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An unreasonable movement, it turns out, cannot easily be reasoned with.” (On the subject of that Trump-Fox interview before ...
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Scripps News on MSNWhy does the Epstein debate continue to churn? A conspiracy theory expert weighs inThe debate over a federal investigation into the late, disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein continues to stir. But why? A journalist and conspiracy theory expert joined Scripps News to explain.
Whether his ties to Epstein — which, according to those two researchers, continued well past the 2018 Miami Herald exposé and included a visit in prison during his 2008 conviction — lead to a ...
The revelation that MIT’s Media Lab aggressively sought the financial support of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, and tried to keep his donations secret, has left the once-prestigious ...
What does Donald Trump have to prove to win his WSJ lawsuit over ‘fake’ Epstein card? - Here’s what President Donald Trump would have to prove to win his $10 billion defamation lawsuit against The ...
The Media Lab rejected a $25,000 Epstein donation in 2019. In February 2019, after the Miami Herald investigation of Epstein had revived interest in his case, ...
The development has spurred larger debate about how charities, foundations, and other powerful institutions should handle donors. Jim Braude was joined by Tina Opie, an associate professor at Babson ...
Elon Musk stirs the pot on social media, demanding the reveal of Epstein-Maxwell's concealed client list. The Tesla CEO's call for transparency reignites scrutiny of high-profile criminal cases ...
The fallout over Epstein's funding is only the latest in a long list of similar disputes. In 2017, the University of Southern California rejected a $5 million donation from Harvey Weinstein after ...
Professor Jonathan Haidt of NYU and Reason's Robby Soave debate the harms of social media and what the government should do about it. Gene Epstein and Robby Soave | 2.24.2022 11:20 AM ...
This article is part of Media Bubbles, a regular feature that looks at how different news and opinion outlets — large, small and often partisan — are covering the 2024 presidential election.
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