Let me start by saying I love The Washington Post. To me, it has always been the greatest newspaper in the nation, with outstanding journalists, opinion writers, and content.
I have another reason to love thea Post. I worked there as a copyboy in the summer of 1959. While there, I met my future husband. So I would not be wrong to say that the Post changed my life.
But the estimable Graham family made a terrible mistake when they sold the paper to multibillionaire Jeff Bezos. To the Grahams, the Post was a sacred trust. To Bezos, it’s a business, one of many he owns.
When he first bought the paper, he said he would respect its values, notably its commitment to independent journalism. As publisher, he would not interfere with the editorial side.
He kept his promise until 2024, when he realized that he could not antagonize Trump, because his other businesses dare not antagonize Trump. First, he stopped the editorial board from endorsing Harris. The editorial was written but never printed.
Then he donated $1 million to the Trump inaugural festivities. Then he made a deal to buy Melania’s video about her life for $40 million. The film is expected to cost $12 million. The remaining $28 million goes into her pockets.
Then he told the opinion writers that they should focus on “personal liberties and free markets.” Most understood that diktat to mean “stop criticizing Trump so much,” although one could write many columns about his assault on personal liberties and free markets.
A significant number of acclaimed journalists, editorial writers, and opinion writers left the Post, rather than submit.
So Bezos has a new idea. Cultivate writers from other publications, bloggers, freelance writers, even nonprofessional writers. Use AI to
Edit their submissions. Let humans make final decisions. Sad…especially for a great newspaper that is bleeding talent.
The New York Times wrote about Bezos’ new approach:
The Washington Post has published some of the world’s most influential voices for more than a century, including columnists like George Will and newsmakers like the Dalai Lama and President Trump.
A new initiative aims to sharply expand that lineup, opening The Post to many published opinion articles from other newspapers across America, writers on Substack and eventually nonprofessional writers, according to four people familiar with the plan. Executives hope that the program, known internally as Ripple, will appeal to readers who want more breadth than The Post’s current opinion section and more quality than social platforms like Reddit and X.
The project will host and promote the outside opinion columns on The Post’s website and app but outside its paywall, according to the people, who would speak only anonymously to discuss a confidential project. It will operate outside the paper’s opinion section.
The Post aims to strike some of the initial partnership deals this summer, two of the people said, and the company recently hired an editor to oversee writing for Ripple. A final phase, allowing nonprofessionals to submit columns with help from an A.I. writing coach called Ember, could begin testing this fall. Human editors would review submissions before publication.
Sad.

I really never understood why he bought the paper to begin with. With all his business interests, why? SMH. Whatva shame.
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To shape opinion? Be, therefore, more powerful? These bros make a pile of money and then think that they should be running things. BTW, LOVE YOUR POSTS, RG!!!
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Are you a runner?
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Yes, I am. And I am a grandmother. You probably figured that part out.
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That’s awesome!!!! xoxoxox
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Why did Bezos buy the Post? A vanity project, I assume. Why did Musk buy Twitter?
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Ripple sounds like a cheap drunk and Ember the last glow if a dying brand.
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My first thought as well. Why would Bezos name a program after an icon for personal failure, ripple?
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Because ripples expand far beyond their starting point, I suppose. The name certainly didn’t come from the breathtakingly deep and beautiful Grateful Dead song by that name.
And, ofc, it’s cheaper to license an article than to pay staff to research and write articles. Did you know that the Huff Post doesn’t pay for articles? A writer, like me, is supposed just to be grateful that he or she is being published. It’s depressing AF. Young people without training or expertise churning out drek for which they are paid little or nothing while actual writers can’t place stuff anymore for enough to earn a living.
Example. For most of the 20th century, novelists could earn a living, between novels, by selling short stories to magazines. Now, almost no general readership magazines publish short fiction. It’s all in little online literary magazines with readerships of 10 people, and there’s no pay. None.
For this reason, I just gave up and started posting my essays, short stories, poetry, and other work on my own website for free. And I have chosen a literary executor to keep the stuff up, hoping for a better time when readership returns.
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So what you are saying is that authors are to found in future times drinking ripple, hence the name?
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I earned my living for most of my life writing for educational publishers. In those days, I would write entire chapters on topics like Elements of the Short Story or The American Transcendentalists or The Legacy of Ancient Greece or whatever. And I would typically earn, 20 years ago, $125-$150 a page. And I earned between $150,000 and $200,000 a year doing this. And a lot of these companies published my short stories for children (I have written over a hundred of these. Now, writing for educational publishers has devolved into producing Common Core (or state versions of the same) exercise sets and coding them for online use for what comes to $7.00-$10.00 per hour. Often less than minimum wage. And so only complete hacks and kids right out of school do it. And the results are utterly predicdtable.
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Sad!!
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The textbooks and online “learning” materials now are as shot full of errors as a speech by Trump or Noem or Greene. Barely literate. Errors of fact, grammar, usage, mechanics, logic. In my last year of teaching, I was told that I had to use a new literature program from Prentice Hall. I opened it at random and sent a memo to the principal and every teacher in the school listing 70+ errors in a single two-page spread.
BTW: Something has been troubling me. Half the voter population of the US cast ballots for the Orange Clown. These folks were almost all products of a K-12 education. So, that seems to be a LOT of failure. Add to that the fact that 60 percent of American adults, roughly, are utterly innumerate despite having taken 12 years of K-12 mathematics. Or, stop adults at random on the street and ask them what a Conference Committee is or when the Civil War took place. Appalling.
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“Something has been troubling me. Half the voter population of the US cast ballots for the Orange Clown.”
What troubles me is that so many misrepresent the ORANGE CONVICTED FELON’S electoral victory. He did not get “half of the voter population.” He got roughly 1/3 of that population. Why do so many continue to repeat that horse manure?
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Duane, I should have written voting population, though the phrase “voter population” can certainly be construed to refer to those who actually voted, which was my intention. It isn’t too difficult to figure that out, and if you were a little more generous and a little less judgmental, you could have done so.
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I’ve seen this mistake many times by folks on the supposed correct side of things. If I have to be less than generous and more judgmental to get my points across I’ll continue doing so.
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And, ofc, you totally ignored the main point that I was making. Half of those who voted, roughly, voted for Trump even though most of them were products of our K-12 educational system.
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The public education system cannot outcompete the religious faith belief indoctrinations that so many have been subjected to.
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Living here in Florida, I meet regularly people who
a. are products of our K-12 education system, and
b. think that the sky is a firmament with stars stuck in it like plums in a pudding, believe that the Covid vaccine contains microchips placed into it by Bill Gates, think that contrails are a government program to seed the air with chemicals to sicken people for the benefit of our healthcare industry, think that the moon landing was filmed on a stage set, and think that Obama put chemicals in the water to turn high-school kids transgender.
I recently met one who explained to me that the world is secretly run by shape-shifting reptilian aliens and that those aliens make up the populace of the nation of Switzerland.
So, there’s a problem, and we shouldn’t ignore it.
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Bob,
How about the kids who went to Florida’s religious schools? Are they better?
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Worse. Far worse. Except the Catholic ones. Those are pretty darned good.
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Indeed there is a problem, no doubt. For me it comes directly from the faith belief brainwashing 85% of the population is subjected to that conditions them to believe all sorts of absurdities. . . especially when part of the discourse demands that one doesn’t criticize religious faith beliefs or risk eternal damnation (what a bizarre concept.)
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And my condolences to you for having to endure the insanities, inanities and absurdities that Florida politics entail. Sadly, Missouri isn’t that far behind.
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It’s definitely a trip living here, Duane. I would love to take a canoe ride with you some time and argue with you about religion and materialism. If, that is, you would promise not to drown me.
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Haven’t had anyone drown yet!
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“The name certainly didn’t come from the breathtakingly deep and beautiful Grateful Dead song by that name.”
Probably doesn’t know who The Dead are.
Another excellent song about rippling waters by the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band:
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Great stuff. Love me some Nitty Gritty Dirt Band!!!
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When he first bought the paper, he said he would respect its values, notably its commitment to independent journalism.
Same when Murdoch bought The Wall Street Journal
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Ripple, Ripoff, Ripofflichen, Trumplestiltskin …
Chickens Of A Feather Taco Together 🌮🌮🌮
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Hah!
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All that matters to such folks is their bottom line and the power it takes to maintain, protect, and grow it.
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Bezos hurt his bottom line at the Post. He lost hundreds of thousands of readers and some of its best writers..
But his real financial heart is in Amazon, which churns out millions with no effort on his part.
And his love for now is Blue Origin, where he competes with Musk for government contracts and success.
He should unload the Washington Post and sell it to a billionaire who wants to protect it.
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I would love to see Bezos sell the Post to a group who are interested in real journalism. I.am.onr of thr many subscribers who canceled their subscription last year. I also deleted the Amazon app.
I know that Kara Swisher has talked about trying to put together a group to bid for the Post.
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A lot of Post & NYT writers, as well as other prominent journalists, moved to Substack, trading a secure income for academic freedom. Bezos is chasing them, trying to regain control. I can’t imagine any writers who came to Substack for that reason jumping back into the pit they just climbed out of. If money was the primary concern, they could have just stayed where they were.
I hope it’s OK for me to recommend one of those Substacks, the Contrarian, started recently by WP & NYT writers. This is not spam, & I have no connection with it other than as a subscriber. I think in this time it’s important to support independent journalism however we can, while we still have it.
https://contrarian.substack.com
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There are many wonderful blogs on Substack.
I esp enjoy Jeff Tiedrich. “Everyone is entitled to my opinion.”
And The Bulwark is terrific.
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The Post in the 50s must have been fascinating.
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From what I recall, the Post was fearless.
ESP against McCarthy.
The cartoonist Herblock skewered him.
If you never saw his cartoons, Google them.
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Herblock was brilliant. Such talent!!!
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I loved his cartoons; but as a Bostonian, I thought The Globe’s Paul Szep was edgier.
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Thanks for the recommendation. I don’t know his work.
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William,
I just posted a Szep cartoon.
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Founding Father Thomas Jefferson, the main author of our Declaration of Independence, had this view of the key importance of the Free Press which is protected by our Constitution: “Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”
Jefferson and America’s other Founding Fathers who wrote the protections for American news media into our Constitution knew that the foundation upon which our republic stands is fully-informed citizens. The entire structure of a republic is based on a foundation of well and honestly informed citizens. “If a nation expects to be ignorant and free…it expects what never was and never will be,” he said.
But, human nature being what it is, with their new-found constitutional freedoms newspapers went “bad” almost right from the start, causing Jefferson to declare: “Nothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper. Truth itself becomes suspicious by being put into that polluted vehicle.” He said that newspapers had become “putrid” due to the “malignity, the vulgarity, and mendacious spirit of those who write for them.”
So, is there ever anything new under the Sun?
The problem that arose in newspapers arose because of the rapid rise of political parties in our new republic, and those political parties gave rise to political partisanship. Right from the beginning of our republic another Founding Father and our First President, George Washington, had given us this warning about political parties: “Political parties are likely in the course of time to become potent engines by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the People and to take for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion.”
America should have listened to its Father…but who listens to their father?
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Well said, Quikwrit!
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Why TF can’t we have a person as intelligent, informed, learnéd, and compassionate as Quickwrit as president of this country? Someone who actually understands what this experiment is supposed to be about?
Almost 350 million citizens, and we end up with the sociopathic, criminal, treasonous Orange Clown.
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When did we go from being the “land of opportunity” to the land of opportunists? Opportunism for a few is what Project 2025 represents.
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Three realms which should be totally off limits to modern American capitalism: news/information, health care, education. The demands from corporate ownership inevitable make them lose sight of their mission and ultimately wither and die.
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Private equity is buying up medical practices. Long ago, most doctors were independent. Now most are in a practice owned by financiers.
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Private equity is buying up veterinary practices as well. The trend is also into dentistry. It has long dwelt in audiology.
Why is this? Not to sound like Trump, but we don’t build things anymore. Instead, our most wealthy business people are just organized distributors of either goods or services.
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I loved the Post, was a subscriber for years, but when it became afraid to continue its mission, I dropped the subscription. I am trying to find a better place to put my money. I subscribe to a couple excellent magazines, but I am open to suggestions on newspapers.
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It’s sad to see The Washington Post’s integrity eroded by corporate interests—quality journalism and education are pillars of democracy that deserve protection. Speaking of which, I’m supporting an education fundraiser; https://gogetfunding.com/You-can-support-olivia-education/ because investing in the next generation matters more than ever.
Bezos’ shift toward AI and amateur content is a stark departure from the Post’s legacy. Let’s hope real journalists keep holding power accountable, even as trusted institutions falter.
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