As if it wasn’t bad enough that the mainstream media has become impossible to trust, the Harris campaign has taken to mimicking real news articles and rewriting the headlines so that they appear in her favor. 

Hot off being complicit in hiding President Joe Biden’s deteriorating mental state, the mainstream media is now trying to convince an American public who has never cast a single vote for Vice President Kamala Harris in a Democratic presidential primary that the least popular vice president in history is somehow the savior of the Democratic Party, the United States, and the world. 

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And the American public is beginning to wake up to what the media has been doing, as evidenced by the recent unexpected guffaws from the audience in response to Stephen Colbert describing CNN as “objective” and “just report[ing] the news as it is.”

However, the Harris campaign must be concerned that even having the mainstream media on its side is not enough for the Border Czar to beat former President Donald Trump, and has taken to falsifying news headlines. 

Sounds like Kamala may be feeling a bit burdened by what has been and by what the future holds considering the disastrous state of the economy under Bidenomics. 

Axios reports on the Harris campaign’s editing of news headlines in her favor. Here’s the start of the story:

The Harris campaign has been editing news headlines and descriptions within Google search ads that make it appear as if the Guardian, Reuters, CBS News, and other major publishers are on her side, Axios has found.

Why it matters: It’s a common practice in the commercial advertising world that doesn’t violate Google’s policies, but the ads mimic real news results from Search closely enough that they have news outlets caught off guard.

  • According to Google’s ad transparency center, the Trump campaign isn’t running these types of ads, but this technique has been used by campaigns before.
  • The ads say that they are sponsored, but it’s not immediately clear that the text that accompanies real news links is written by the campaigns and not by the media publication itself.

What they’re saying: “While we understand why an organization might wish to align itself with the Guardian’s trusted brand, we need to ensure it is being used appropriately and with our permission. We’ll be reaching out to Google for more information about this practice,” a Guardian spokesperson said.

  • Spokespeople for brands such as CNN, USA Today and NPR, whose links appeared in Harris for President ads, said they were unaware their brand was being featured this way.

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