Return hate for hate?
/I mention this horrid woman’s affiliations to make the point that she’s not some bizzaro nutcake emerging from a rock in the woods, she’s establishment: the face of modern journalism. They hate us, they want us dead, and it’s probably time to reciprocate.
UPDATE: Gideon brings up the good point that Twitter has exposed journalists as the partisan, hateful creatures they are, by lulling them into saying publicly what they used to just spout to their fellow journos in the office, all to great applause and commendations for their wit. Like “remote learning”, twittering journalists have pulled back the curtain for the rest of us to see what’s going on.
Susan B. Glasser (born January 14, 1969) is an American journalist and news editor. She writes the on-line column "Letter from Biden’s Washington" in The New Yorker, where she is a staff writer. She has served as editor of Politico during the 2016 election cycle, founding editor of Politico Magazine, and editor-in-chief of Foreign Policy magazine, which won three National Magazine Awards during her tenure.[1] Before joining Foreign Policy, Glasser spent a decade at the Washington Post, where she edited the Post's Sunday Outlook and national news sections, helped oversee coverage of Bill Clinton's impeachment, covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and served as Moscow co-bureau chief.
She is the author, with her husband Peter Baker, of Kremlin Rising: Vladimir Putin's Russia and the End of Revolution (2005) and The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker III (May 2020). They are also writing a book on the Trump presidency and impeachment.
Biography
Glasser is the daughter of Lynn (née Schreiber) and Stephen Glasser (of Jewish ancestry). Her parents are the founders of a weekly legal newspaper, Legal Times, and a legal and business publishing company, Glasser Legal Works. Glasser graduated cum laude from Harvard University,[2] where she wrote for The Harvard Crimson.
Personal life
In September 2000, she married Peter Baker in a civil ceremony. Her husband is the chief White House correspondent for The New York Times.