Good morning and welcome to The Movementâwhere weâre biased towards the truth. In todayâs newsletter:
The VA secretary folds when trolls take aim on X
Stories the algorithms may be keeping out of your feed
Some good news about journalism that should make you feel proud
âąď¸ Estimated read time: 4 minutes, 30 seconds.
Conservative trolls force VA to back down on ban of this problematic photo

An hour and a half. Thatâs how long it took for the Secretary of Veteransâ Affairs to cave to conservative trolls on X who called out a departmental policy that forbade the display of a problematic though iconic photoâthat shows a totally non-consensual kiss.
The backstory: On February 29, an assistant undersecretary sent out a memo asking that the famous photo showing a U.S. sailor forcefully kissing a woman in Times Square on the day World War II ended be removed from public view. The photo is problematic, to say the least: the woman being âkissed,â Greta Friedman, said she didnât know the sailor who kissed her, and that the kiss was forced. Speaking in 2005, Friedman told the Library of Congress, âIt wasnât my choice to be kissed. The guy just came over and kissed or grabbed.âÂ
The memo asked the photo be removed from public display in an effort to maintain âa safe, respectful, and trauma-informed environment,â going on to say the photo is âinconsistent with the VAâs no-tolerance policy towards sexual harassment and assault.â
Then, yesterday, at 8:30 a.m. ET, a fascist-leaning troll account on Twitter with 2.3 million followers posted a copy of the memo. Faster than you can say âspineless liberal,â the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Denis McDonough, tweeted that the problematic image was in fact not banned, and would remain in VA facilities. Two unnamed sources did further damage control, telling the AP that McDonough never approved the memo and rescinded it once informed that it had been sent out. Even the White House tried to distance itself from the fallout.
But but but: Critics say that despite the photoâs popularity, displayingâand even celebratingâan image that shows sexual harassment by a male in authority over an unsuspecting woman sends a negative message about what is allowed and considered acceptable in our society. At the very least, the VA could have used the opportunity to explain why the photo is controversial, rather than rolling over so quickly to conservative hate accounts.
đď¸ Making news right nowâŚ
Here are the top stories making news this morning.
Nikki Haley will end her campaign: After winning just one state in yesterdayâs Super Tuesday elections, Haley says she will suspend her campaign.
âUncommittedâ strikes again: Also in yesterdayâs election, 20% of voters in Minnesotaâs Democratic primary voted âuncommittedâ to send a message to Biden about his support of Israelâs genocide in Gaza.
Farewell, douchebag: âCorrupt egomaniacâ Kyrsten Sinema says sheâs leaving the U.S. Senate, leading many progressives to rejoice.
A teamâand nowâa union: The menâs basketball team at Dartmouth University voted 13 to 2 in favor of joining a union, a first in the fight for athletes to get their fair share in the billion-dollar industry of collegiate sports.
âĄď¸ Question of the Day
We want to know: What do you think of that iconicâyet problematicâphoto? Vote below and tell us why in the comments!
POLL: Should that World War II kiss photo be displayed by the government?
Yesterdayâs results: Yesterday we asked: Do you trust the media? You votedâŚ

Oljgrandma voted no and said: âThe Media has it's own agenda and very often are lying.â
JCFwind also voted no: âFollow the Money: They are distorted by corporations with concern for only their profit and loss.â
While Dick said yes: âThe media is not the root problem for me, the problem is more about what we consumers do with the information we take in. We all need to be more analytical of the message and the source of the message.â Yes indeed.
đ Stories kept out of your feedâŚ
Here are some stories the algorithms may be keeping out of your feed.
On politics, outside of Super TuesdayâŚ
The frightening way the Supreme Court could swing the election for Trump.
Dream candidate Michelle Obama responds to renewed rumors that she might run for president. đ
On GazaâŚ
When you thought it couldnât get worse: A new U.N. report says Palestinians have been âbeaten and sexually assaultedâ at Israeli detention centers.
Three days of negotiations between Israel and Hamas have failed to achieve a breakthrough on a peace deal, less than a week before the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the informal deadline for a deal.
Trump finally weighs in on Gaza, makes predictably horrible remark.
The Washington Postâs resident flamethrower Karen Attiah argues why Black women should not be the face of Americaâs ugly Gaza policy. â#RepresentationMatters only goes so far.â
On corporate greedâŚ
President Biden is launching a task force to crack down on âunfair and illegal pricingâ amid rising inflation.
Meanwhile: Credit card companies are threatening the amount of credit theyâll extend to consumers if Biden limits all late fees to $10.
Speaking of fees, Delta just became the third major U.S. carrier to hike this annoying fee over the past several weeks.
On climate changeâŚ
Scientists decide they won't classify Anthropocene as 'epoch' yet, but (of course) say human impact is undeniable.
Meanwhile: Ice-free summers in the Arctic are now possible within next decadeâand thatâs very bad news for animals.
đ° Good News: The oldest Black college newspaper hits historic milestone

Jasper Smith on the right. Congrats! (via WAMU)
Its journalists have covered Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., civil rights protests, and protests against apartheid. Its alumni have gone on to win Pulitzers. And now, the nationâs oldest Black college newspaper has hit another milestone: Howard Universityâs The Hilltop just turned 100 years old.
âThis is so important to the Black press as a whole,â the paperâs current editor in chief, senior Jasper Smith, recently told the public media station WAMU. Noting the systematic underfunding of HBCUâs, Smith pointed out the unlikeliness of this milestone, and what that means for student journalists yet to come.
Students got to celebrate last month at a gala at the National Press Club, and Smith says theyâre devoted to carrying on the great legacy of this student publication. âI feel so inspired and it inspires our current staff to think of the legacy that weâve inherited and what that means every time we pick up a pen and paper.â
Today, we salute the student journalists, past, present, and future of The Hilltop. đž
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