(Hot Air)—The New York Times ran a photo on its front page that was a visual lie.
The point of that lie was to back the claims made in their article that Israel was intentionally starving Gazan children, but apparently, there were no photos available that would back the claims made in their story.
No doubt they believed the story that their reporters were feeding them, not that any reporter who was not a Hamas toady would dare set foot in Gaza–but in the circular logic of the Times they assumed that nothing printed in their paper could be false.
full post: the sky isn’t falling, the narrative is https://t.co/z7OzP4PB8b
— Seth Mandel (@SethAMandel) August 4, 2025
We know that they knew the photo was false because there are internal Times emails that show they did. In fact, the editors had rejected a different photo because they knew that printing a photo of a child suffering from a genetic disease did not back their story, and demanded it be replaced.
The replacement, though, was of a child with a genetic disease as well.
- Read More: hotair.com

