It's the media's fault. If there's any real investigative journalists out there, any real media truth seekers who don't have corporate or political agenda's...they could straighten all this shit out...like yesterday...but they won't, because profit and agenda come before actual news.
They could easily show what a fucking idiot Rand Paul was/is for making the remarks he did, just fuckin eat him alive...but they don't. They could show how completely fucking plausible Christies involvement is...but again....eehhh. Hell, most likely they'll just act as his protector. He's the only viable competition to HRC should she decide to make a Pres Run. Short of him sitting on top of a building somewhere, doing meth and fucking sniping people, I doubt he's gonna get his balls busted journalistically...I mean not really.
It's so sad watching our media and journalism just slowly die. Shit on for profit.
Bingo.. they have a choice.. the minor ratings now.. because already ppl are like "oh who cares, it was a little traffic" not realizing that it was more than a 'little traffic'.. it was the closing of the busiest bridge in the county on some of the most busiest travel days of the year and it was done as a simple dick-move..
or does the profit-driven media just burp this story in the 3rd segment of their show and pocket the rest until the just before the final Presidential Debate between HRC and Christie in 2016 ..
hmmmmmmmmm which brings in more money I wonder...
4 in the.....
" In the infancy of mass communications, the Columbus and Magellan of broadcast journalism, William Paley and David Sarnoff, went down to Washington to cut a deal with Congress. Congress would allow the fledgling networks free use of taxpayer-owned airwaves in exchange for one public service. That public service would be one hour of air time set aside every night for informational broadcasting, or what we now call the evening news. Congress, unable to anticipate the enormous capacity television would have to deliver consumers to advertisers, failed to include in its deal the one requirement that would have changed our national discourse immeasurably for the better. Congress forgot to add that under no circumstances could there be paid advertising during informational broadcasting. They forgot to say that taxpayers will give you the airwaves for free and for 23 hours a day you should make a profit, but for one hour a night you work for us. And now those network newscasts, anchored through history by honest-to-God newsmen with names like Murrow and Reasoner and Huntley and Brinkley and Buckley and Cronkite and Rather and Russert - Now they have to compete with the likes of me. A cable anchor who's in the exact same business as the producers of Jersey Shore. And that business was good to us"...Will McAvoy,Newsroom