You’ll remember that one of the key players in all this was Tony Bobulinski, a former business associate of Hunters.
Well, you might not if you’ve only read @CNN. As of last night, they’d never mentioned him. But their homepage featured Hunter and China.
Funny, that. pic.twitter.com/7QHpLxS1Xu
— Drew Holden (@DrewHolden360) December 11, 2020
And surely you’ll remember that @CNN had former DNI James Clapper on the program to say that the Post’s reporting – that blew the lid off of the Biden family corruption in the first place – was “classic textbook Soviet Russian tradecraft” back in October. pic.twitter.com/Mw9bInuls1
— Drew Holden (@DrewHolden360) December 11, 2020
The richest may be @NPR. Back in October they didn’t say a peep about Hunter because – I kid you not – they “don’t want to waste our time on stories that are not really stories.”
Apparently, now it’s a story. pic.twitter.com/F38qKe5Gcv
— Drew Holden (@DrewHolden360) December 11, 2020
@politico put out a piece back in October about how 50 “former senior intel officers” said it might be Russian disinfo, despite the entire American intel apparatus saying that was bunk.
Today they used the same picture of Hunter to report about…Hunter’s corruption. pic.twitter.com/AHYyZGEqQq
— Drew Holden (@DrewHolden360) December 11, 2020
One of the most egregious displays was @CBSNews, who got upset with one of their reporters for daring to ask about Hunter Biden in October (h/t @CarmineSabia) but, all of a sudden, see it as a valuable story a couple of months later. pic.twitter.com/QWk0GMMNJg
— Drew Holden (@DrewHolden360) December 11, 2020
Mr. Holden goes on exposing the bias, hypocrisy, double standards, unprofessionalism, fabrication, lying, and censorship practiced by the intrepid “journalists” at big media and the faceless, snowflake censors at big tech.
Media and big tech are a disgusting disgrace. People that work there are incapable of shame.
If you get your news and information from these sources you are not informed. You are misinformed. It is your own fault.

