House of cards", that instruct people to play the game and be "political".

            I define "neutral" as loosely "trying to not be biased".

            Like, for example, pretending until it became way over the top too embarrassing that the president is mentally fit for another 4 year of any work, is a good example of being "political" about it.

            Gaslighting that backfired badly.

            • mandevil a day ago

              I am biased against creationism being treated as science. And that is correct, because one side is true and the other is false and should not be taught or treated equally.

              So I think either your definition is wrong or your goal of neutrality is wrong.

              • rightbyte a day ago

                I don't see how that is biased in anything but a really litteral way.

                I don't think that is your point, but treating creationism as a science would rather quickly disprove it? Like Dowsing rods or whatever.

                If God descended from heaven (lets just pretend he did, not a powerful alien or whatever) and showed you how he creationisted everything, then it would be 'biased' to pretend it didn't happen. But I guess you could still believe it is fake, as long as the facts are considered in some way, without being biased.

                • mandevil a day ago

                  Well, on the details, technically creationism is non-falsifiable, because God in his infinite wisdom could have just done whatever (1). It's impossible to disprove it- that's why its not part of science.

                  But the issue of whether science class was "biased" against creationism- and whether it should neutrally teach both sides in public schools, museums, etc.- was a huge political argument in the US for decades, resulting in many legal battles- with Justice Scalia and Chief Justice Rehnquist voting that it should be taught in public school science class (Edwards v. Aguillard, 1987, decided 7-2 against creationism). Given the current makeup of the Court - where Scalia's positions have far more clout than they did then- I hesitate to see where a new case would end up.

                  To just wave that away because you want the world to be different is avoiding how the world actually works. It would be nice if organizations could be "neutral" on things you disagree with them about and biased on things you agree with them about, but unfortunately people disagree with you, and they get a vote too.

                  Far more important to spreading the truth to let organizations have bias, and then build good institutions that achieve positions closer to the truth, and those institutions get respected for being closer to the truth, and lose respect for being further from the truth.

                  1: The Omphalos Argument, the God of Abraham could have made the entire universe 6000 years ago with an appearance of age, with light from distant galaxies already in flight towards the Earth, with radioactive isotope ratios consistent with a 13.7 billion year old universe and a 4.54 billion year old Earth, for His own purposes.

                  Omphalos is Greek for navel, and the name comes from a medieval argument over whether Adam and Eve had bellybuttons: they would not have had one naturally, obviously, due to their special creation, but then they would not be like all other humans, and they are supposed to be. But if they did have them was God lying about their past? This is why most artists of the time carefully placed some cover where the bellybutton would be, to stay neutral in this argument.

              • zahlman a day ago

                Please keep in mind that "creationism as part of science education" (as you argued about elsewhere in the thread) and "creationism being treated as science" do not mean the same thing.

            • calf a day ago

              Then you need to finish high school, because if you define neutral as "trying not to be not-neutral" then you are using a circular definition and so you really need to work on your basic skills which are usually taught by high school.

      • ihsw a day ago

        [dead]

    • dotnet00 a day ago

      It's amazing how motivated reasoning and a poltics poisoned mind can be used to make obvious points out to be unreasonable. Institutional neutrality is simple, the organization does what is ncessary to operate, but doesn't prescribe anything unnecessarily over that.

      It does not mean that professors are not allowed to talk about disagreeable things that are required for teaching the subject. If anything, it makes it easier for them to do so, as they can teach whatever is necessary to produce well-functioning members of society.

      Eg you don't need to endorse a specific candidate to fulfill your duty of teaching students. You don't need to avoid talking about research that runs counter to the organization's politics. You don't need to openly pick sides on protests besides advocating for enough civilty to allow your institution to keep operating, and so on. I'm fairly certain that a good portion of the neutrality statements from universities have been coming from the difficult ideological situation presented by the flaring up of the Israel-Gaza conflict, where picking sides opens them up to either being islamophobes or antisemites.

      I'm not really sure what you're getting at with the tension about creationism as part of science education. In my schooling the early science education often covered the history of the topic, which would inevitably talk about the local religious ideas, working it's way through them, sometimes even with brief readings of some associated stories, through to major discoveries that provided the evidence for the modern consensus. That's just part of providing a comprehensive education and connecting it to the culture kids are exposed to?

      • calf a day ago

        What backwater high school did you go to that had you study creationism of all religions? We never covered propaganda in science, in Canada.

        • dotnet00 a day ago

          Calling an important aspect of most cultures as "propaganda" is rich. You don't have to be religious (I'm not religious and wasn't religious at that time either) to recognize that it's useful to understand those beliefs and how we worked our way to the modern age. That's how you help students to learn our current understanding of the world such that they are less susceptible to eating up blatant lies and believing that school was just indoctrinating them.

          • calf a day ago

            Creationism is an American protofascist phenomenon, it actually is propaganda and does not need to be taught in a science class in order to nurture and develop critical thinking skills.

            If you are referring to traditional cultures, they have creation myths which are better suited for social sciences classes.

            Showing both sides of the debate is itself a worse form of indoctrination. Haha, look at how creationism is pseudoscience! Now you will be tested on the reasons why. No, let's just not platform propaganda as if it deserved any fair footing in good-faith context of discourse.

        • mandevil a day ago

          It never made it into science class, but only because institutions had (and have) the power to set rules and not be neutral on important issues of the day. It was our choice at the museum that received tax payer funding to not be neutral that kept creationism out. That's picking a side. And that is absolutely essential is my point, because the truth is, unfortunately, not neutral, and we all need to do our best to find that truth. Just saying "be neutral" is abdication of responsibility.

          • calf a day ago

            Well said. There's are several sayings, such as "neutrality is the both-sideism fallacy", which is one of the most obvious critical thinking examples that humanities students are taught early on, but it is not so easy to convey this to people without exposure to these ideas.

      • mandevil a day ago

        You are ignoring my point.

        I was a volunteer at a US science museum that received some taxpayer funding back in the mid-aughts when "Scientific Creationism" was still a thing. Our museum had (and still has) an institutional commitment to the scientific consensus on the age of the universe and earth. If we had caught a volunteer providing visitors with creationism they would have been asked to hand in their badge and not work any more shifts, because that was our institutional position and everyone had to respect that.

        Trying to throw that away because of Israel-Palestine is much more threatening to the value of truth than it helps it.

  • georgeecollins a day ago

    Endorsements come opinions editors, a special part of the paper where the paper prints opinions, not news.

    I agree that it would be nice if news outlets tried to always be neutral, but a lot of TV news channels in the US would have almost nothing to say if you stopped their opinion reporting.

    • dotnet00 a day ago

      Opinion sections on websites and on TV/video should be segregated from the rest of the organization in some way. On paper having it as a section was fine because it used to be marked relatively clearly and there were serious logistical issues.

      However, with video and websites, it is very easy to mix editor opinion with news. People tuning into a news channel mid-report don't necessarily know they're listening to just an opinion, and same goes for people reading the headline from an embed or URL without clicking through to the page.

      Another thing I often notice is that opinion pieces get to play more loose with the facts. They can say completely unsubstantiated things or get actual facts wrong, but still say something as if it had the credibility of the organization. Yet if the backlash gets too strong they get to deflect by arguing that it was just an opinion and not meant to reflect on the organization.

      The current state of opinion pieces is like running a blog about my research and getting important things wrong there, then expecting people to assume that my actual research publications are accurate.

    • soerxpso a day ago

      If they have nothing to say, maybe nobody needs to hear it.

      • willturman a day ago

        Maybe? It’s almost a certainty that the news media outlets are outright bullshit and/or attention sucking propaganda.

        https://fs.blog/stop-reading-news/

        • lancesells a day ago

          https://www.washingtonpost.com

          I don't disagree with some of the things that blog post is saying, but excluding the opinions on the Washington Post home page, where is the is outright bullshit or propaganda? I hear the opinion often but I don't see it when I go to a newspaper.

          Now if you were to go to the home page of reddit or twitter there's clearly tons of propaganda.

          • willturman a day ago

            1. Immediacy trumps quality.

            The current headline on the Washington post is talking about Israeli strikes in Iran.

            Is that the most immediate event pertaining to Israel? Probably. Is that the most important recent event pertaining to Israel? Well, that depends, doesn’t it?

  • vr46 a day ago

    There is no neutrality in the face of evil.

    Journalism and journalists are not supposed to be neutral, but impartial.

    Ethics are pretty universal.

    • packetlost a day ago

      > Ethics are pretty universal

      Anyone who has taken a basic philosophy or ethics class or read more than the summary page of their history books knows this is not even remotely true

      • willturman a day ago

        Counterpoint: But surely you must not understand my ethics.

    • tvaughan a day ago

      Well said. Journalists also don’t have to give equal weight to the other side when the other side are whackadoodles

      • zeroonetwothree a day ago

        Unfortunately both sides seem to think this of the other side equally.

        • vampirical a day ago

          Which doesn’t matter in the slightest. What’s our best understanding of what’s objectively true? That one side is actually stupid, insane, or evil.

          I at least, am out of patience for sophistry as if this is just a normal and innocent difference of perspective.

    • tbrownaw a day ago

      > There is no neutrality in the face of evil.

      You are either with us, or against us.

    • dotnet00 a day ago

      "There is no neutrality in the face of evil"

      This is said by both sides, it is equally stupid every time.

      If ethics are pretty universal, how is it that one party wants no abortions at all and thinks any abortion that isn't absolutely medically necessary is evil and the other party wants abortions right up until viable birth and thinks that anything less than that is evil?

      Especially when considering that most of the world is somewhere in between, where abortions are legal for a few weeks and then illegal unless absolutely necessary.

      • vampirical a day ago

        You were demonstrably wrong three times in your comment, misrepresenting the reality of both sides of the argument and the prevailing opinion of humanity. The fact that one side doesn’t have the tools to confidently reach that conclusion is the problem.

      • angoragoats a day ago

        One party wants to end _all_ abortions, _including_ those that might be medically necessary. They are pro-forced-birth, and pro-killing-women.

        You’ve got the position of the other party wrong as well, but I’m not going to even bother correcting that because if you don’t find the above completely vile there’s no helping you.

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    There’s not really any such thing as neutrality. Arguably universities can maybe step away from things (although this is complicated with departments that are inherently political), but “neutral” if you’re writing about politics always reflects some kind of value judgement. By definition one person’s neutrality is someone else’s bias.

    • devvvvvvv a day ago

      Not endorsing a presidential candidate is neutral in this context. Easy.

      • eapressoandcats a day ago

        But what about the rest of their coverage? Every article and its editorial promotion reflects a value judgement that basically has to be not neutral. This is unfortunately something newspapers like to pretend is not true but it absolutely is.

        Your definition of neutral appears to be “shut up” and is creepily authoritarian.

        • devvvvvvv 15 hours ago

          Authoritarianism is good, journalists have shown they do not deserve free reign.

  • makeitdouble a day ago

    Being neutral in an unbalanced situation means you are purposefully ignoring things that should be said and not putting on the table things that should be there. Not publishing relevant opinions pieces is part of that.

    To get some distance, imagine being neutral to every candidates during Russia's last elections, and refusing to publish well researched and argumented opinions people have about the leading candidate.

    • rightbyte a day ago

      What do you mean by 'unbalanced'? "Unstable" or "biased"?

      The US seems really unstable right now. It is like a ever growing political cacophony. And blaming the "other side" for a mutual problem seems silly for an external observer.

      The bad faith tone is making the caricatures real by moving people further from each other and entrenching distinctive extremes as ingroup markers.

      E.g. I feel that during the pandemic supporters of the former president believed the caricatures of his policy on the matter, making it a thing.

      • makeitdouble a day ago

        What I mean by "unbalanced" is that the US situation is not about small details and very minute distinctions. People's opinions are divided on very basic and fundamental issues, there are very radical behaviours and really big swings of money.

        Trying to keep a "the truth is in the middle" attitude is unethical.

        I think the main issue becomes "bad faith", and we're back to the credibility issue. IMHO discourse should be fact based, and arguments should be researched. If you're calling your opponent names, show the receipt and not vague gesturing at what you think reality is.

        Blaming the other side should be fine, as long as you can defend that position.

        • rightbyte a day ago

          > Trying to keep a "the truth is in the middle" attitude is unethical.

          It is illogical too. In a simple question of "little" and "much" the truth could be "even smaller" and "way bigger than much".

          > I think the main issue becomes "bad faith"

          Ye I think I agree here about it being the main concern. Bad faith accusation, debates etc seem to radicalize the supporters of the accused. I think you make the caricature real at some point when supporters start to believe the misconception.

  • xyst a day ago

    So if quality news outlets no longer provide journalism when we need it most (breaking down candidate platforms, keeping candidates honest, …). Then it shifts to a variety of unverified sources (ie, TikTok, Fb, Telegram, et al) for those that couldn’t find anything credible.

    The population already struggles with determining fact from fiction. Taking away the power from journalists because a _billionaire_ wants to ensure his wealth remains high.

  • sigy a day ago

    [flagged]

    • lostlogin a day ago

      > It's hard to think that he doesn't know how lop-sided this election is, so the naive notion of "neutral" should not be applied to his behavior.

      I’m not American or in the US, so please keep that in mind when I ask, ‘what’s lopsided?’

      • sigy a day ago

        I should have been more specific. I meant lopsided as in the character of the two candidates. I posit that any decent, moderately educated citizen should be able to see this clearly, but therein lies the issue.

      • zahlman a day ago

        Kamala Harris currently has a popular vote advantage on the order of 51-49, but in the American system (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Electoral_Colleg...) effectively only the "swing states" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swing_state) matter.

        One of the best respected analysts in the business, Nate Silver, currently has Trump at a 53% probability of winning (https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2024-election-forecast/), in a system designed to magnify the effect of small changes near the halfway point (historically, getting about 65% of the popular vote would net you a landslide worth approximately every seat in legislature - https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2020/12/11/bidens-vi...). Silver's model can pick Trump as a slight favourite despite being behind in the popular vote, again because of the nature of the system. In particular, each state gets an extra constant two votes on top of the ones apportioned by population, favouring rural areas which currently prefer the Republican party.

        The same analyst, BTW, gave Trump a ~30% chance of winning, shortly before the election, in 2016 (https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2016-election-forecast/). This was notably higher than the probability ascribed by pretty much anyone else with any authority or respect in the matter.

        • dragonwriter a day ago

          > One of the best respected analysts in the business, Nate Silver, currently has Trump at a 53% probability of winning (https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2024-election-forecast/)

          You mean G. Elliot Morris; Nate Silver has nothing to do with fivethirtyeight any more (since he and Disney broke up, he now has his own private subscription publication—Silver Bulletin—which also does forecasting and which has much better odds for Trump from what I understand, but I can't give you details because its paywalled and I’m not paying him; aside from that gig, he’s also employed by Polymarket, now.)

          • dllthomas 18 hours ago

            My understanding is that Silver's model has been more favorable to Trump than 538, by virtue of 538 having Kamala up just a little while Silver had her up less or Trump up a little. In the past couple days 538 shifted a little toward Trump; I'm not sure Silver's model did the same. His updates have been saying "small moves, still basically tied" for a while, but like you I'm outside the paywall.

ahnick 2 days ago

It seems like it would be less polarizing if it was the default state for news and information outlets to not endorse any candidate ever and just remain as neutral as possible.

  • oivey a day ago

    Why would they want to appear neutral? All news reporting, no matter what, is inherently biased in some way. There isn’t some “ideal” where that isn’t the case. There can’t be some magical font of unbiased information because just selecting what stories to put on the front page introduces bias.

    News can’t be unbiased and being unbiased was never a goal. News is meant to inform, which includes facts as well as analysis. That seemingly the average American doesn’t understand that is a failure of the education system.

    • roenxi a day ago

      Sure. But the newspaper could be biased towards facts, moderate speech and empathy to all parties. Then - despite being biased - people wouldn't be as worried about bias.

      People are misusing the word "unbiased" but I don't think there is much uncertainty about what they actually mean - the call is for less partisan bias and more bias towards, say, enlightenment values. The exact values are a political topic but reporting with any values at all would be a step up for the US corporate media.

      • oivey a day ago

        That’s fair enough, but you should consider that a news source might be biased toward facts and empathy and still might endorse a candidate.

      • FactKnower69 a day ago

        >But the newspaper could be biased towards facts, moderate speech and empathy to all parties.

        literally zero semantic meaning to be found in this word salad

    • user3939382 a day ago

      You’re suggesting there’s no difference between journalism that attempts objectivity and outright political advocacy which is clearly false. Perfect neutrality doesn’t exist, we can even get into a discussion of what knowledge is, that doesn’t mean news outlets don’t have an obligation to try. They did in decades past which is evident from a review of older journalism.

      • oivey a day ago

        What older journalism are you talking about? Cold War era Cronkite? The era of endless red scares and other very obviously biased behavior?

        WaPo has been giving out endorsements since the 70s. The era you’re pining for never existed.

    • mint2 a day ago

      That pretentious “above the fray” belief some news orgs and reporters have is awful and harmful.

      NYT is particularly guilty of that behavior.

      How one contextualizes a story and presents the attention grabbing headline puts a massive thumb on the scale of how the topic is perceived.

      Because of what the article mentions or doesn’t mention, provides context for or no context for, the exact same core story centerpiece is biased and leading. Any impression the author wants to convey is easy to bring out in the “neutral” writing. This is simply a fact of writing.

      And yet some reporters and news orgs, like the NYT, profess they are neutral observers as if from the planet zorg recording a miraculous unbiased story.

      No, that is impossible and everyone knows it. Claiming to be neutral is gas lighting.

    • refurb a day ago

      > Why would they want to appear neutral? All news reporting, no matter what, is inherently biased in some way. There isn’t some “ideal” where that isn’t the case. There can’t be some magical font of unbiased information because just selecting what stories to put on the front page introduces bias.

      Sure, but just because you can't be perfectly unbiased doesn't mean the only alternative is to become a mouthpiece for a political party.

    • bigstrat2003 a day ago

      That just isn't true. It is possible to be unbiased in journalism, and it was a major goal of journalists at various times in history. Obviously not all journalists at all times have striven towards this goal, but some have. Stop making excuses for blatant partisanship, instead hold them to a higher standard.

      • t-writescode a day ago

        > "to be unbiased in journalism"

        By no means. Word choice on its own __is__ a bias. Even if you reported straight facts, the word choice used presents a bias or not. Is it a military action or a terrorist attack? Is it a protest? An occupation? Are they Freedom Fighters?

        Choosing __to__ or __not to__ use an organization's given name or a description of them, is having a bias.

        Choosing to report on something at all is a presentation of bias.

        There is bias in everything and to imagine there isn't is to be even more susceptible to it.

    • lucb1e a day ago

      > Why would they want to appear neutral? [...] There isn’t some “ideal”

      Getting some notion of what USA politics are like on HN, I can understand why you'd have this viewpoint, but I don't think it's true

      The news I am used to, I couldn't tell you what political color it has. The selection they make seems based on the perceived severity, which certainly means there is a selection process that must be introducing some sort of bias, but as near as I can tell, this bias is towards a shared humanity and not a party

      Perhaps I am just naïve, so I opened the local Wikipedia and it has no mention of them being accused of having a bias, political coloring or selection, notable omissions, or any such thing

      I disagree strongly with the party for hate and egocentricity having come out as the biggest one in the most recent election, and to a lesser extent with the rich people be rich party from the previous ~decade, so it's not like all noses are pointed in the same direction where I'm from; but I couldn't tell you how this organization (the default thing if you turn on your TV at prime time) feels about any particular party beyond that I expect they would condemn hate and violence in general -- shared humanity, basically.

  • coreload a day ago

    These are opinion editors. They're expected to have opinions.

    • 93po a day ago

      maybe biased opinions should be entirely separate from journalistic enterprises if those journalists want a single shred of credibility. people are mad at trump supporters and anti covid and anti vax stuff, and while i agree that's all stupid, i don't blame them at all for falling for it because main stream corporate journalism has destroyed any and all trust with absolutely everyone. maybe if we weren't constantly being lied to and sold something, more people would believe them when they say important things like "trump is taking away reproductive rights" and "covid exists and people are dying"

      • nkrisc a day ago

        Pretending there exists “unbiased” journalism is silly. All journalism is biased to some degree. The worthwhile categorization is to what degree the bias exists.

        • EasyMark a day ago

          And how well they use facts to back their bias(es)

      • makeitdouble a day ago

        Journalistic credibility comes from presenting facts. Which facts you present, which pieces you publish are in themselves opinions, biases.

        That's why I see aiming for unbiased reporting to miss the point of journalism. We want opinions, but not random uneducated opinions, we want well argumented, relevant and proof backed opinions.

        "Candidate X is a liar" is valid journalism if there's the facts to back the claim and the analysis to make it a thought provoking piece that brought something to the readers. We have whole Pullitzer winning books going into minute details about how some public figures are crooks.

        To note, not reporting, not expressing opinions is also a bias so I don't see a middle ground. For instance if a major national journalism would not publish the news of a candidate getting arrested, that in itself is a biased decision. If they'd publish a dry piece just quoting the official police declaration, that would also be tremendous bias and everyone would see it as a refusal to comment on it.

      • ajross a day ago

        That's a fair point. But in this case it wasn't a principled stand against the idea of opinion journalism[1]. It was an act to kill an in-progress editorial piece days before publication, for quite clearly partisan reasons (though most people believe Bezos did it out of fear and not affinity, he'd presumably prefer Trump loses, but doesn't want to be in the line of fire if he doesn't).

        [1] Which, let's be honest, is pervasive and popular. You aren't simultaneously arguing to kick Hannity off the air, right?

  • neves a day ago

    First, they are never neutral.

    Second: this is what happens in Brazil. Everybody gets angry because each news outlet defends its own conservative candidate.

    • drukenemo a day ago

      Are you saying that the largest media complex in Brazil, Globo, supports conservative candidates? Where and how?

      • zztop44 a day ago

        Is this sarcasm? Globo has never missed an opportunity to be virulently anti-PT.

  • w0de0 a day ago

    While we’re at it, let’s do away with voting. Much less polarizing if we stop asking the demos to endorse a government.

  • mschuster91 a day ago

    News outlets by definition can not be neutral. Just look at the insane amount of stuff that the global news agencies like Reuters or AFP push out every minute, and on top of that comes all the state, county and local news.

    The very act of filtering what to report to the audience is political in itself. Say, floods or other natural disasters caused or (like wildfires) made worse by climate change. Most of them tend to be ignored outside of the nation they happen, but not reporting on it also means that people don't grasp just how bad climate change already is, and thus the people may not vote for parties or individuals campaigning on climate change.

    • megous a day ago

      You learn this by science, and scientific reporting. Not by reporting events usually selected by severity of harm to humans and clickbait factor to enrich the media companies.

      • metabagel a day ago

        I feel like you missed the point, which is that reporting or not reporting, or how you report something can all be examples of bias. The conclusions you draw. The quotes you use or don’t use. The ordering in which you report things.

        The job of the journalist is to try to present a version of the story which is as close to the truth as possible, and without leaving out any relevant information. But, also the story is in context of the values which most of us hold dear, because we are human beings.

        We might have thought that an unbiased news story would have to be written by a robot, but as we know now, LLMs are biased too.

  • ribosometronome a day ago

    But it is not. They regularly make endorsements and call outs. They recently called for Biden to step down from the ticket, just months ago. It seems like we should not examine situations based on idealistic, non-existent scenarios but the world we actually live in.

  • nektro a day ago

    no endorsement is an endorsement for the oppressor

  • CamperBob2 a day ago

    Being neutral in the face of a candidate who has promised to do what Trump has promised to do may not be the virtue you think it is.

    • lucb1e a day ago

      I would read "neutral" here to mean "factual" rather than endorsing trump as part of being neutral or something. If one party proposes e.g. impossible things or financially stupid things or whatever it may be (general examples from politics anywhere), that can and should be reported on and would not break neutrality

  • good8675309 2 days ago

    [flagged]

    • bydo a day ago

      The Washington Post has endorsed a candidate every election cycle since 1976, with the exception of 1988. The New York Times has endorsed a candidate in every presidential election since its founding in 1851.

      • smeeger a day ago

        yes. its always been done and therefore is good! …?

        • arp242 a day ago

          What was said was: "In the 90s newspapers made an effort to not endorse candidates to appear unbiased".

          This was countered with "endorsements have been a thing since long before the 90s".

          Previous poster didn't say anything about what's "good" or "bad". They pointed out a claim was incorrect.

      • goostavos a day ago

        Just because it has always been done doesn't make it good.

        It's surprising to me that a news organization not publishing an opinion piece is itself giant front page news

        • newswasboring a day ago

          What's so bad about large institutions in the opinion shaping space endorsing?

          • goostavos a day ago

            Nothing, I suppose. I honestly didn't realize it's so contentious. I guess it just seemed kind of weird for "the news" to have an opinion at all. Why do people want an organization to tell them who they think should be president?

    • nobodyandproud a day ago

      I definitely remember the 1990s differently.

      They still had endorsements, but it just wasn’t spelled out that way.

      Instead, just prominent opinions, hit pieces, etc.

      • iwontberude a day ago

        I do remember the 1990s where it was typically local newspapers doing explicit endorsements and it was almost always limited to local candidates and issues.

  • Eumenes a day ago

    100%. People upset about this are just upset cause they didn't endorse their candidate. Trust in media/journalism is at an all time low. This is simply a smart move to not alienate 50% of the population. If individual editors/writers/journalists want to endorse someone, take it to your blog or website or twitter.

SamDc73 a day ago

> "Katharine Graham the previous owner of the Washington Post during the Watergate years was threatened by Holden who famously said, and I will leave out a bit of the quote because it's too crude to say out on the stage, but he said you tell Kate Graham if she prints that we'll put here blank through a big fat ringer, and then they actually worked to try get their broadcast license resented, it's completely un-American, so I guess the only thing I say is as Katharine Graham my role model I'm very willing to let any of my body parts go through a big fat ringer if need be." Jeff Bezos in 2016 when asked about Donald Trump. ^1

I don't think he is pro Trump, but I think he just doesn't want to be on his bad side just in case, just like Zuckerberg he tried to patch his relationship with Trump after he publicly threatened him

1: source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guVxubbQQKE 1:01:00

  • CalChris a day ago

    That was Nixon's AG, John Mitchell, who said that and it happened in 1972. Graham died in 2001, well before Eric Holder was ever Attorney General.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_Graham

    • dustincoates 20 hours ago

      You're right that it was Mitchell, but Bezos wasn't referring to Eric Holder, but to Bob Haldeman, WH CoS under Nixon.

slimebot80 a day ago

Strangely, the same people who call newspapers "legacy" are all over Twitter calling WP a failure and that people need to cancel their subscriptions.

There's a trend among Tech Oligarchs to diminish the role of journalism. Seems to be all about getting slices of government contracts, if not controlling them.

adamc a day ago

Good reason not to subscribe to the WP.

  • topspin a day ago

    There you are! The correct response.

    Should this not fall under the "private company, do what they want" mantra we were all so fond of wrt (pre-Musk...) Twitter, Facebook, et al? The further advice then was; "make your own social media platform."

    Same thing happened at LA times a few days ago, also replete with an editor quitting, when owner Patrick Soon-Shiong blocked the same Kamala endorsement.

    You're free to not subscribe, some editor or other is free to quit, and owners are free to do as they please with their private property. Freedom. What a great idea.

    • metabagel a day ago

      We also have the freedom to gripe about it. That is also the correct response.

      • cryptonector a day ago

        I think GP is asking for consistency.

  • null0pointer a day ago

    Why?

    • adamc a day ago

      I don't want to read a newspaper where the owner is suppressing -- well, anything -- because of concerns for how it might affect his fortune. I want the owner walled off.

      • Thuggery 9 hours ago

        Well you have been. The consent was always being manufactured. A certain controversial fellow by the name of Chomsky pointed out decades ago that media would inevitably reflect biases of their owners and staff, and the needs to be a for profit business.

        It would seem you didn't care or notice because there previously wasn't an opinion conflict with the owners.

        • adamc 8 hours ago

          Everything ever written reflects biases. That isn't the interesting part.

  • 0xy a day ago

    You didn't draw that conclusion when WaPo lied about Russians hacking US electrical infrastructure, sabre rattling for war, then retracting the entire story when it was proved they fabricated the story? One of the authors of the faked story is still employed by WaPo, by the way.

    It's only bad when they refuse to bend to your political orthodoxy, not when they knowingly print dangerous and false stories about nation state hacks (eerily similar to NYT's lies about WMDs in Iraq) -- something likely to drag the world to war again.

    • adamc 8 hours ago

      Yawn. No newspaper is immune to reporters making stuff up.

pharos92 a day ago

We love to objectify the press and pretend they do a service to mankind, but they're just another business.

KevinMS a day ago

I have no idea who to vote for now.

mmooss a day ago

I don't think there could be a more powerful endorsement of Trump so far, much more than if Bezos's paper actually printed an endorsement of him (which would have been laughed at):

It's a signal of Trump as extraordinarily powerful, a stronger signal than probably anything else I've seen. That boosts his image among suppoters - remember power is what he sells - and will intimidate many, many more into complying. What journalists and business people, or any elite, will stand up to him now after Bezos and the Washington Post - probably the second most respected news organization in the country - have bent the knee. And it makes a Trump victory look more inevitable, a key selling point for anyone, but especially a populist.

When Los Angeles Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong did the same thing recently, "The Trump campaign swiftly shared the ... story with supporters." [0]

[0] https://www.npr.org/2024/10/24/nx-s1-5163293/la-times-editor...

  • rightbyte a day ago

    I don't get why there is this assumption that Bezos would not just be supporting him.

    > have bent the knee

    This sounds a bit like "thedonald" nomenclature?

    • mmooss a day ago

      > assumption that Bezos would not just be supporting him.

      Where is that assumption in my GP comment? I said Bezos gave Trump the most powerful endorsement possible.

      (The rest of the parent is a distraction.)

      • rightbyte a day ago

        It might be vague: "Bezos and the Washington Post [...] have bent the knee."

        I read "bent the knee" as some sort of humiliation? I.e. Bezos don't really want to support Trump, but did anyway. Also on "thedonald" it was used as some sort of "humiliated loser folding in line" meme which is why I namedroped it.

        English is not my native tongue so I get such nuances wrong sometimes.

        • devindotcom a day ago

          "Bending the knee" is a way to say that someone knelt - going down on one knee, a sign of loyalty and subservience. In this context it implies Bezos acknowledges Trump as an authority he submits to.

  • ihsw a day ago

    [dead]

benatkin 2 days ago

So they aren't going to endorse either candidate.

If I didn't have context about the situation, I'd say it makes sense. However I think that in this flawed two-party situation, there is unfairness on both sides, resulting in some sort of balance, and it's bad that one of the richest people on earth could upset the balance in this way, especially at the last moment.

Article from 2020: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/09/28/editorial...

  • dclowd9901 a day ago

    Yeah, I think you’re missing the point a bit here: the fear of endorsing the “wrong” candidate, as it would lead to loss of profit by the owning company, is what led to the axing of the endorsement. Call it what you want: profit and political strongarming silenced a newspaper.

    • benatkin a day ago

      You could have created a top-level comment instead of replying to mine. I don't see how your reply is about my take on it and isn't just your completely different take on the issue.

    • CalChris a day ago

      It's just political strongarming. The Washington Post is not profitable.

      • eigart a day ago

        It’s Amazons, Blue origin, AWS profits he’s fearful for, not WaPo.

      • dclowd9901 a day ago

        Bezos made the call because he was afraid of Trump canceling lucrative Pentagon AWS contracts. WaPo is a loss leader, AWS is his bread and butter.

voidfunc a day ago

Not antagonizing the likely future POTUS is smart business especially when said future POTUS is known to lash out with retaliatory rhetoric and actions.

SkipperCat a day ago

Democracy dies in darkness was a promise, not a warning.

  • nomdep a day ago

    I'm sick of this absurd FUD. You surely must realize that the claims that if Trump wins, democracy is going to end are just fearmongering, don't you?

    • laidoffamazon a day ago

      He literally tried an autogolpe. I saw it, live, on TV with my own eyes and ears. He's currently promising to pardon the people that participated in it that have been prosecuted while pardoning himself due to his own immune status.

      That's how a Banana Republic functions.

      • warner25 a day ago

        That and talking about prosecuting the political opposition along with journalists, poll workers, and career public servants just for doing their jobs. And using the military to do it.

        I don't actually think he'll be able to end democracy, because I think a sufficient number of Americans (including in the military) will stand up to him, but I do believe he'd like to.

        • archagon 14 hours ago

          At the very least, we’ll feel the damage from a supermajority far-right judicial system for generations.

      • dragonwriter a day ago

        He'a also promised to purge the civil service and replace it entirely with personal loyalists, and to conduct ethnic cleansing on a world-historic scale.

    • eapressoandcats a day ago

      It’s… really not? The dude tried to overturn the previous election, and repeatedly threatens to throw his enemies in jail. Senior members of his own staff have flat out said he’s a fascist and he’s literally running on a promise to round up millions of people and put them in camps.

      Like probably we’ll still have elections but you know, so do Hungary and Russia.

      • nomdep 18 hours ago

        Ok, so if he wins (seems likely even to WaPo) and those thing doesn’t happen, are you going to think “I was wrong” or double down on “he really wanted to do it but they didn’t let him”

        • eapressoandcats 15 hours ago

          So, he did win and a lot of bad things did happen.

          Trump withheld disaster aid from blue states: https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/trump-de...

          Trump already punished Amazon for the Washington Post’s reporting: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/washington-post-endo...

          And like, if you don’t believe any of that reporting, listen to the man himself? Like he regularly and personally advocates putting his opponents in jail. Either you’re saying he’s blatantly lying about his intentions or your entire defense of him is that he’s an incompetent nincompoop.

          The problem is that because it’s probably true that we’re not going to all and up in prison camps on Inauguration Day, you can claim that things aren’t really bad, which is absurd. Like, lots of people have ordinary lives in authoritarian countries. Most of them are not in fact North Korea.

          The US becoming far more authoritarian and cronyistic is still really bad.

    • geye1234 14 hours ago

      They really think it's true.

      People as diverse and mutually antagonistic as George Orwell, Noam Chomsky and C.S. Lewis said that the outer elites -- the exact kind of people that inhabit HN -- were far more thoroughly propagandized than the working class and the poor. It's on full display here.

    • Spivak a day ago

      Do I need to trot out the list of dictators who were democratically elected?

      https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/25/us/politics/trump-officia...

      These aren't nobodies, they aren't the only ones close to him saying this, and that's before his public statements. The bulk of Project 2025 is a how-to guide for rooting out administrative disloyalty. I don't think he'll be successful but I don't want to deal with the shit he's going to cause in the attempt.

      It would be really really easy to make everyone feel better by nominating literally anyone else, preferably a Moderate Republican. I'll personally go door to door campaigning for them if it means not Trump.

    • soupbowl a day ago

      How is it FUD? The last time Trump was elected Democracy died... didn't it? /s

      • dymk a day ago

        He tried his best during his presidency, and has continued to do so since losing the last election.

      • w0de0 a day ago

        Yeah - let’s give the moronic narcissist a second chance, since he was stymied by entrenched republican institutions and own incompetence the first time. It is only fair!

wannacboatmovie a day ago

I've yet to see an argument against this not delivered in bad faith.

If the publication in question was the NY Post, Washington Times, or another center-right newspaper, the very same group currently having a collective meltdown on social media would be praising them with an equally melodramatic "saving democracy" or some other manufactured phrase du jour.

  • noirbot a day ago

    I'm really not sure of this. The argument I've mostly seen is that the endorsement was always mostly meaningless. If anything, this is a "coverup worse than the crime" situation. Killing the endorsement is much more notable than just letting it happen because it's what everyone was worried about when Bezos bought the paper - that he'd inject his own consideration into it, something he said he wouldn't do. If some billionaire owned the NY Post and banned them from endorsing Trump, that would absolutely be a story as well.

    I don't think anyone thinks it's not clear who the writers at the NY Post or the Washington Post generally want to win. That makes this whole situation so much more stupid on Bezos's part.

    • wannacboatmovie a day ago

      > Killing the endorsement is much more notable than just letting it happen

      It's only notable because the staff was upset and leaked the backstory in retaliation. A newspaper is a business; it's not the town square. Imagine working for a company and going public every time your boss did something you disagreed with.

      • noirbot a day ago

        That's ignoring that he's running a business that's literally to report on things that important people like him do. An engineer at Amazon's job isn't to write about Amazon's business dealings to the public. The opinion and editorial board of a newspaper is literally there to write about what people like Bezos do.

        It would have been notable even if they hadn't been public about it, just because the Post has endorsed every presidential race for decades. Eventually someone would have noticed and asked about it, and it just would have come out then.

        You may as well just say he could silently kill the Kindle line and it wouldn't be a controversy/reported on. He can literally tell Amazon employees to stop making them, but it doesn't mean it's not weird and notable that he's doing it.

        • dmix a day ago

          Regardless the more likely explanation is that this is a news story regardless of internal leaking. People will notice WaPo didn’t endorse anyone and someone’s going to say something.

      • noirbot a day ago

        Also, do you seriously think any more right wing paper wouldn't have leaked it if their owner had prevented them from endorsing? That if their owner had come in saying he preferred Harris and they couldn't endorse Trump that they'd have just gone home like "Hey, free market, he's rich, that's how it works?" Half of major right wing media is run by people whose whole identity is "a major paper said I couldn't write what I wanted so I quit and wrote what I wanted anyway". Getting "canceled" by a major newspaper is pretty much the #1 way to end up rich on Substack these days. They go around parading how much they're "free speech advocates" because they "won't let the rich elites decide what I can write" but suddenly when the rich elites are suppressing an endorsement of a more left candidate it's "it's bad faith and retaliatory to speak out about the rich deciding what you can publish".

    • cryptonector a day ago

      > If some billionaire owned the NY Post

      A billionaire does

  • Capricorn2481 a day ago

    Describing NY Post as center-right is insane. It's genuinely not up to interpretation, that's about as hard right as it gets.

oysterville a day ago

Did people really think that billionaires wanted to buy major press outlets for profit expectations?

Controlling the narrative was always the plan. Unless it's private equity. They just strip it bare and put it out of business.

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    People did warn about it at the time too.

    I fail to see why being upset about the bad thing actually happening means people didn’t think that was the plan.

legitster 2 days ago

There's an irony here, the WaPo news room has become quite political in the last decade. But the editorial board has decided to be apolitical.

Everything is backwards.

  • croes 2 days ago

    Did they?

    > An endorsement of Harris had been drafted by Post editorial page staffers but had yet to be published, according to two sources briefed on the sequence of events who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. The decision not to publish was made by The Post’s owner — Amazon founder Jeff Bezos — according to the same sources.

    Seems it’s just Bezos

  • tasty_freeze a day ago

    You didn't read the article. The board had written an endorsement of Harris. But it was killed at the demand of Bezos.

moduspol 2 days ago

More interesting to me is that this is the third tech billionaire to take a decidedly different stance than he did previously. Musk is quite active, but even Zuckerberg took a much more neutral stance for 2024.

Honestly I'm more surprised that Bezos even bothered. Does he really think the endorsement of The Washington Post editorial board is so significant that it's worth intervening? That seems implausible.

  • dclowd9901 a day ago

    Given he was the one who made the call, what other conclusion would you draw?

    • moduspol a day ago

      Well I mean the most generous take would be that he's come around about Trump and has decided that the editorial board making an explicit endorsement for Harris isn't in his own (or the country's) interests.

      On X they're floating the theory that he knew this would cause a lot of them to resign, and wanted that for other reasons. All we can do is speculate, I guess.

      • dclowd9901 a day ago

        No need to speculate. It’s in black and white: last time Trump wanted to spite Bezos, he canceled $10Bn in AWS contracts. This is profit driven, plain and simple.

        > In a 2019 lawsuit, Amazon claimed it lost a $10 billion Pentagon cloud computing contract to Microsoft because Trump used “improper pressure ... to harm his perceived political enemy” Bezos.

        Notably, most presidential candidates aren’t so petty and vindictive as to cancel contracts with political opponents for spite, but we’re talking about Trump here. It would be best if you woke up to this reality.

        • moduspol a day ago

          It's certainly possible, though if he truly felt pressured that way, he could do a lot more than waiting until 11 days before an election to simply withhold an endorsement.

          • dclowd9901 a day ago

            Like what?

            • moduspol a day ago

              You know all the stuff Musk has been doing with Twitter since buying it? That.

              Or, just to throw out a few ideas: insist on more conservative people on their editorial board. Insist on endorsing Trump (rather than simply not endorsing). Insist that more pro-Trump stories be covered, and fewer pro-Harris ones.

              Or, if all of that is too far, just sell the paper and get out of the way.

              Any of these makes more sense than simply waiting until the last minute to enforce the withholding of an endorsement if the genuine goal is to avoid being targeted in the event Trump wins.

              • acdha 20 hours ago

                I think this is a last-minute hedge: a lot of people did not expect the Republicans to shield Trump from prosecution as effectively as they did (including the SCOTUS majority being willing to invent an unprecedented reversal of U.S. legal precedent) and weren’t expecting him to actually win again.

                Now there’s a roughly even chance that he’ll do so and that’s causing some hard calculations: if Harris wins, they won’t face retribution because Democratic administrations don’t do that. If Trump wins, Bezos and Soon-Shiong can go to him saying that they got rid of the liberals at their companies in a very public display of support.

                Trump is an authoritarian at heart: he doesn’t care if you like him, he cares if you support his power. Vance used to be a harsh critic but got the VP position by publicly recanting and displaying obeisance. It really looks like they’re thinking along the same lines: either it won’t matter or he’ll be satisfied with their acceptance of his power since he really wants to attack other people who aren’t fellow rich men.

            • cozzyd a day ago

              Jumping up and down like a lunatic.

        • wbl a day ago

          All the more reason to endorse his opponent!

  • eigart a day ago

    I would say Zuck went as far right as reasonably possible, and his timing was good. Kind of cowardly, but also impressive foresight on his part.

    • throwaway48476 a day ago

      That's absurd. His political donations are very blue.

  • acdha a day ago

    Bezos cares because his businesses have billions of dollars in revenue from the federal government. Trump has already claimed to personally review those contracts and was reported as trying to kill the $10B JEDI contract:

    https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2019/10/26/trump-mattis-screw-amazo...

    By all accounts, he’s prepared to be more authoritarian and less bound by the law if re-elected and he’s already threatening journalists with rape and talking about yanking broadcast licenses for channels which don’t kowtow to him.

  • deepsquirrelnet a day ago

    Probably the opposite. He doesn’t think it’s significant, but the risk of petty retaliation IS significant.

  • smeeger a day ago

    of course it is. endorsements by major entities such as major newspapers… endorsements by celebrities and all these other points form the constellation of how a candidate is perceived. a huge chunk of people will not just vote blindly for whoever seems to be more broadly supported but actually deeply like whoever is put in front of them. and they will also believe it if a bunch of newspapers release the same story at the same time… even if there is no evidence offered to support the main assertion. or even if its obviously false. creation of the appearance of a consensus is an extremely powerful tool

  • jp_nc a day ago

    Thats because of the calculation:

    - Endorse Harris and Trump wins, Trump will seek revenge on Bezos and Amazon (he tried this in the first term)

    - Endorse Trump and Harris wins, Harris will not act outside the bounds of a normal government official

    This is capitulation to the perceived threats of a Trump presidency and is very bad.

    • elihu a day ago

      This sounds like "obeying in advance", a phenomenon that Timothy Snyder wrote about in On Tyranny, 20 lessons from the 20th Century.

      https://timothysnyder.org/on-tyranny

      Helpfully, the relevant quote I was thinking of is directly on the books website:

      > Do not obey in advance.

      > Most of the power of authoritarianism is freely given. In times like these, individuals think ahead about what a more repressive government will want, and then offer themselves without being asked. A citizen who adapts in this way is teaching power what it can do.

      (The quote on the website goes on with several pages of examples.)

    • nomdep a day ago

      > Harris will not act outside the bounds of a normal government official

      California has even blocked SpaceX because they don't like the politics of Musk (https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-10-11/la-me-sp...) so I would say is risky to expect any of the two (or its followers) not seeking revenge.

      • ywvcbk 10 hours ago

        Presumably you have to draw a line somewhere, though? There is not liking someone's political views and there is not liking someone's attempts to undermine the whole country by (possibly purposefully) selling it to Russia etc.

      • metabagel a day ago

        The California Coastal Commission is rather (in)famously powerful. This is kind of a special case.

    • frugalmail a day ago

      [flagged]

      • dang a day ago

        Could you please stop posting flamewar comments and using HN for political battle? Your account has been doing both. It's not what this site is for, and destroys what it is for.

        If you wouldn't mind reviewing https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and taking the intended spirit of the site more to heart, we'd be grateful.

        • frugalmail 3 hours ago

          Will try, just not sure how my comment is at issue when this posting is specifically political content.

          • dang 3 hours ago

            HN comments on political content need to follow the site guidelines, just as on any other content.

        • albedoa a day ago

          In a recent comment, you write that "single purpose accounts are not allowed on HN". This one is fourteen years ongoing, and I know that you have been alerted to it numerous times: https://news.ycombinator.com/threads?id=rayiner

          • dang a day ago

            rayiner's account isn't single-purpose.

    • throwaway918299 a day ago

      [flagged]

      • KaiserPro a day ago

        I mean he still appears to be making lots of money, and moreover being able to bend the rules without any serious consequences.

        He has his own broadcast medium to play with and noone has banned it (apart from brazil, but all he had to do was pay some money)

      • staplers a day ago

          they go after him
        
        Would love to hear what horrible consequences you think Elon is facing..
        • rKarpinski a day ago

          They retroactively invalidated several years of compensation packages...

          • mikeyouse a day ago

            "They" of course being the Delaware Chancellory Court in this situation... man people are clueless about how things work.

            • rKarpinski a day ago

              "Delaware Chancellory Court" of course being a political appointee in the home state of the powerful politician whom they had an adversarial relationship with, in this situation... but you know how these things work

              • mikeyouse 16 hours ago

                It’s always telling when people resort to unclear conspiracy theories instead of disputing the actual evidence that lead the court to their decision.

                • rKarpinski 13 hours ago

                  It's telling when people resort to ad hominem. The government is in the process of confiscating tens of billions of dollars from him - if thats not a real consequence I don't know what is. Wether or not that ruling only happened because of his political position is a different matter, it's not like the judge mentioned it was because of his political posts on social media - like other officials have [1].

                  [1] https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-10-11/la-me-sp...

                  • mikeyouse 5 hours ago

                    The government isn't confiscating anything.. they merely ruled that the independent board of directors who authorized the richest pay deal in the history of pay deals wasn't truly independent as is necessary to properly represent the shareholders they legally must represent. Every dollar stays with the company.

  • CamperBob2 a day ago

    It's almost as if coming out in favor of taxing unrealized capital gains right before the election wasn't the stroke of political brilliance that Harris thought it was.

    "Hmm, I'm facing a close election. Hey, wait, I know! I'll make enemies of people who buy ink by the trainload and bandwidth by the petabyte-second."

    I really wish somebody could have talked her out of that idea, or at least convinced her to wait another couple of months before putting it on the table. It was an incredible faux pas, maybe a history-changing one, whose consequences were trivially foreseeable.

  • TylerE 2 days ago

    All signs point to this being an extraordinarily tight election. 5 or 10k votes in the right state could swing the whole thing.

    • moduspol 2 days ago

      I'd be incredibly surprised if there are even 100 people who:

      - Don't know who The Washington Post editorial board would endorse

      - Would change who they are voting for based on this lack of endorsement

      But I could be wrong.

      • johnnyanmac a day ago

        All elections ultiamtely come down to undecided swing voters. It's silly every-time, but you need to vastly lower your expectations for that kind of crowd. Yes, a cheesy dance number endorsing a candidate can be all that is needed to swing an entire election.

        This is an issue with first past the post, but that's a much larger thing to tackle.

      • TylerE 2 days ago

        We’re in. Situation wheee one of the candidates routinely criticizes us and praises our enemies, and still pulls at about 42%. Rationality is not in evidence.

        • bamboozled a day ago

          If this race is right, then whatever I thought about people was wrong.

          Then again, I always wonder what the hell actually went through peoples minds in Nazi Germany.

          • lerjan a day ago

            [flagged]

            • traitfield a day ago

              After more than 60 years the Reductio ad Hitlerium is finally losing its power, heartening to see.

  • wumeow 2 days ago

    Musk is a true believer, but Zuck and Bezos probably fear retribution from Trump if he wins and they endorsed Harris.

    • nobodyandproud 2 days ago

      Isn’t this like Russia’s oligarchy?

      I’m not enamored with Democrats, but Trump doesn’t share Constitutional values and I’m very much for independent journalism.

      This is bad.

      • bamboozled a day ago

        If this is true, it’s beyond bad. It may be the beginning of the end of the free world.

        • throwaway48476 a day ago

          This is such a weird take. People can't conceptualize a world of many discrete important actions and reduce it to one event. It's a failure of imagination.

          • nobodyandproud 15 hours ago

            This is an ironic take.

            It’s a distinct lack of imagination and historical knowledge that stops at one event, and refuses to ponder the long term consequences.

    • helf a day ago

      [dead]

  • rightbyte a day ago

    Zuckerberg has never been not right wing though.

  • lerjan a day ago

    Silicon Valley is not entirely happy with the economy. They may be mostly Democrats, but there are limits to the current incompetence that people are willing to endure.

    • kelnos a day ago

      Presidents get far too much praise or criticism for the state of the economy. In reality, their effect on it is fairly limited, especially over such a short span like 4 years.

    • pstuart a day ago

      So you're suggesting the fresh incompetence will improve things?

euroderf a day ago

I guess there's no regulatory guidance here, on media ownership interfering with media op-ed operations ? Even when Bezos (probably) swore up and down he would never interfere ?

greenthrow a day ago

So many times HN posters have extolled how Bezos hasn't interfered with the WaPo and those of us who expressed concern about his purchase were chicken littles. It has never been true and it's plain as day now. He bought it for the same reason Musk bought Twitter. To have control over a media outlet he values.

  • vagab0nd a day ago

    If you have that kind of money, why wouldn't you do that?

    • ribosometronome a day ago

      They're not really saying Bezo or Musk are acting illogically. He's lamenting everyone who has set with their heads buried in the sand and pretended they aren't doing the things they're doing.

      • EasyMark a day ago

        Not really, there was no proof, just speculation with no evidence. In this case there is plenty of evidence that Bezos put his finger on the scale. See the editor resigning and likely there will be others to follow. He said he was hands off when he bought it, but here we are.

    • mmooss a day ago

      Because you believe in something more than personal gain. The US and other countries were built by elites who believed in more; it's the current generation that are failing.

      • UniverseHacker a day ago

        Or at least forming your own vision of what you want the world to be like based on your own values, and seeing the world move that way as "personal gain."

        I think people nowadays choose some generic and pointlessly bland vision of personal success instead of having their own vision based on their own values out of narcissism. The more generic, the more people will agree that you are successful.

  • ajross a day ago

    Well, it might have been true until now. Certainly there's no previous good evidence for Bezos-directed coverage or editing at the Post.

    But regardless: you were right. I was one of the folks who viewed him as a basically benign entity who, sure, had opinions of his own, but clearly would never put his fingers on the editorial scale. And I was wrong, and he isn't.

  • gwern a day ago

    > The newspaper also published an article by two staff reporters saying that editorial page staffers had drafted an endorsement of Democratic nominee Kamala Harris over GOP nominee Donald Trump in the election.

    This is a bizarre way to use his control as a owner. If you own a newspaper or tabloid, we know from Trump how you use it effectively: you practice 'catch and kill', or you kill your own inconvenient stories, or you sic your reporters on the enemy disproportionately (while still scrupulously reporting only true things), or you selectively amplify stories from elsewhere.

    You don't... kill editorial board endorsements (while still publishing an article on it!). Is there a single person in a swing state who, despite being bombarded by advertising for years, is now going to vote for Trump but would have voted for Harris once they saw the Washington Post endorsed Harris instead? "Ah, well, if WaPo says so, I guess I was wrong about her! I wasn't expecting them to endorse the Democratic candidate!"

    I can only read this as Bezos trying to kiss up to Trump, who is narcissistic enough to actually take personally a foregone editorial board endorsement of his opponent.

jmcclell 2 days ago

It makes sense in so much as "it's a risk to our business to endorse Harris because of the risk of falling afoul of Trump's vindictive nature should he win."

From a fiduciary standpoint, I agree with that assessment. From the standpoint of a citizen, I find the implication alarming.

I do believe that this is the reasoning behind the decision, but it is certainly speculation on my part.

  • archagon a day ago

    A newspaper that succumbs to fear of reprisal fails completely in its principal duty and becomes little more than a propaganda rag.

    • throwaway48476 a day ago

      It was always a propaganda outlet. Only now more people see it.

  • wbl a day ago

    If you own a paper money isn't the point. Just like in a hospital or a law firm or even a bank. You do the right thing because society trusts you and making money comes from that. Do the wrong thing, and your business will vanish.

  • Animats a day ago

    A statement along those lines should appear in the next 10-Q filing, under business risks.

  • sleepybrett a day ago

    You are forgetting that the ftc is looking at amazon under biden, one would hope that harris will keep kahn in the post (because she's kicking asses that have been needed to be kicked for 30+ years).

    I think he's in a bad place. If he endorses trump he's endorsing a potential fascist dictator. If he endorses harris he's contributing to amazon's anti-trust peril.

    • dralley a day ago

      A billionaire personally intervening in the endorsement of a major newspaper on the basis of profit motive seems like the sort of thing that would contribute to anti-trust peril.

      • sleepybrett a day ago

        I think abstain is his only real play here, both endorsements are peril.

  • bitwize a day ago

    This is why we need to repeal and replace the First Amendment with an amendment that guarantees freedom of expression within the bounds of civilized discourse (e.g., open Nazism=crime) and severely punishes government officials who use their power to stifle such expression. The First Amendment, as written, protects speech that oughtn't be protected, and fails to protect speech that ought to be protected, hence the current situation with the Washington Post being cowed into withdrawing their endorsement by the threat of a vindictive Trump.

    Countries with no First Amendment, where hate speech is in fact criminalized, routinely score higher on international free-speech indices than the USA because in the USA the government, especially the Republican Party, has the means and the will to intimidate the press into silence or capitulation.

    • bigstrat2003 a day ago

      We need to do no such thing. All speech, even speech which is vile, must be equally protected under the law or else the protections are meaningless. In your preferred policy regime, it's entirely too easy for the people in charge of government to declare "this is outside the bounds of civilized discourse" about perfectly legitimate speech which they don't like. History has shown us, time and time and time again, that this will happen once you give people the power to censor. It may take 5 years or 100, but it is inevitable. I'm not willing to open that door, and if the price is that I have to deal with some jerks who are Nazis, I call that a bargain.

carbatterylife a day ago

Couldn't a simple answer here be that he felt Kamala is unqualified and terrible and as a newspaper with a lot of readership and influence, he decided against endorsing her? To be fair, I can see the same reason why another right leaning newspaper might not want to endorse trump if they felt the same about him.

For all the comments talking about how there is no such thing as true neutrality, I agree. You can dislike Bezos's decision to not want to endorse her but to call it wrong is insane because its a choice as much as endorsing her is

  • swatcoder a day ago

    The traditional ideal is that editors and journalists exercise a freedom of practice that owners don't intefere with, much the same as the academic freedom tenured professors are traditionally given at universities.

    In practice, that's of course not the case (in either domain), but it predictably makes front page news when an owner acts too egregiously domineering.

  • thimabi a day ago

    > Couldn't a simple answer here be that he felt Kamala is unqualified and terrible and as a newspaper with a lot of readership and influence, he decided against endorsing her?

    Sure, but why should the personal opinion of the owner of the newspaper prevail over the opinion of the editorial staff?

    • roenxi a day ago

      Because they own the newspaper. The question answers itself. There isn't any reason some random employee should have their opinion privileged over the owner. Or vice versa, to be fair, but the joy of being an owner is being able to pull rank.

      If an owner can't get decisions made in a way that is favourable to them then there are very real questions about whether they are, in fact, owning the company.

      • noirbot a day ago

        Sure, and we get to look at the fact that he silently pulled rank to kill a story for craven reasons and decide worse of him and decide that his control of the news we get from that paper makes it suspect to his whims. If he's willing to kill something this major, he's willing to kill smaller stories about Amazon, or himself, or anything else him or his friends care about.

        It completely flies in the face of the values of the paper and the reasons Bezos said he was buying it. If I wanted to get Bezos's press releases, I could get them on Amazon or Blue Origin's press site. No one's claiming he's not literally allowed to do this, but that it's spoiling the product. If Bezos bought McDonalds and made it serve only vegan burgers without explanation that's totally his right as the owner, but it's insane and makes you question why they did it.

      • metabagel a day ago

        You’re not answering “why should”. You’re answering “why can” - a question which was not asked.

        • roenxi a day ago

          In this situation the distinction makes no difference. The editors' opinions are just what some otherwise random people think. They happen to have control over what a newspaper reports so they get to broadcast that opinion widely. Them being overruled by a different random person with somewhat more power over what the newspaper prints is not philosophically interesting.

          Nobody is seeking these editors out for their personal opinion, I doubt many could name them. The editors are relying on the WaPo brand. They aren't all that legitimate a source of political opinion although they are as entitled to it as much as anyone else and it isn't a big deal if they want to publish it in the paper they edit (gotta fill the space with something and they believe what they believe).

          • thimabi 21 hours ago

            Wouldn’t you say that the WaPo brand owns its prestige much to the journalists, editors and other professionals who build the newspaper on a day by day basis?

            These are not random people whose opinion matter as much as those of other random people. At least in theory, people seek the Post for the quality of the work done by the editorial staff. Accordingly, the staff should have more — not less — influence over the content of the paper.

            No one buys the Post out of a wish to read Bezos’ personal views or those of random strangers.

            • roenxi 10 hours ago

              > Wouldn’t you say that the WaPo brand owns its prestige much to the journalists, editors and other professionals who build the newspaper on a day by day basis?

              Yeah. But statistically some of them are going to vote Trump so I don't think that is much of an argument why the WaPo endorsement decision needs to be made by any specific committee in the WaPo.

              There are arguments for and against both candidates - the WaPo as an institution might be good at presenting both but it isn't competent to make the decision on which president is a better choice. That includes Bezos for what it is worth. If we're talking shoulds, in theory they shouldn't be endorsing anyone.

              > No one buys the Post out of a wish to read Bezos’ personal views or those of random strangers.

              Sounds to me like that is exactly why people buy newspapers. The drive is to find out what a community at large thinks about things and to figure out how a random sample of a community is interpreting events. If I want to learn what an expert opinion is on a topic I would not be turning to the WaPo to try and figure it out.

              Although with the advent of the internet we've discovered that professional corporate journalists do a terrible job of capturing that so I expect they're being replaced by podcasters with more independence. Owner's influence has never stopped at nixing one decision.

      • big_whack 18 hours ago

        This is one of the ostensible guiding principles of the Washington Post: "The newspaper’s duty is to its readers and to the public at large, and not to the private interests of its owners."

      • Capricorn2481 a day ago

        HN once again refusing to engage with the world outside of Peter Thiel quotes. Business owner good.

    • defen a day ago

      They can make their own newspaper, or go on X or something, if they want to make their opinions known. He's not saying they can't voice their opinions, he's saying they can't use HIS platform to do it.

    • bogantech a day ago

      Because he owns the paper and they don't

  • laidoffamazon a day ago

    It's not his endorsement, it's an endorsement written by the editorial board that he told them not to run. Notably, he didn't endorse either.

    He's entitled to do so as owner of the paper. But it reeks of cowardice.

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    The worry is 100% that this is happening to please Trump. The evidence is that he hasn’t had a hand in editorials until now all of a sudden.

    It’s his choice I suppose but I don’t think it’s crazy to be worried about the precedent of a formerly very independent institution caving so readily.

  • noirbot a day ago

    Sure, but then Bezos should be writing something explaining it. Instead, he's silently just using his money to squash opinions he doesn't agree with. The is the exact sort of conspiracy that Trump likes to claim where Soros is the reason anyone doesn't endorse him, except now it literally happened and it's to help him, and he turned around and took a meeting with Blue Origin right after.

  • rat87 a day ago

    True neutrality is endorsing Harris. Because it's not like Trump is a real choice. He's objectively terrible.

    Harris isn't terrible or unqualified. She has plenty of experience and unlike Trump cares and wants to learn the details of policy.

    The two sides are not remotely similar. And yes Bezos decision to let himself be blackmailed is insane

mensetmanusman a day ago

Remember when 10,000 papers endorsed Hillary?

janalsncm a day ago

> CNBC has requested comment from Amazon.

According to the article, Jeff Bezos is presumably afraid that Trump would continue to punish Amazon. If that is the case, this seems like an entirely futile exercise.

Not that corporate PR responses are ever particularly illuminating. I read an article regarding information conveyed per syllable. English was near the top. Languages with less information per syllable like Spanish were spoken faster. In dead last place were PR statements from Fortune 500 companies.

  • throwaway48476 a day ago

    He's afraid of Vance. Trump is an egoist but Vance has an ideological dislike of amazon.

  • sleepybrett a day ago

    No, he's fucking terrified of lina khan. He won't endorse trump and poke the bear and he won't endorse harris because he's embittered.

    He's a cowardly monopolist.

    • dralley a day ago

      1) He already has experience with the Trump admin trying to deny AWS from government contracts on the basis of Trump's personal frustration with the Washington Post.

      2) It's notable that his other significant enterprise is Blue Origin, whose competitor is Elon Musk, who has by now deeply and publicly ingratiated himself with the Trump campaign.

      Maybe Lina Khan is part of the story, but it's silly to act like there aren't more straightforwards reasons.

    • janalsncm a day ago

      That doesn’t make sense to me. Lina Khan already doesn’t like Amazon, she cut her teeth at Yale calling them out for antitrust. How is not endorsing Kamala Harris going to smooth that over? And it’s WaPo, which is entirely separate from Amazon as far as antitrust is concerned.

      Even within the internal logic of the equivalency between Donald Trump and Lena Khan it doesn’t make sense. It’s pretty clear he is afraid of Trump.

  • jeffbee a day ago

    Imagine taking as many steroids as Jeff Bezos has taken, only to end up being afraid of an obese elderly man who cheats at golf. What was the point of all that flexing?

    • energy123 a day ago

      On a serious note, this is an example of what historian Timothy Snyder refers to as "obeying in advance", where people predict what a repressive government will want and then obey before they're in power just to be safe. This creates a positive feedback loop that leads to them seizing power.

      • janalsncm a day ago

        I read that book but didn’t connect the dots here. That is terrifying.

      • jeffbee a day ago

        I am serious! But yes.

    • defen a day ago

      Maybe he's afraid Kamala Harris will champion an unrealized capital gains tax.

    • arp242 a day ago

      Well, he does have a reasonable chance to be elected to presidency, so there's that.

      Morality and general spinelessness aside, it's clearly the sensible thing to do. You might anger a few sensible people but that will pass. Trump is not exactly known to be forgiving. Remember when he refused emergency aid to states that weren't supportive enough of him? That's the sort of decrepit small-minded snowflake we're talking about.

barfingclouds 11 hours ago

Weird, because in Trump’s last presidency he was pretty anti Jeff Bezos. But I guess however they feel about each other, the assumed business tax benefits of a trump presidency make him want trump

ruined a day ago

clearly bezos is concerned about the present administration's policy regarding weapons exports

HarHarVeryFunny 20 hours ago

This isn't a normal election, or anything remotely close to it. It'd be lovely if we had TWO relatively normal candidates and could vote for them in our normal partisan ways.

You may have noticed that basically everyone in Trump's first term cabinet has come out and called him things ranging from "moron" to "fascist" to a "danger to the country". This is not normal. It's extremely abnormal. It's a warning to the country.

It's at extraordinary times like these when the country needs some leadership, from the media as well as those in power, to highlight the danger. Many senior republicans have stepped up and announced they are going to vote for Harris. It's a very poor look for a newspaper, faced with a once in a lifetime election like this, to effectively say "we're gonna sit this out out - we have no editorial opinion on who is better for the country". Very sad.

userbinator a day ago

What a title. I read the first 3 words, and just had to keep reading the rest of it.

znpy a day ago

it's all disagree and commit until the big boss comes and says to "just commit". didn't success and scale bring responsibility ?

i guess Bezos can bend the leadership principles back and forth the way it best fits his current needs.

laidoffamazon a day ago

The most kind way to read this is that he is concerned of reprisal, no different than the reprisal he faced from the Saudi government (with likely Trump assistance via David Pecker) in 2019.

keeda a day ago

Here’s an alternative take. Note, I’m absolutely not a Bezos fan. Maybe he is just chickening out against Trump and/or fighting against the proposed billionaire tax (which IMO will never happen.)

But consider that 1) even with all the damage Trump could do, Bezos will still be richer than god, 2) Bezos did not instruct the Washington Post to endorse Trump, and 3) he doesn’t seem to have asked them to keep things quiet either.

So of course this story breaks and of course there is all this media hullabaloo with the upshot being everyone now:

* knows that the WaPo was about to endorse Harris.

* is reminded that Trump has made official decisions and improperly pressured government matters based on personal feelings.

* is aware that even the 2nd richest man in the world fears the personal ire of a presidential candidate in a democracy, ostensibly with a solid rule of law.

I hate that this comes across as “he’s the billionaire we deserve, but not the one we need right now, and oh, BTW he's also playing 4D chess," but all this seems very expected. So maybe another way to look at this is: Bezos appears to submit to Trump, which in itself serves as a very publicly warning to the world about what will happen under Trump, and indirectly endorses Harris anyway.

  • laidoffamazon a day ago

    I don't think he has to do 4D chess to signal support against Trump. He could always just use his giant megaphone to decry Trump as a wannabe dictator that improperly used his own power when he was President to punish his political enemies - something Trump does not shy away from publicly admitting.

    • geoelectric a day ago

      Yeah, but I wondered about the same thing as GP.

      It’s one thing to be another voice in the crowd of people all saying the same thing (even a very deep pocketed voice) and another entirely to be the object example everybody discusses by letting it be believed that with all your billions, you’re scared too. People are more affected by things they decide for themselves than things you tell them, hence show don’t tell.

      Were that to be the case, I wouldn’t consider it 4D chess. It seems like a straightforward strategy to me.

refurb a day ago

Ok, I actually RTFA and it just seems like a bunch of conjecture over what the reasons might be? Nobody actually knows?

And the editorial board's comments seem a bit dramatic?

"It represents an abandonment of the fundamental editorial convictions of the newspaper that we love, and for which we have worked a combined 218 years"

How does it represent an abandonment? These editors have been sharing their convictions for the past combined 218 years. I don't think any reader is going to ask "I wonder who the Post is going to endorse"?

6510 a day ago

This is great. Now if they could also stop pretending there are only 2 options maybe we could one day have peace in the world.

southernplaces7 18 hours ago

Probably already mentioned in the comments below, but the subtext here is obvious. Bezos thinks Trump is very likely to win and he has killed this endorsement because it might screw his broad business interests in all kinds of ways under the administration of a vengeful Trump. The nature of Amazon makes it much more exposed to regulatory heat inside the U.S than would be the case for a more purely digital tech-driven firm like, say, Meta.

Aside from the likely cynicism of the move, the cliquish criticism of Bezos reeks of moralizing hypocrisy. Is there some exact moral duty among major tech company founders to effusively endorse specifically progressive, liberal elite-endorsed democrat candidates, to show their own kumbaya credentials? Bullshit. Even the ones who vigorously support democrat politicians are no less self interested in doing so. It almost always boils down to money and favorable regulations, whether someone supports the donkey or the elephant.

  • giraffe_lady 18 hours ago

    It's not a novel observation but there's another conclusion you can draw from the same information: it's in bezos's best interest for trump to win and he wants him to.

73kl4453dz 2 days ago

What's even the point of being a billionaire if you're still scared of Trump?

  • tredfjgkkl543 a day ago

    Trump may be handed unprecedented [0] power, is quite openly and plainly motivated by retribution, has repeatedly threatened to use the power of the military and the state against his political enemies, and at least once has used his own media platform to call for the termination of the US constitution.

    (Those are facts. Not political claims.)

    Putting aside any broader assessments of his character, I think it is rational to be afraid of the consequences of being on the wrong side of such a person.

    What is depressing is the number of people in positions of influence who do not feel like modelling the virtuous position of having fear of the consequences of doing what they believe to be the right thing but doing it anyway.

    [0] I realise that in principle there is a precedent for him having this power because he had it before. But what any presidential candidate in 2024 now has is the opportunity to run an executive with the clear legal opinion that they are permanently immune from prosecution for most of their actions, and an implicit handbook on how to bury criminal acts in official communications that are covered by absolute immunity. This extended power has no precedent.

  • sangnoir a day ago

    The hedonic treadmill comes for everyone. Even the billionaires want more.

  • blantonl a day ago

    No one is safe from a nation state that is weaponized against you.

    Just look at what happened in Saudi Arabia and the billionaires there.

  • EasyMark a day ago

    Because soon it’s very possible Trump will rally the military behind him and start imprisoning billionaires who dared to cross him. He’ll be the only “billionaire” with real muscle to imprison his enemies for life or even summary execution.

  • jimmydoe a day ago

    About half of American voters are behind Trump. More poor/less educated coming to him compare to past cycles. Why wouldn’t a billionaire scared of him?

  • greenthrow a day ago

    Why is everyone in this thread pushing the idea that Bezos is scared of Trump? It seems more plausible to me he is scared of the DoJ breaking up Amazon under Harris.

    • eigart a day ago

      Has anyone brought that up? In the current administration? In the campaign?

      • 93po a day ago

        what happens behind closed doors is entirely different than what makes the papers. i am positive bezos has spoken to trump, and i am positive trump assured bezos of something that harris did not

        • tredfjgkkl543 a day ago

          A rational person would know that many past promises or reassurances offered by Donald Trump have proved to be empty, worthless and even costly to their recipients, as documented by countless legal actions.

          If Bezos believes what Trump has told him behind closed doors, then his companies are in the control of a sucker, not just a coward.

          • 93po 15 hours ago

            legal action does not show reality, people can sue for nearly no reason at all, and people have large political and PR reasons to sue Trump for posturing reasons. we have very little idea what trump's track record is for making deals because the vast majority of it isn't public. to base your entire opinion of him based on tabloids and biased corporate news and pretend that literally nothing ever happens that isn't public is not going to give you a realistic picture. i am sure there are also dozens of high profile examples of deals that were public and went just fine.

            obligatory trump is terrible is racist etc. not defending trump, just highlighting questionable logic

    • trealira a day ago

      Yes, and it seems to me equally likely that he likes Trump but is too cowardly to say so. I don't know why others are so certain he's scared of Trump, unless there's a piece of information I'm missing.

    • EasyMark a day ago

      I think people are finally coming around to paying attention to “Putin’s a really great guy” and “imprisoning the enemy within” and realizing Trump’s not joking around about that.

    • dotnet00 a day ago

      Because talking about how Trump is evil is more entertaining than talking about Harris

wumeow 2 days ago

"Democracy dies in darkness"

and silence, apparently.

  • smeeger a day ago

    [flagged]

    • KaiserPro a day ago

      Best case senario and he's just bluffing about deporting people, removing parts of the judicial system, deploying the military on US soil against US citizens.

      None of that is healthy. None of that is part of normal democracy.

      In previous years, presidential candidates talked about policies, rather than divining meaning from a demented old guy (you may also point to biden on that one, he is still able to answer a question though.)

    • Trasmatta a day ago

      He's said he wants to be a dictator on day one, has told his supporters that they won't have to vote again after this election, has said he will prosecute his political opponents, has said that Harris voters should be afraid of saying they support her, etc, etc.

      What more do you need?!

    • mmooss a day ago

      Isn't the capitulation of the free press to his will a threat to democracy?

    • pstuart a day ago

      Being that he's stated his desire to be a dictator and has an army of enablers to help him, it's not an unreasonable fear.

      Obviously this topic is a third rail here, but I think it's important to say that he upended the political environment and we are in uncharted waters now.

    • o11c a day ago

      and I'm tired of Trump explicitly stating his intent to end democracy.

      But just because we're tired doesn't mean we don't have to face things.

      • smeeger a day ago

        link to the video where he says that. like the full video with context, not a news bite

  • good8675309 2 days ago

    [flagged]

    • noarchy a day ago

      The manner in which Harris got the nomination, deciding at the convention, isn't atypical and was the norm in earlier American history. The party decides how this goes. There is nothing Constitutionally-mandated about how they do it.

    • archagon a day ago

      Which candidate was deemed a fascist by over a dozen members of his own administration?

      https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/13-former-tru...

      • zer8k a day ago

        [flagged]

        • archagon a day ago

          What does any of this rambling about Harris and the NBC have to do with the fact that 14 members of Trump's former administration (including one general) have agreed that Trump is an outright fascist in an open letter?

          • selectodude a day ago

            These political threads on HN always make me really sad. A bunch of ostensibly intelligent and educated people who see whats happening and either don’t care or are excited about the prospect.

            I gave up. Pax Americana had a good run. The parallels to Germany 1933 and Russia 2003 are simply too loud to ignore at this point.

            • archagon a day ago

              Indeed. I'm planning to spend the next year looking for a country to emigrate to that hasn't completely lost its mind. How can I stay politically invested in a democratic society that vociferously supports a burgeoning dictator? These are not my people anymore.

              • selectodude a day ago

                My concern is that the US is simply too large and influential on the rest of the world. It’ll be bad here but it won’t be much better anywhere else.

              • bigstrat2003 a day ago

                > How can I stay politically invested in a democratic society that vociferously supports a burgeoning dictator?

                The problem is the lie that either of these candidates is anything like a dictator, not people supporting them. Neither Trump nor Harris is my pick for president, but whoever wins it will still be business as usual in America for four years. The only thing which actually threatens is is fearmongering tearing apart our bonds as countrymen and undermining belief in our system of government.

                • archagon a day ago

                  Not according to general Kelly and 13 other members of Trump’s former administration. (Or Trump himself, who has explicitly said that he wants to be "dictator for a day," have "one really violent day" of police retaliation, throw his political enemies into prison, and who has wished his generals were more like Hitler’s because they barely stopped him from deploying troops on American soil last time around. I mean, come on. This isn't even reading between the lines anymore.)

          • mikeyouse a day ago

            Slight correction - 3 Generals off the top of my head (Kelly, Mattis, and Milley)

    • dclowd9901 a day ago

      Said as though with earnest care

    • wumeow 2 days ago

      The majority of Democrats wanted Biden to drop out and approve of Harris as the nominee

      https://apnews.com/article/poll-joe-biden-kamala-harris-dona...

      • brandur a day ago

        The point is that Democratic voters didn't get a chance to have their voice heard. Conducting polling is post-hoc rationalization for Harris being installed by party leaders in unprecedentedly anti-democratic action.

        • pron a day ago

          The purpose of a primary is to help the party pick a nominee that has a better chance of winning the general, which is, in turn, the purpose of a political party. The mechanism of binding primaries was set up by party leaders after some bad choices (especially in the 1968 Democratic Convention). This time, the prospective candidates decided that a blitz primary wouldn't serve its purpose. If the voters punish them for this decision, then it will have proved a bad one, but it's neither unprecedented nor undemocratic.

        • archagon a day ago

          If the presidential candidate wishes to hand the reins over to his vice president, why is he not allowed to do that?

          • Maxatar a day ago

            He is allowed, it's just doesn't follow a democratic process.

            • archagon a day ago

              But this is part of the democratic process. If the presidential candidate died a week before election and the VP took his place, we would not be discussing the situation as undemocratic.

              • Maxatar a day ago

                When I say democratic, I don't mean the Democratic party's primary process, I mean a process by which people vote to select a leader.

                Yes I agree that Joe Biden had the legal authority to step down and appoint Kamala Harris as his successor to run for President. No, I don't think doing that is democratic. What would have followed the democratic process would have been recognize what everyone else knew way in advance and stepping down early enough for potential nominees to run to be the candidate.

        • wumeow a day ago

          There is no way they could have held a second primary in the 28 days between Biden dropping out and the DNC. Polls said Democrats wanted Biden to drop out, Democrats had already elected Harris once, and polls said Democrats were happy with Harris as the nominee. That's about as democratic as you could get given the situation.

          Criticizing the Democrats for being anti-democratic here would carry a lot more weight if the Republican nominee wasn't responsible for J6 and the fake electors plot.

ulfw a day ago

So we have reached the intimidation phase of this election, where businesses owners fear repercussions from Trump (or standing up against him) and his entourage for not supporting him.

Reminds me of a certain time in history.

  • laidoffamazon a day ago

    It's fascinating to compare other countries on the brink of authoritarianism with our own. In other countries it happens because of bread lines and complete dysfunction here it happens despite a country out of war and an economy that's humming along at a brisk pace.

    It's the equivalent of playing chicken with a train because you're bored.

thesuperbigfrog a day ago

Just like their motto:

"Democracy dies in darkness"

Hopefully there are no dark times ahead.

  • e40 a day ago

    Comparing the NYT and WaPo, seems to me the latter is more stridently alerting everyone to the dangers of a Trump presidency, this killed endorsement notwithstanding.

ErikAugust 2 days ago

Does Bezos have uber-intel, and knows Trump is going to win?

  • Trasmatta a day ago

    Nobody does. It's a tossup, and he's hedging his bets.

  • slater 2 days ago

    lol... maybe he does? Number of trump signs vs. harris signs bought on Amazon?

    (yes i know Jeff doesn't work there, but y'know...)

    • HarHarVeryFunny a day ago

      Any sign of strength than can be bought (i.e. fake strength), probably already has been bought by Musk and/or others trying for influence the election. They say the sudden betting market swing for Trump from a few weeks ago comes from overseas money (4 people, maybe all the same), but I'd not be surprised if Musk were behind it given that he's out there trying to buy people's votes.

  • bojan 2 days ago

    He is, unfortunately, a clear favourite to win. You don't have to have uber-intel to know that.

    • maxerickson a day ago

      From my corner of rural Michigan, the relative sentiment shift appears to be massively in favor of Harris.

      I don't really trust my opinion, and I have a pretty limited perspective on what people in other areas think, but between 2020 and now, there is much increased support for Harris compared to Biden, and much more muted support for Trump 2024 compared to Trump 2020.

      With the polling mildly in favor of Harris in key states (but within the margin of error), I wonder how you've drawn your conclusion.

      • bojan a day ago

        By following polls, and the way they are trending. And the odds seem to be moving daily towards Trump, and while we're still in coin toss territory, if this trend continues for the next 10 days, it's really looking bad for Harris, despite the shift in your area.

        If I'm wrong, please let me know, as I'd really like to be proven wrong here.

        • maxerickson 20 hours ago

          Well, the election is the thing that is going to resolve the question.

          Polls don't really trend though, they tend to settle. Of course significant news can cause people to reevaluate things, but it's probably the case in this election that most people have already made a pretty conclusive decision.

    • w0m 2 days ago

      clear favorite or coin toss.

      • bojan a day ago

        Clear favourite. It might be a toin coss still at this moment, but the odds are getting ever-so-slightly worse for Kamala for many days in a row now. So it's about the trend.

        On top of that, the growth of the blue firewall in PA is losing steam too early...

        • eigart a day ago

          What data brings you to this conclusion? PA firewall is slowing, but it’s not terrible.

        • ajross a day ago

          Seems like in the language I speak "ever so slightly" and "clear" are in opposition. You can be a clear favorite or a slight favorite. Which is it?

          • bojan a day ago

            If the odds long enough ever so slightly move toward Trump, he is then in my eyes a clear favourite. It's been going on for three weeks now and we have 10 days to go still.

            I do hope I'm wrong, but purely looking at the numbers, I don't think I am.

objektif 2 days ago

Good because newspapers should not be endorsing candidates.

  • tasty_freeze a day ago

    It is one thing to be neutral when one candidate wants more military spending and a lower top income tax bracket and the other is in favor of higher taxes on top and more social spending.

    But in this case one candidate literally tried to subvert the last election. Even ignoring all his other issues, that one is enough to say we shouldn't vote for him.

  • stogot a day ago

    This is probably the most important topic here. It reveals their bias/partisonship and turns the whole newspaper into an opinion piece

    • favorited a day ago

      > turns the whole newspaper into an opinion piece

      The Editorial Board pens endorsements. It is literally an opinion piece, in the section of the paper reserved for opinion pieces.

    • sangnoir a day ago

      Consider the editorial board to be the equivalent of Fox's Opinion shows. They opinion side if the house is nominally independent from the News-gathering operations. If you're arguing purveyors of news should not carey opinion-pieces l, you may be a few centuries too late.

      • objektif a day ago

        Why do you think what Fox is doing is our standard? Why do we need Editorial Board’s biased opinion. Can we not have a truly unbiased journalism outlet?

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    Newspapers should do whatever they want. The 1st amendment is kind of a big deal.

throwaway5752 a day ago

I'm going to rewrite something verbatim the other candidate posted on his social media network:

CEASE & DESIST: I, together with many Attorneys and Legal Scholars, am watching the Sanctity of the 2024 Presidential Election very closely because I know, better than most, the rampant Cheating and Skullduggery that has taken place by the Democrats in the 2020 Presidential Election. It was a Disgrace to our Nation! Therefore, the 2024 Election, where Votes have just started being cast, will be under the closest professional scrutiny and, WHEN I WIN, those people that CHEATED will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the Law, which will include long term prison sentences so that this Depravity of Justice does not happen again. We cannot let our Country further devolve into a Third World Nation, AND WE WON’T! Please beware that this legal exposure extends to Lawyers, Political Operatives, Donors, Illegal Voters, & Corrupt Election Officials. Those involved in unscrupulous behavior will be sought out, caught, and prosecuted at levels, unfortunately, never seen before in our Country.

It is right here https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/1133692554916...

He's right there saying it. We're in a slow motion train wreck. Bezos is chickening out because of it.

You really might see the end of democracy in America within weeks. Trump is telling you he's going to end it. One of the richest men in the world is listening to him.

coding123 2 days ago

There is definitely a quiet support among the faang owners for Trump.

  • standardUser a day ago

    There's been so much focus on education as the new fault line in American politics. And though it is huge, and the less educated increasingly do support ultra-conservative policies, I think the even bigger fault line is across genders. And tech workers, though usually well educated, skew dramatically male and those degrees and salaries don't make them immune to the growing culture of male grievance and victimhood.

    • eapressoandcats a day ago

      The effect size is actually pretty similar from what I’ve seen. Both are huge. Tech workers are cross pressured in that they are mostly male and mostly college educated.

  • mmooss a day ago

    How quiet is it, if you and all of HN knows?

  • Molitor5901 2 days ago

    I think they, like even some on the left, have reasoned that Trump will only be there for four years. That's it. He's gone, or in jail. That's four years they know who their opponent will be and the Democratic Party can prepare. Thinking a long game, it is possible the left has given up and said fine, let's get it over with.

    • kccoder 2 days ago

      I haven't met a single person on the left with the mindset you described. I'm not saying they don't exist, I just can't imagine it represents more than a fraction of a percent of the left. It seems like more on the left believe that if Trump is elected, we are unlikely to see another fair election.

      • eigart a day ago

        FWIW I’m not American. I think it’s more likely than not that Trump is the end of liberal democracy. They had it planned out for Jan. 6. They know how to succeed next time, and they have an even firmer grip on SCOTUS.

        I used to fear for what this would mean for Europe (me), but I think it will be incompetence top to bottom. He had a decent crew last time around, but by the end it was Giuliani, MyPillow and the big dick toilets guy.

      • TMWNN 2 days ago

        >It seems like more on the left believe that if Trump is elected, we are unlikely to see another fair election.

        Don't listen to what they say, Look at what they do.

        Breaking Points back in July, while discussing the Trump-Biden debate <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cV8ULfwTneE> (which I highly recommend watching; it's the single best sum-up), pointed out two things for those who claim (to believe) the above:

        * If TrumpNaziKKK being reelected means "no more elections ever", shouldn't Democrats have originally chosen someone other than a living corpse as his opponent?

        * While discussing how the many plans among Democrats like Newsom, Whitmer, etc. (and their successors) for 2028 were disrupted/forced up by the potential to replace Biden (before Kamala's abrupt coronation), they again pointed out the paradox of on the one hand claiming that Trump will abolish elections, and on the other hand having plans for running to replacing Trump in 2028.

        Read this June New York Times interview of Whitmer. <https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/22/magazine/gretchen-whitmer...> Strange, how she doesn't say (despite being very specific about things like the plot against her) that "if Trump wins, there won't be elections in 2028 and all non-MAGAtards will be executed by Trumptroopers". You'd think that would be something of sufficient urgency to repeat at every public opportunity. Almost as if actual Democratic leaders don't really believe the rhetoric they have so successfully foisted upon their supporters, including 75% of Redditors.

        Another example: Post-Trump/Biden debate, Rep. Jared Golden (D-ME) explicitly denying that Trump's reelection will threaten American democracy <https://www.bangordailynews.com/2024/07/02/opinion/opinion-c...>.

        Yet another example: After discussing Golden's op-ed, Ezra Klein citing other Democrats who privately admit to him <https://x.com/Timodc/status/1811136469911711877> that a) they don't believe Trump is an "existential threat to democracy", and don't know why others say that, and b) that's why they aren't speaking out about Biden stepping down, because they believe the damage to their own careers from doing so is a greater threat than Trump winning

        Yet another example, perhaps the most prominent of all: Biden telling George Stephanopoulos that if he loses to Trump then, well, "I'll feel, as long as I gave it my all and I did as goodest as I know I can do, that's what this is about". If he was the only person who can save the country from Orange Hitler, would that really be the extent of Biden's reaction? Really?!?

        • KaiserPro a day ago

          mate, you're assuming that the democrats are well enough organised to actually think like that, let alone execute a plan so complicated.

          They clearly are a party divided by old timers, radicals and the rest. Biden has a retinue of close advisers who loose power when he looses office (either by mental ability or loosing) They have the influence to damage anyone taking a swipe at the "king". Obvious disloyalty is toxic in politics. (even more so in trump circles. even though hes not very loyal to you)

          Trying to pry a leader out of their seat, when there are no clear charismatic upstarts is fucking hard, even more so when your party is in paralysis because they are loosing in the polls.

          THe democrats bungled it. and you have Harris.

          Youre citing sources saying that the democrats will plan x,y & z, and they are keeping it a secret.

          They can't keep a secret. Look how much warning we had about Biden being yeeted. _months_ of low lying noises and grumbles.

          Where as you look at trump and he says: "I'm going to deport milions"

          and

          > “We have some very bad people. We have some sick people, radical left lunatics. And I think they’re the big — and it should be very easily handled by, if necessary, by National Guard, or if really necessary, by the military, because they can’t let that happen.”

          There isn't really an equivalent from the democrats, because they are disorganised and frankly useless.

          Trump has a chance to do this because he's surrounded by pricks who'll let that happen.

    • dralley a day ago

      If that's the case, "some on the left" are absolutely clueless. Watch Trump replace Thomas and Alito with 40 year old justices and lock in a conservative (or worse, MAGA, not that there has been a difference in practice lately) supreme court for the next 30 years.

    • nerdix 2 days ago

      They aren't playing 5D chess. They don't like the proposed Biden (and now Harris by extension) tax policy because it personally affects them.

      This is about billionaires wanting to avoid taxes.

    • taylodl 2 days ago

      Or maybe Big Tech has swung to the right since the Trump administration better aligns with their power lust

    • amadeuspagel a day ago

      Isn't it much better from a left-wing perspective to have Trump win the primary and lose the general until he dies? Because if he loses this time, that seems likely to happen.

    • coding123 2 days ago

      Zuck said Trump's fist in the air was the most badass thing he has ever seen. I don't think that sounds like what you are saying.

xkbarkar a day ago

Cannot in any way understand why this is an actual issue. Sheesh If more newspapers would stay out of endorsing political parties we would live in a better world.

Frankly leftist newspaper propaganda has done little but make the rightist ( especially the ones with a racist agenda ) political parties expand massively.

Every election i. almost any european country is showing this trend.

Why on earth are you all flaming this? Because it means its a hidden Trump support? Kamala is immensly unpopular, outside of all the glam endorsements. She is no Obama thats for sure. How abour adressing the root cause of that?

Wow I wish every newspaper was properly unbiased.

tldr I think you are all idiots for outrage over lack of proper political bias in a newspaper.

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    “Left wing publications caused right wing movements to be popular” is such a lazy trope and terrible “anti-anti-Trump” argument.

    Thinking that newspapers should stay out of publishing opinions about political parties is basically the most authoritarian position you can take.

bamboozled 2 days ago

Actively making the Democrats chance of winning less likely for your own personal interests is shortsighted.

Jeff still needs customers, he needs a sane society where his businesses can operate from ?

Sorry but the leader of the Republican Party is completely unhinged. Bezos might get away with a tax break or avoid some other legal scrutiny or even Trumps gestapo hit squad,but wow, you’re giving up a lot for a little.

Actions like this completely undermine one of the main reasons people believe Trump should be president. Which is that he is too rich to be bought. Well, look at the rich people being bought by their own greed and shortsightedness now.

  • 627467 a day ago

    > making Democrats chance of winning less likely

    Do you vote according to what others tell you to? Or do you believe most other people do so blindly? Dem voters will stay home because they didn't read a papers opinion? Or you believe that others can't tell the stance of a newspaper regarding a candidate from their reporting on them?

  • timeon a day ago

    > he needs a sane society where his businesses can operate from ?

    As someone from Eastern Europe I do not think that any oligarch really needs this.

htk a day ago

What a sad state of affairs where people want newspapers to actively push opinions, instead of only report facts.

  • swatcoder a day ago

    What an odd view of history to imagine that newspapers weren't always (and importantly) open about their editor's opinions.

    The idea of "objective journalism" is both ahistorical and unsound and mostly just acts as cover for claiming that certain journalism has subjectivity we're not allowed to call out.

    It's far better to know how the editors see the world than to falsely pretend that they don't.

  • HPsquared a day ago

    That's basically the entire history of publishing.

    • olyjohn a day ago

      What does that mean? That it's good, that it's bad? Should we just keep doing things because that's what we've always done?

  • ribosometronome a day ago

    What a sad state of affairs when people who consider themselves educated enough to opine about what newspapers should and should not do clearly has no historical understanding or basic familiarity with newspapers.

  • eapressoandcats a day ago

    Every choice of coverage is an opinion about what is important, and shapes the tone of coverage as surely as an editorial. This is actually a very common critique of the News Media, which loves to aggrandize itself by saying that it is neutral.

    At least editorials are honest about the views of the institution.

  • psyklic a day ago

    Facts still must be interpreted. It could be a fact that a credible source claimed X and a non-credible source claimed the opposite. A newspaper's job is to also provide this context, not merely the "facts" of what was stated.

    Similarly, an endorsement could in countless ways not simply be partisan. For example, based on what is most predicted to help the country with X/Y/Z.

  • elihu a day ago

    If this was a long-standing policy, or one at least announced well in advance of the election it wouldn't get much attention. That it's coming right before the election for transparently selfish reasons on the part of the paper's owner is not great.

  • mjfl a day ago

    For the past 100 years, literally since WWI, all media organizations have been used to constantly launder opinions into the brains of the American people, disguised as 'fact'.

  • moomin a day ago

    If the Washington Post only reported facts, it would be the most left wing newspaper in the US by a country mile.

  • felixgallo a day ago

    Wait until they tell this guy about Fox News.

morkalork a day ago

[flagged]

  • dang a day ago

    Your comment broke several of the site guidelines, by (1) posting in the flamewar style, including nationalistic flamebait, (2) being snarky, (3) doing political battle, and (4) commenting about getting downvoted. Would you mind reviewing https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and sticking to the rules? We'd appreciate it because we're trying to avoid hell here.

    • adamc a day ago

      This is a story that is going to lead to political passions. Don't want such stories? Just kill them. What kind of useful conversation do you think it will raise that will not ignite passions?

      Sometimes your guidelines are stupid.

      • dang a day ago

        It's good for HN commenters to learn to tolerate the passions without venting them unfiltered.

    • morkalork a day ago

      https://www.npr.org/2024/10/22/nx-s1-5161480/trump-media-thr...

      "More specifically, Trump has pledged to toss reporters in jail and strip major television networks of their broadcast licenses as retribution for coverage he didn't like."

      But hey, I'm doing political battle? You guys really are in denial.

      • dang a day ago

        Yes he says bad things and yes your comment broke several HN guidelines.

  • edmundsauto a day ago

    One candidate has proposed a day of violence and given indications they consider “anyone who disagrees with me” as an “enemy within”. I don’t think they have talked about televised tribunals, and they also have a … tenuous … relationship with the truth or following through on promises (even when baselines against normal “politician lie rate”)

    • jimbiliy325 a day ago

      yeah, and kamala just flat out isn't taking any non-scripted interviews - how are we supposed to know what she's really thinking at all?

      • edmundsauto a day ago

        Do you not think that people communicate their intention in a scripted situation?

        I, personally, script meetings because I don’t communicate effectively when put on the spot. To me, “unscripted” interviews feel like gotcha journalism - why not let someone take their time to describe their thought process?

        POTUS is not in a tactical fighter jet dogfight where low latency is massively important. What matters is thinking things through, to consider second order effects.

        Instinctual reactions are great for sports but I have no idea why they’d be important for politics, outside of optics. Type II systems, not type I.

    • mjfl a day ago

      the genocide doesn't give you any form of perspective?

      • what a day ago

        What genocide?

        • mjfl a day ago

          The genocide in Gaza?

          • morkalork 12 hours ago

            How do you think that's going to go with Trump in charge again?

            • mjfl 8 hours ago

              That's not an answer to my question.

      • edmundsauto a day ago

        I honestly have no idea what you are insinuating. Can you be more specific and less clever?

  • throwaway19972 a day ago

    To be clear, the camps never went away, and we’ve been mass deporting for decades now. Support of ICE is a bipartisan effort. Iirc the only change Biden made was to end the policy of family separations. The rhetoric is massively different, but the actual policy is not.

    I really wouldn’t hold my breath for a president that doesn’t fearmonger about immigration in the forseeable future.

  • astro125labin a day ago

    Yeah, it's really scary right now. Trump with power is not going to end well for anyone, especially trans minorities

  • jimbiliy325 a day ago

    it is, kamala is super scary right now. her hate of the palestinian people immediately lost my vote but it's so infuriating to see so many other supposed "democrats" refuse to support them

  • mjfl a day ago

    the genocide doesn't give you some form of perspective?

mensetmanusman a day ago

[flagged]

  • thimabi a day ago

    HN is not a living organism, it’s an abstract entity formed by the people who engage in the site. As it happens within any community, there’s no such thing as consistency. In fact, so diverse is this community that I’d wager that luck and chance explain much of what gains traction or gets flagged here.

    • 0xpgm a day ago

      Majority of HNers are obviously left-leaning, and left-leaning political views always get much more support than right-leaning political views.

      HN not abstract entity, it is full of living organisms with biases and majority view carries the day.

BurningFrog 2 days ago

[flagged]

  • kccoder 2 days ago

    Even if one is Bozo and the other is Pennywise?

seper8 a day ago

[flagged]

wormlord 2 days ago

This is probably an unpopular opinion on HN. But if billionaires have a choice between ending democracy and ending capitalism, which do you expect they will pick?

EDIT: I am not saying Kamala is going to "end capitalism" however Lina Khan's actions as chairwoman of the FTC and Joe Biden's historic support for unions, as small as both of these things are, are enough to make liberal billionaires vote for a fascist. That is my point.

  • ausbah 2 days ago

    don’t ask german companies what they were doing during 1933-1945

    • tdba a day ago

      They were under the thumb of the regime. They produced whatever the government told them to produce. They had a predetermined profit margin that the government dictated to them. German capitalists certainly fared relatively well, but their influence and prestige was greatly reduced compared to the past. Nonetheless they took that deal because the alternative was literally communism.

  • hnlmorg 2 days ago

    Democracy is largely driven by preferences of the super rich. So your statement is a little like choosing between the church* and the pope.

    * I’m aware not all Christian religions are governed by the pope. But I hope you still get the symbolism I’m making.

  • bojan 2 days ago

    Not all billionaires - Bill Gates endorsed Harris.

  • adamc a day ago

    Mostly I agree. Billionaires chose long ago to prioritize wealth.

  • olliej 2 days ago

    Which party is ending capitalism? I'm curious, because there's one party saying explicitly that they intend to end the democratic process, one party explicitly stating the goal is the end of the rule of law, and one party saying they want to deploy the military against the supporters of the other political party.

    You could make the argument that those positions are fundamentally opposed to capitalism as well, but that's not as explicit.

    Regardless, only one party is threatening either of your alternatives, your straw man nonsense about ending capitalism not withstanding.

    • wormlord 2 days ago

      Please read my edited comment for clarity.

    • bigstrat2003 a day ago

      > Regardless, only one party is threatening either of your alternatives, your straw man nonsense about ending capitalism not withstanding.

      Nobody is threatening either of those things. The idea that democracy is under any sort of threat is a pure lie told to you by those who benefit from keeping you scared.

  • ribosometronome a day ago

    Which is why we need to legislate away the billionaire.

  • pyuser583 2 days ago

    Capitalism. They own companies that are established. It’s in their interest to prevent competition.

    Almost all established companies eventually support rules that enshrine themselves as monopolies in exchange to much tougher regulation.

    Tariffs force governments to pick and choose industries to receive state protection. As do subsidies.

    Even creating tons of paperwork for startups helps a lot.

    Plenty of democracies function this way. Italy and Belgium come to mind.

    • wormlord 2 days ago

      The means of production are still privately owned. What you described is not Capitalism by strict definition, but the owners of capital are still at the top of the food chain in such a system. It's not like lack of competition somehow precludes private ownership.

  • vermilingua 2 days ago

    Do you really think Harris and co are able or willing to end capitalism? They have nearly as much to lose as the billionaires.

    • wormlord 2 days ago

      Of course not. However they are like 5% more willing to pursue anti-trust action and enforce regulations. Even a small threat like that will be resisted by the ultra wealthy.

      • bamboozled 2 days ago

        So there isn’t democracy as we thought there was anymore…it’s really becoming an oligarchy.

        Look at musk jumping around on stage and handing out money for votes.

        It’s really disturbing.

      • csallen 2 days ago

        Agreed, but that's just them voting for their interests, not voting to end democracy.

        • wormlord 2 days ago

          The destruction of democracy is a convenient byproduct of their consolidation of power. Fascism in germany was convenient for the wealthy-- even if they weren't the architects of it.

          • csallen 16 hours ago

            The idea that the rich in America, as a class, want the destruction of democracy, is laughable. Few people want to overturn a system that's making them millions.

          • bamboozled 2 days ago

            In the long term was it a good thing for the wealthy though ?

      • olliej 2 days ago

        You understand that anti-trust and regulations exist to support capitalism right? You understand that that is why those things exist right?

        Because absent those comments you don't get capitalism, because absent those things you don't have a free market

        • wormlord 2 days ago

          If you think a free market is a requirement for capitalism then by definition sure. If you think it is about the distribution of ownership over capital then the free market doesn't matter. Many political scientists refer to the economic model of the USSR as "State Capitalism" because the state owns the means of production.

          Would you rather I use a word like "Cronyism" to specify private ownership of capital without free-market competition?

          • olliej a day ago

            Yeah, that's reasonable lets go for that, so given statements to the effect of

            A) Ending democracy

            vs

            B) Ending cronyism

            Regardless of how effective you may think they would be at that goal, would you pick (A) over (B)?

  • johnea 2 days ago

    [flagged]

    • Sabinus 2 days ago

      >Shut uo and vote for me, or you get the cheatoo...

      That's not the DNC platform, that's the reality of US elections. First past the post in a race against a proto-fascist.

    • wormlord 2 days ago

      I edited my comment for clarity

Devasta 2 days ago

A cowards way of endorsing Trump, to be honest.

  • coldpie 2 days ago

    Regardless of its impact on the election, this decision ends the Washington Post a serious news organization. Prior to this, you could reasonably trust it as a decent source, if questionable on tech & Amazon stories due to the ownership bias. After this, it's clear that Bezos purchased it with intent to push his own views. It's no longer a reliable source for news, it's just a mouthpiece for Amazon & Bezos's other companies.

    Sad to see an important newspaper die in this way. I hope the people that do good work there are able to find new employment.

    • briandear 2 days ago

      The Washington Post long ago lost all credibility. Steele Dossier anyone? Russia collusion?

  • belter 2 days ago

    At this point it's just tax optimization...

    • dr_ 2 days ago

      or perhaps because Blue Origin hopes to do business with the Government? Just a thought. A non issue for the NYTimes but for the owners of WaPo and LA Times…

jgalt212 a day ago

> Scientific American makes second-ever endorsement, backs Kamala Harris. This is only the second time in the magazine's 179-year history that it has made an endorsement in a presidential race

The first time they ever made an endorsement was (wait for it) 2020! Everything has become political these days.

https://www.axios.com/2024/09/16/scientific-american-kamala-...

nextworddev a day ago

He knows something

  • futureshock a day ago

    Yes we can infer. His political leanings are fairly Democrat. His media puppet is very left leaning. He didn’t announce this policy years ago when it would have been a nothing burger, instead just a couple weeks before the election as a splashy egg on face moment.

    I can smell fish. His best information is that he was backing the wrong horse and now he is scrambling to contain the damage. Because it’s also quite a slap to the Harris campaign, he must not think much of their chances or sees a very, very asymmetrical risk profile here. Snub versus scorched earth.

    We are going to be in for a very interesting four years.

  • KaiserPro a day ago

    I mean not really

    Its just a hedge.

    If HArris wins, she's unlikley to actually take petty revenge. If trump wins, he has past form.

  • fullshark a day ago

    He knows Trump will hold it against him, and his probability of becoming president is nonzero.

    • foobarian a day ago

      Yes but if I was a richer than God billionaire what would I care that POTUS had a grudge. What's he gonna do, audit my taxes? There is something fishy going on.

      • papercrane a day ago

        He'd care about getting government contracts. For example, during the Trump administration the Pentagon chose Microsoft over AWS for JEDI. AWS claimed there was political interference that favoured MS.

        Obviously Bezos will be rich with or without these contracts, but he'd prefer to be richer.

    • jeffbee a day ago

      More importantly, he knows that Harris administration will not seek retribution. So he sees nothing to lose here.

  • malermeister a day ago

    He knows that one of the key pillars of fascism is the strengthening of corporate power.

    Billionaires are not your friends.

okr a day ago

I think the endorsement was just bad journalism or bad writing and Bezos just did not want to risk it. If such an endorsement would come out in such a divided climate, then i would want it to be excellent. Maybe it was just partisan.

Who knows.

  • laidoffamazon a day ago

    They endorsed in 2020 and 2016 and 2012 and 2008 and if they were so serious about adopting national neutrality they should have announced this in January instead of spiking an existing endorsement

    • JKCalhoun a day ago

      Honestly too, this seems like the wrong point in history to sit out an election.

    • okr a day ago

      But this is past. Each time had its own challenges. For example, i learned so much about how media and partisanship works in the past years. It is so obvious and visible to me now. Maybe others feel the same and thats why an endorsement would feel disingenuous. It has to be reasonable and believable. But maybe it was not.

kyleblarson 17 hours ago

The irony I see is that all of the "reporters" who resign(ed) will soon be pitching their Substacks on Twitter.

m101 a day ago

So why is it that this is about money and Amazon contracts? Why isn't it about Kamala just being so bad, in Bezos's eyes, that she doesn't deserve an endorsement. I think that's way more likely.

I am not surprised however that the liberal media will look for any problem over admitting it's their own candidate that's the problem.

Bezos owns 9% of Amazon. His personal share of any 10bn contract might be a few hundred million over many years. He doesn't care!

  • edanm a day ago

    > Bezos owns 9% of Amazon. His personal share of any 10bn contract might be a few hundred million over many years. He doesn't care!

    The rest of your comment aside, I think this sentence proves too much. You can use it to prove that Bezos doesn't care about almost anything in Amazon, or that most billionaires don't care much about what happens in their companies, because it only impacts a small part of their already vast fortune.

    It's pretty clear that this is not true for many billionaires.

    • m101 18 hours ago

      My point was that the media is looking for whatever reason it can make up which correlates, rather than asking whether the problem lies with their own "team". It doesn't care about the legitimacy of the reason.

  • latexr a day ago

    > Why isn't it about Kamala just being so bad, in Bezos's eyes, that she doesn't deserve an endorsement.

    Bad for whom? Bezos is a multibillionaire, his problems are not our problems. It’s detached from reality to think a guy that made his fortune exploiting workers and other businesses in any way understands or cares for society’s struggles.

    • m101 18 hours ago

      I fundamentally disagree with your comment on "exploiting workers." That's what Marx thought, and it's precisely where he went wrong.