08 February, 2017
Members of the Bowling Green community gathered downtown and stood together in the cold Friday night, lighting candles and holding signs to commemorate a tragedy that never happened: "the Bowling Green massacre".
It would be a positive development if Ms. Conway embraced the idea that the term "honest mistakes" can apply to reporters, too, as it would be if everybody - including journalists - doubly committed to getting the facts right, without hysteria or misfires. "On the flimsy excuse that there was no "Bowling Green Massacre"".
"Are they more important than the many things that he says that are true that are making a difference in people's lives?" "And to say we're not reporting something that happens not to be true, therefore we're not to be trusted ― that's a problem". Conway attempted to pivot, but Tapper pulled her back to address his questions about the administration's attacks on the press and the president's habit of saying false things.
"They have their reasons", Trump added.
"I could do no live Sunday shows this week BC of family", she said in a tweet.
The Times also notes that media critics are calling on news networks to keep Conway off of their shows due to her repeated "alternative facts".
Cosmopolitan did not publish the quoted in its original stories based on the interview with Conway, but chose to publish the quotes in light of Conway's appearance on MSNBC.
"Regardless of her words, our visa and refugee systems are severely broken, and the situation regarding the Bowling Green terrorists demonstrates that point", Paul spokesman Kelsey Cooper said. In one case there was a terror case the press did not talk about.
"The president is accusing the media of refusing to cover terrorist attacks. Why?"
Pence was set to appear on four major news networks but not CNN. Think about it, if America isn't going to be attacked, who's most likely not to do it? Us. Why are these vanity news outlets suddenly becoming more credible and better at their jobs than outlets like MSNBC?
While speaking with the website, Conway, 50 - who served as President Donald Trump's campaign manager and is now counselor to the 70-year-old business mogul - referred to the purported terrorist attack days before her unsubstantiated claims to MSNBC went viral.
"This is a pattern of behavior", communications strategist and former "Apprentice" contestant Tara Dowdell said on CNN's "Reliable Sources" on Sunday.