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ShowMarch 26, 2025
Watch: Jeffrey Goldberg... What a Piece of Sh!t
This morning, The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg released more texts. And, unsurprisingly, Goldberg is an a-hole.
According to CBS:
The Atlantic on Wednesday posted screenshots and a fuller text chain from the Signal group chat that inadvertently included a journalist, after the White House and top administration officials on the chat claimed no "war plans" were discussed.
The screenshots show the timing and targets of the attack on Houthis in Yemen earlier this month were shared by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and discussed in the chat. The White House has stated — and Cabinet officials testified Tuesday — the information in the group chat wasn't classified, even though Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg received tactical details before the attack.
“The problem is the lie, saying there is nothing classified in there, and you give the left ammo,” Crowder said. “Don’t give them an easy win.”
At 11:44 a.m. ET on Saturday, March 15, Hegseth posted in the chat, in all caps, according to screenshots provided by The Atlantic: "TEAM UPDATE: TIME NOW (1144et): Weather is FAVORABLE. Just CONFIRMED w/CENTCOM we are a GO for mission launch." The ensuing message included the timing of the expected strikes and what type of weapons would be used.
"This Signal message shows that the U.S. secretary of defense texted a group that included a phone number unknown to him—Goldberg's cellphone—at 11:44 a.m.," Goldberg and Shane Harris wrote in The Atlantic. "This was 31 minutes before the first U.S. warplanes launched, and two hours and one minute before the beginning of a period in which a primary target, the Houthi 'Target Terrorist,' was expected to be killed by these American aircraft."
According to Steven Cheung, Assistant Director of Communications, “The Atlantic beclowns itself as they concede— by releasing this— that no ‘war planning’ was going on as they had falsely alleged.”
According to Politico:
Trump was mad — and suspicious — that Waltz had Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg’s number saved in his phone in the first place, according to three people familiar with the situation, who were granted anonymity to discuss private conversations. A fourth person said the president was also particularly perturbed by the embarrassing nature of the episode.
"I would be, too. If there was an adversarial journalist, who I knew was out to get me, I would probably be suspicious," Crowder said. “President Trump has every right to be mad.”
Trump was mad — and suspicious — that Waltz had Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg’s number saved in his phone in the first place, according to three people familiar with the situation, who were granted anonymity to discuss private conversations.
“This journalist was not doing anything in the best interest of the country. He was not fighting corruption, he was just revealing private information. This is entirely self-promotion; it benefits no one," Crowder said.
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