October 11, 20172 min read, 459 words
Published: October 11, 2017 | 2 min read, 459 words
Joey Garrison and Dave BoucherThe TennesseanNASHVILLE — Republican U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn's online video announcing her campaign for U.S. Senate has been blocked in any Twitter advertisements after the social media company objected to a line that Blackburn's ca...
CRITIC REVIEWS
There don't seem to be any reviews yet.
PUBLIC REVIEWS
Credible
October 12, 2017
This is a neutral review of Twitter's actions to remove Blackburn's video. The citations are all other USA today articles, but all the topics (such as the planned parenthood baby body parts scandal) are widely discussed in other news sources as well.
October 12, 2017
Credible
October 11, 2017
An impartial, balanced report on Marsha Blackburn's Senate advertisement and Twitter's refusal to allow it because of her claims that she stopped the "sale of baby body parts."
October 11, 2017
Credible
October 19, 2017
USA Today does a pretty good job of giving more information on Marsha Blackburn's statement and the party line's responses to her statement. I'd say this article is neutral because it gives both the Republican and Democratic responses but would've liked to see the original video to help discern for myself how bad it was. Overall, I found this article trustworthy.
October 19, 2017
Credible
October 19, 2017
Without detectable bias, authors Joey Garrison and Dave Boucher, provide some context to the inflammatory line given by Marsha Blackburn during her ad. They also cover Twitter's policy on the ad but also how she is still able to post it on her own campaign feed.
October 19, 2017