Tolerance? After Breaking Story of LGBTQ's Antisemitic Ejection of Jews From "Dyke March" Award-Winning Journalist Suspended By Newspaper
July 11th, 2017
Tolerance? After Breaking Story of LGBTQ's Antisemitic Ejection of Jews From "Dyke March" Award-Winning Journalist Suspended By Newspaper
Published on July 11th, 2017 @ 12:28:00 am , using 452 words,
Stories like these exemplify the extreme hypocrisy represented by those groups which are constantly marching & demanding "tolerance from others" for their "differences" while simultaneously denying that same tolerance to lesser groups for their particular "differences"
They demand an end to what they define as bigotry, from the majority, while at the same time practicing their own brand of what they define as bigotry on lesser minorities in their own groups.
The cherry on top is the fact that the journalist who broke the story is then suspended for her crime of telling the truth about WHO ALL OF THESE PEOPLE REALLY ARE.
It's just Priceless....
~ Refocus Notes
The Algemeiner
by Ben Cohen
An award-winning journalist who broke the story of the group of Jewish women ejected from an LGBTQ march in Chicago last month has been reassigned to non-journalistic duties at the paper which ran the original report, the Windy City Times.
Gretchen Rachel Hammond — whose June 24 story caused a national storm after she detailed how three women flying Jewish Pride flags embossed with the Star of David were instructed to leave the gathering by organizers from the Dyke March Collective — confirmed to The Algemeiner on Monday that while she was still employed by the paper, she was not presently engaged in its reporting and writing operations.
“At this time, I have not been fired from Windy City Times, but I have been transferred to working full time for the sales department,” Hammond explained in an emailed statement. “The reasoning is an internal matter and I have been instructed not to comment about it even to close friends. Given my present situation, I must comply with this instruction.”
The Windy City Times — whose masthead featured Hammond as a senior writer until a week ago — now describes her as “senior account executive.”
The Algemeiner approached Hammond after a reader pointed out that her role at the Windy City Times had been abruptly switched. The reader said in an email that Hammond’s reporting had been blamed by the march organizers for the ensuing controversy, and went on to express “disgust” and “outrage” that Hammond had “been bullied and attacked” by individuals associated with the march, sometimes in an “antisemitic” manner.
Tracy Baim — the publisher and executive editor of the Windy City Times — told The Algemeiner she could not discuss the specific charges around Hammond.
Chicago reporter Gretchen Rachel Hammond (left) pictured after donating her kidney to reader Elvie Jordan (right). Photo: Gretchen Rachel Hammond.
“I cannot comment on our people, but know that we stand by our reporting on our stories,” Baim said by telephone from Chicago.
Pressed on whether she stood by Hammond’s reporting of the Dyke March controversy specifically, Baim answered affirmatively. “I was the one who edited the story,” she added. Asked why Hammond had not filed a byline for the paper since June 28, Baim had no comment.
Hammond joined the Windy City Times as a reporter in 2013 and won the 2016 National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association Award for Excellence in News Writing. This year, Hammond was a finalist for the second time for the Lisagor Award, which honors journalists in Chicago....