This intuition is largely fallacious. The quality of reporting can very so dramatically from one source to another that it's not particularly rare for a foreign outlet to do a better job than a domestic one. (no opinion on this specific case)
> Today the Guardian has offices in New York, Washington and Oakland, California, and further correspondents elsewhere: a team of more than a hundred editorial and commercial staff
From [1]
Oh hmm, what about it being the publication that Snowden trusted to handle his whistle-blowing properly, compared to the NYTimes that he didn't trust, because on the Bush Jr.'s White House's request, they suppressed publication of a news story about NSA wiretapping until after his reelection?
Unfortunately the article doesn’t seem to have any information at all. The majority of the incidents are from a year ago and they’ve basically interviewed residents who haven’t returned and have been living far away.
I mean, if I was in their shoes I probably wouldn’t live there either, and would likely try and make my move permanent. But there is no evidence that there is anything being hidden, or was missed by authorities in the East Palestine area at all.
> Two of the biggest beneficiaries in the 2024 contests have been Rep. Sam Graves (R-Mo.), the leader of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and Rep. Troy E. Nehls (R-Tex.), who oversees its rail-focused subcommittee. In this cycle, Graves has received $26,000 from BNSF, CSX, Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific and their top trade association, while Nehls has received about $19,000. The companies donated through their political action committees to the two lawmakers as well as their leadership PACs, which enable members of Congress to write checks to their peers.
Act 1
>In the weeks after the East Palestine derailment, Graves, Nehls and other Republicans hammered the Biden administration. That March, they wrote federal regulators to raise “significant concerns” and to question “whether appropriate actions have been taken by the federal agencies to protect the community and the environment.”
Act 2
> Since then, though, the two lawmakers have refused to hold legislative hearings on the bipartisan rail safety bill, preventing it from coming to the House floor for a vote. Nehls at one point even told Politico that Congress should not impose “more burdensome regulations and all this other stuff.”
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 15.3 ms ] threadFrom [1]
Oh hmm, what about it being the publication that Snowden trusted to handle his whistle-blowing properly, compared to the NYTimes that he didn't trust, because on the Bush Jr.'s White House's request, they suppressed publication of a news story about NSA wiretapping until after his reelection?
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/media/2021/may/05/guardian-200-y...
I mean, if I was in their shoes I probably wouldn’t live there either, and would likely try and make my move permanent. But there is no evidence that there is anything being hidden, or was missed by authorities in the East Palestine area at all.
Given the reality of the situation, they likely wouldn’t see a dime back. Something tells me they can’t afford that kind of loss.
> Two of the biggest beneficiaries in the 2024 contests have been Rep. Sam Graves (R-Mo.), the leader of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and Rep. Troy E. Nehls (R-Tex.), who oversees its rail-focused subcommittee. In this cycle, Graves has received $26,000 from BNSF, CSX, Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific and their top trade association, while Nehls has received about $19,000. The companies donated through their political action committees to the two lawmakers as well as their leadership PACs, which enable members of Congress to write checks to their peers.
Act 1
>In the weeks after the East Palestine derailment, Graves, Nehls and other Republicans hammered the Biden administration. That March, they wrote federal regulators to raise “significant concerns” and to question “whether appropriate actions have been taken by the federal agencies to protect the community and the environment.”
Act 2
> Since then, though, the two lawmakers have refused to hold legislative hearings on the bipartisan rail safety bill, preventing it from coming to the House floor for a vote. Nehls at one point even told Politico that Congress should not impose “more burdensome regulations and all this other stuff.”
Act 3