Dictators love to revise history.
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Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
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Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
@randahl Is this video archived on the Web Archive (Way back Machine)? It can archive YouTube videos as well.
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@randahl Is this video archived on the Web Archive (Way back Machine)? It can archive YouTube videos as well.
@tapafon if you mean archive.org, I checked, but it does not seam to handle the dynamic UI of YouTube very well.
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Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
@randahl Since when does this fascist care whether anything is legal?
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Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
@randahl
Consider following picture. I did not even have to use AI to get it! -
Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
-
Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
-
Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
Since when did 47 and crew worry about legal? We're lucky there were enough cooler heads around 45 to inhibit him some.
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Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
@randahl. Have you tried the wayback machine?
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Dictators love to revise history. In my research for the next video, I was looking for The White House press briefing of January 22, 2017, because in it The White House made a false statement.
The video has been deleted.
Picture 1 shows a screenshot of the video, where Sean Spicer wore a light grey suit. This screenshot is from CNN where a clip from the video was used.
Picture 2 shows this video no longer exists among the oldest of the archived White House videos.
Is this even legal?
@randahl It's a presidential record and should be preserved. No idea if it's preserved outside of the public's reach yet still in compliance with the Presidential Records Act.
You'll recall this same POTUS stole classified documents and presidential records, refused to return them, and couldn't be prosecuted because of evasive manipulations of the prosecutorial process and Trump's winning a second term. SCOTUS decision on immunity has exacerbated the situation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidential_Records_Act#Proposed_amendments
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