In a major scandal for the Trump administration, National Security Advisor Mike Waltz mistakenly added Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, to a Signal group chat with JD Vance, Pete Hegseth, Tulsi Gabbard, and more top officials. In the chat, they were openly discussing US plans to bomb Yemen.
Goldberg watched as they privately laid out their plans to bomb a civilian apartment building. Then he watched on the news that the bombs dropped. And published screenshots of the group chat.
[In an act of terrorism, the United States bombed a civilian apartment building in Yemen and killed dozens of people.]
The scandal here, according to US corporate media, is that Trump officials were careless with national security and let slip their plans for the bombing. In the good old days of Obama and Bush, presidents were presidential. They had decorum when committing terror. Trump did not. For that (and only that!) he should be punished!
In this week’s Thursday Throwdown, Katie and Aaron deep dive on SignalGate, watching the pathetic excuses given by Waltz and co, and laugh at the ridiculous embarrassment for the Trump team.
But we also turn our eyes to Jeffrey Goldberg, who had the chance to publish these screenshots before the act of terror was committed. He could have potentially stopped the attack. Why didn’t he? Well, would you be surprised if we told you that our heroic editor of the Atlantic is also a former IDF prison guard?
It’s a perfect example of the state of corporate media when we have journalists who cheer on bombs but criticize the leakers. Subscribe to watch our full takedown of everyone involved.
Plus, this week Aaron debated Matthew Stadlen on the Ukraine proxy war. When Stadlen began the debate by trying a gotcha to try to pin Aaron as a Russian agent, another takedown occurred. We watch the whole glorious thing.
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