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#defamation

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More than 60 years ago, New York Times C. v. Sullivan established that, to succeed in defamation cases, public figures must prove that a published statement is false and that publishers acted with "actual malice." "Murder the Truth," a new book by New York Times journalist and editor David Enrich, discusses the movement to overturn Sullivan, accelerated by Trump, his allies and people who are influenced by them. Nieman Lab spoke to Enrich about his investigation, the journalists he spoke to, and more. "The push to overturn Roe was obviously one of the most coordinated assaults on established Supreme Court precedent, probably in history," Enrich says. "This is definitely not like that — but it’s not an accident that these people were getting up and being given platforms on places like Fox News to make these arguments over and over again."

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#USLaw #Law #Libel #Defamation #Books @bookstodon #Media #Journalism #MurderTheTruth

Her parents were injured in a Tesla crash. She ended up having to pay Tesla damages

apnews.com/article/tesla-china

Zhang Yazhou was sitting in the passenger seat of her Tesla Model 3 when she said she heard her father’s panicked voice: The brakes don’t work!

Tesla sued her for defamation for complaining publicly about the car’s brakes — and won. A Chinese court ordered Zhang to pay more than $23,000 in damages and publicly apologize to the $1.1 trillion company.

In this photo provided by Zhang Yazhou, she stands in front of her damaged Tesla Model 3 outside of the Tesla dealership in Zhengzhou, the capital of central China’s Henan province, on March, 19, 2021. The car was painted with the phrase “Brakes fail.” (Courtesy Zhang Yazhou via AP)
AP News · AP investigates Tesla's aggressive legal strategy in ChinaBy ELSIE CHEN

"This week, we watched as the world's richest man appeared to give a Nazi salute at Trump's post-inauguration rally. Twice. Then we watched as mainstream media outlets bent over backwards to avoid saying what we all saw," writes Parker Molloy for her newsletter, The Present Age.

She explains why, as neo-Nazis and white nationalists applauded the gesture, mainstream outlets have been muted. "The answer lies in our broken defamation laws and the way wealthy individuals can weaponize them against critics. This is a legitimate free speech crisis."

flip.it/AiLzYu

The Present Age · News Organizations Are Tiptoeing Around What We All SawBy Parker Molloy