Time to play the victim card.
The New York Times journalist who was humiliated for erroneously claiming Mike Bloomberg’s $500 million ad buy could have been used to give every American $1 million dollars has re-emerged to complain that her embarrassment was the fault of a “racist Twitter mob.”
Mara Gay responded to Bloomberg dropping out of the presidential race last week by claiming that the money he spent on campaign commercials could have made every American a millionaire with lots of spare change.
“Actually with the money he spent he could have given every American a million dollars,” Gay told MSNBC’s Brian Williams, who immediately agreed.
This clip is just incredible. When he said “if you’re ahead of us on the math,” I thought he was about to correct the terrible math, but NO. pic.twitter.com/kAH3GDuPNl— Jessica Fletcher (@heckyessica) March 6, 2020
With math obviously not being Gay’s strong point, it was immediately pointed out that Bloomberg’s $500 billion doled out to all 327 million Americans would mean they get just $1.53 each.
After being left red-faced, Gay re-emerged today with a New York Times opinion piece whining about racism.
“A racist Twitter mob came for me over a trivial math mistake. I’m not going anywhere,” she tweeted.
A racist Twitter mob came for me over a trivial math mistake. I'm not going anywhere.
In the article, Gay complains about receiving a “deluge of hate.”
“Unfortunately, quite a few Americans can tell you what it’s like to be the target of a Twitter mob over a gaffe,” she writes. “My great sin was trivial, harmless, silly. What’s it like when people are trying to cancel you for...
After being left red-faced, Gay re-emerged today with a New York Times opinion piece whining about racism.
“A racist Twitter mob came for me over a trivial math mistake. I’m not going anywhere,” she tweeted.
A racist Twitter mob came for me over a trivial math mistake. I'm not going anywhere.
In the article, Gay complains about receiving a “deluge of hate.”
“Unfortunately, quite a few Americans can tell you what it’s like to be the target of a Twitter mob over a gaffe,” she writes. “My great sin was trivial, harmless, silly. What’s it like when people are trying to cancel you for...