Authored by Ben Bartee via PJMedia.com,
If ever you needed proof that X Community Notes is vastly superior to corporate fact checks as a way for real journalists to do real work countering misinformation rather than as a bludgeon to suppress dissident narratives, this is it.
Lying about being a Native American for DEI leg-ups, it turns out, isnt the only dishonesty Elizabeth Warren peddles.
This lie, however, is much more consequential in terms of policy impact:
I don't take contributions from Big Pharma executives. I don't take any corporate PAC money, Elizabeth Warren says in the Senate hallway when confronted over her smears of RFK Jr.
Via TIME, 2020 (emphasis added):
In an ironic twist, that now makes Warren, who along with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has been the strongest opponent of super PACs in the 2020 campaign, the biggest beneficiary of such a group heading into Super Tuesday the most prominent reversal yet among the candidates on the issue of high-dollar donations. At one point, nearly every candidate decried the practice, before realizing it may be a necessity for survival.
Under campaign finance laws, donors can give unlimited amounts to a super PAC as long as the groups do not directly coordinate with the candidates they are supporting. Since launching her campaign, Warren has prided herself on her refusal to accept money from political action committees or federal lobbyists, and she has promised to disavow any super PAC that formed on her behalf.
Claire's Observations: Any time a politician says something is NOT true, the polar opposite is most probably the case, as we see now with "Senator Pocahontas".