Probably have have had friends who have died doing that. To me, it goes against everything in the american ethos not to be doing that. Theres a lot of unanswered questions, were still getting information now that had to be pulled out through subpoena. We dont know where the president was, what hillary was doing. You know everything what they were doing during the bin laden raid, but you dont know any of this stuff, and then, of course, you have the coverup, and it really goes in with my book for personal political gain. They wanted to show that libya was pacified because libya was their baby right . That was their intervention under the guise of the duty to protect, to stop gadhafi from killing his people. I would submit to you many more people were killed after they destabilized it. Genocide genocide of christians. Isis has a Radio Station a tv station in libya right now. Its a disaster. So before, during and after, tubs of failures tons of failures. And if Hillary Clinton decides to
POLITICO
The Black correspondents at the White House
This episode of Playbook Deep Dive explores how Black White House correspondents deal with everything from microaggressions to death threats.
April Ryan raises her hand to ask a question of former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders during a press briefing at the White House in 2017. | Alex Brandon/AP Photo
By POLITICO STAFF
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White House reporters have access to the highest seat in the country and they’re a small group. An even
smaller group within that? Reporters of color.
On this episode of Playbook Deep Dive, Eugene Daniels is in conversation with fellow Black White House correspondents April Ryan (The Grio) and Ayesha Rascoe (NPR) about everything from microaggressions to death threats to Ryan s fiery encounters with former President Donald Trump. “Covering the White House from Bill Clinton to now, race touches everything,” says Ryan. “Everything.”