“Illegal Under Taliban Law”: CNN Seeks Summary Judgment Under a Curious Claim in Defamation Case

 

 

96 thoughts on ““Illegal Under Taliban Law”: CNN Seeks Summary Judgment Under a Curious Claim in Defamation Case”

  1. CNN’s female on-air staff need to wear burkas.
    Displaying their flesh to strange men is contrary to Sharia and Taliban rule.

  2. Remind me…
    Didn’t CNN have to write a very large check to the kid from Covington KY?

    Turley of course ignores the other elephant in the room.

    This shows that the ‘journalist’ isn’t being objective in their reporting, but showing a clear bias.
    Now this isn’t an issue on the legal merits but that those who call themselves a journalist should be held to an ethical standard.

    -G

    1. Didn’t CNN have to write a very large check to the kid from Covington KY?

      Maybe. Or maybe it chose to write a very small check to get rid of him. We don’t know, and anyone who claims to know is almost certainly lying.

      1. Large or small, they definitely wrote a check to the kid, though. And rightly so.

      2. As often the case, Milhouse, you are correct while totally off base. Given the alleged reputation of his attorney for this type of case, a very small check simply would defy logic. You are correct that we don’t know the amount, but to suggest it could be “very small” just isn’t in the cards dealt by the fickle hand of fate (and occasional justice).

  3. “CNN’s lead counsel Deanna K. Shullman [a *female*] [used] Sharia law in defense of CNN.”

    Did she do so while wearing a burqa? And did she get her husband’s permission to make that argument?

  4. IF CNN’s lead counsel Deanna K. Shullman wants to practice Shiria law, I suggest the get her hind end over to the Middle east, or to parts of Afrika, and go to it. What a sod.

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