Close Menu
TheHub.news

    The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

    By Dr. Stacey Patton

    The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

    By Cuisine Noir

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    TheHub.news
    Support Our Work
    • Home
    • Our Story
      • News & Views
        • Politics
        • Injustice
        • HBCUs
        • Watch
      • Food
        • Cuisine Noir
        • soulPhoodie
      • Passport Heavy
      • Travel
      • Diaspora
      • This Day
      • Entertainment
      • History
      • Art
      • Music
    • Health
    • Money
      1. Copper2Cotton
      2. View All

      August 2018 Net Worth Update

      December 9, 2025

      Dividend Update: August 2018

      December 9, 2025

      How to Fight Inflation and Win

      December 9, 2025
      Passive Income

      Be Passive About Your $

      November 17, 2025

      How to Fight Inflation and Win

      December 9, 2025

      August 2018 Net Worth Update

      December 9, 2025

      More Blacks Needed On Corporate Boards

      December 9, 2025
      Passive Income

      Be Passive About Your $

      November 17, 2025
    • Books
    • Business
    • Sports
      1. First and Pen
      2. View All

      Brian Flores Was Right But the Issue Is Not for Black Coaches to Fix

      February 3, 2026

      Fritz Pollard Alliance Issues Statement on ICE in Minnesota

      January 28, 2026

      Where Is the Black Athlete Anger for Lane Kiffin’s “Make Baton Rouge Great” Post?

      January 28, 2026

      Vince Carter, Tracy McGrady Partner to Host “Cousins” Podcast

      January 23, 2026

      Brian Flores Was Right But the Issue Is Not for Black Coaches to Fix

      February 3, 2026

      Sandra Idehen Named League One Volleyball’s First Commissioner

      February 2, 2026

      To Protect and Serve…I Guess?!?

      January 30, 2026

      Fritz Pollard Alliance Issues Statement on ICE in Minnesota

      January 28, 2026
    • Tech
    • Podcasts
      1. Karen Hunter is Awesome
      2. Lurie Breaks it Down
      3. Human(ing) Well with Amber Cabral
      4. Financially Speaking
      5. In Class with Carr
      6. View All

      The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

      February 6, 2026

      The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

      February 6, 2026

      Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

      February 6, 2026

      Walatta Petros: The Noblewoman Who Defied a King and Saved Ethiopian Christianity

      February 6, 2026

      The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

      February 6, 2026

      The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

      February 6, 2026

      Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

      February 6, 2026

      Walatta Petros: The Noblewoman Who Defied a King and Saved Ethiopian Christianity

      February 6, 2026

      The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

      February 6, 2026

      The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

      February 6, 2026

      Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

      February 6, 2026

      Walatta Petros: The Noblewoman Who Defied a King and Saved Ethiopian Christianity

      February 6, 2026

      The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

      February 6, 2026

      The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

      February 6, 2026

      Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

      February 6, 2026

      Walatta Petros: The Noblewoman Who Defied a King and Saved Ethiopian Christianity

      February 6, 2026

      The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

      February 6, 2026

      The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

      February 6, 2026

      Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

      February 6, 2026

      Walatta Petros: The Noblewoman Who Defied a King and Saved Ethiopian Christianity

      February 6, 2026

      In Class with Carr: Black History in Times of Trouble

      February 2, 2026

      The Rise of the “Righteous Whites” and the Collapse of Plausible Deniability

      January 24, 2026

      How Insurers Use Your ZIP Code and Credit Score Against You

      January 21, 2026

      In Class With Carr: New World Order

      January 19, 2026
    TheHub.news
    Opinion

    The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

    By Dr. Stacey PattonFebruary 6, 20269 Mins Read
    Share Email Copy Link
    Image credit: ShutterStock
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link Threads

    Sometimes you gotta step back and study the pattern rather than the individual events. Because from that distance, the picture reveals itself as something far more chillingly deliberate, coordinated, and deviously precise than anybody wants to admit.

    And once you see the pattern, you can’t unsee it.

    The randomness starts to fall away. The convenient explanations start to feel thin. What looked like a series of unfortunate, disconnected developments starts to read like pressure being applied from multiple directions at once. You can see the economic, technological, political, and cultural pressures all landing on the same target: the infrastructure of truth.

    The mass layoffs announced at The Washington Post yesterday. The hollowing out of what used to be Twitter under Elon Musk after he bought it and reengineered it into a hot, swampy mess of grievance theater, algorithmic chaos, disinformation slop, bad-faith amplification, bot-choked discourse, crypto-grifter energy, and engagement-bait outrage where journalism gets buried alive in real time. Add to that, the quiet but symbolically massive step-back from large-scale journalism funding by Craig Newmark. Layer in the chilling escalation of a raid by the FBI on the home of a Washington Post reporter, and the recent arrests of four Black journalists reporting in volatile political spaces.

    At some point, we have to stop calling this a series of unfortunate, disconnected incidents and start asking why all of the pressure keeps landing on the same institution and the people whose job is to document power, question power, and expose what power is doing when it thinks no one is looking. None of these, standing alone, fully explains what’s happening in America right now. But together, they start to look like a playbook.

    And I need people to understand something uncomfortable: authoritarian systems don’t usually begin by banning journalism outright. That’s messy. That creates martyrs and triggers resistance. What they do instead is starve journalism. They destabilize it. They fracture it. They hollow it out and make it economically fragile, culturally distrusted, and structurally dependent on the very power centers it’s supposed to watchdog. You don’t have to burn down the press if you can make it too weak to fight back.

    The layoffs at the Post matter symbolically because it’s not just any newsroom. It’s one of the last global legacy institutions with deep investigative muscle memory. When a place like that starts shedding huge portions of staff, it’s not just a business story. It’s a signal that tells every other newsroom what the future might look like. Fewer investigative teams. Fewer beat reporters. Fewer people with time to sit on a story for six months until the truth cracks open.

    Truth requires labor. And labor costs money. And when labor disappears, “content” replaces journalism.

    Now put that next to what happened when Musk bought Twitter. He didn’t need the platform to make money immediately. That’s the key piece folks miss. For billionaires, the cost of buying and degrading an information platform is often negligible compared to their overall wealth. Losing a few billion is catastrophic for a company. It is not catastrophic for a man worth hundreds of billions. But degrading a platform that once functioned as a real-time distribution network for journalists, activists, and whistleblowers has massive downstream effects.

    It slows the speed at which verified information moves while letting propaganda, outrage, and synthetic virality travel faster. It buries nuanced reporting under engagement bait and algorithmic chaos, making it harder for the public to even see early warnings about corruption or state abuse.

    It fractures source networks because whistleblowers and vulnerable contacts lose trust in the safety and stability of the platform, which means fewer leaks, fewer tips, fewer people willing to risk telling the truth. It hands narrative power to whoever can flood the zone the fastest, whether they are political operatives, coordinated disinformation networks, or influencer propaganda machines, while pushing evidence-based reporting further to the margins.

    It also burns journalists out psychologically, forcing them to work in environments saturated with harassment, bot swarms, and bad-faith attacks, which quietly discourages risky investigative work. It weakens grassroots movements that once relied on real-time visibility and coordination, while well-funded actors simply buy amplification elsewhere. It erodes the rough draft of history that platforms like Twitter once created, making it easier for powerful people to rewrite events after the fact.

    And economically, when newsrooms lose referral traffic and audience pipelines, layoffs accelerate, reporting capacity shrinks, and the entire information ecosystem gets thinner. The ultimate downstream effect is legitimacy collapse. The public stops distinguishing between verified reporting and manufactured noise. And once that happens, you ain’t got to kill the truth. You just have to make sure it shows up late, exhausted, and already doubted.

    That’s what makes this strategy, if you interpret it that way, brilliant in its deviance. You don’t have to win the information war by building better truth systems. You can win it by making truth distribution chaotic, unreliable, and saturated with noise.

    Then there’s Craig Newmark, and this is where nuance matters, especially given his history of supporting journalism and media ethics initiatives, including programs that have benefited Howard University, CUNY, ProPublica, the Poynter Institute, the The American Journalism Project, and The Trust Project. He has collectively funded efforts that have helped train new and mid-career journalists, strengthen investigative reporting capacity, support nonprofit local newsroom models, build ethics and standards training, fight disinformation, improve public trust in news, and create sustainability strategies for newsrooms struggling under platform disruption and collapsing ad revenue.

    Much of this work has focused on shoring up the infrastructure of journalism, the pipelines, training, credibility systems, and local reporting ecosystems that make watchdog reporting possible, rather than funding individual stories or exerting editorial control, which is why shifts in that funding landscape carry ripple effects far beyond any single newsroom or grant cycle.

    When journalism depends on philanthropy from millionaires or billionaires, it is always vulnerable to their fatigue, frustration, or reprioritization. Philanthropy can supplement journalism. But it was never built to sustain an entire democratic information infrastructure. The moment major philanthropic backers step away, the fragility becomes visible overnight.

    And here’s where people struggle to see the connections, because we’re trained to see events as separate. Authoritarian ecosystems thrive on multi-front pressure. Economic pressure on newsrooms. Platform destabilization. Legal intimidation. Narrative warfare. If journalists are getting laid off, losing distribution channels, losing funding backstops, and watching peers get raided and arrested, you don’t have to pass a law banning journalism. You create a climate where fewer people can afford to do it and fewer institutions can protect them when they do.

    That’s how it works in modern authoritarian environments. Power doesn’t always need to censor. It just needs to exhaust.

    Now layer in the political environment around Donald Trump and the escalating hostility toward press institutions, particularly journalists covering race, policing, immigration, and state violence. When Black journalists are arrested or targeted, the message is not just legal. It’s cultural. It says: these are the stories that carry risk. These are the reporters you can isolate first.

    And once fear enters a profession, self-censorship follows faster than any government mandate ever could.

    Some people will say Jeff Bezos initially wanted to save the The Washington Post. Maybe he did. Maybe he believed it. Maybe Musk believed his own rhetoric about free speech too. But structurally, the outcome matters more than the origin story. If the end result is weakened investigative capacity, destabilized information distribution, and shrinking financial support for watchdog reporting, the system still shifts in favor of power and away from public accountability.

    The terrifying part is how cheap this is for billionaires. Buying media companies or platforms is pocket change relative to their net worth. Letting them degrade doesn’t cost them political power. In some scenarios, it might even enhance it. Because strong journalism creates friction for concentrated power. Weak journalism creates speed. And speed benefits people who already control capital, law, and narrative.

    What this means for journalism as a profession is an existential crisis. The old model with the big newsroom, stable beats, long investigations, unionized staff, and legal protection is eroding. What’s replacing it is fragmented. Independent journalists. Newsletter ecosystems. Creator-reporters. Reader-supported work. That can be powerful, but it’s also unstable and uneven. Not every community gets coverage. Not every corruption story gets six months of digging.

    What it means for truth-telling is even bigger. Truth is becoming decentralized, personalized, and algorithmically filtered. And when truth is fragmented, it becomes easier to discredit, to drown, and rewrite. The long-term risk isn’t that journalism disappears. It’s that it becomes too thin to even matter.

    And the most chilling part is that you can do all of this while still claiming to support free speech, innovation, or efficiency. That’s the elegance of modern authoritarian power moves. You don’t destroy the press loudly. You just let it bleed out while calling it modernization.

    If this is what we’re watching, and I’m saying if Y’all, because intellectually honest analysis has to allow for competing explanations, then it is one of the most effective power strategies of the 21st century. You don’t silence truth. You make it unaffordable.

    And history shows that once societies lose dense, adversarial, labor-heavy journalism, they don’t realize what they lost until the corruption is already baked into the system. By then, the institutions look intact. But the truth inside them is gone.

    And what remains is the performance of accountability and a hollow ritual where power is questioned just enough to look legitimate, but never enough to be changed.

    Thanks for reading. If this piece resonated with you, then please consider becoming a paid subscriber. Paid subscriptions help keep my Substack unfiltered and ad free. They also help me raise money for HBCU journalism students who need laptops, DSLR cameras, tripods, mics, lights, software, travel funds for conferences and reporting trips, and food from our pantry. You can also follow me on Facebook!

    We appreciate you!

    • Reggie Jackson’s Raw Truth About Racist Incidents Was for All to Hear and Remember
    • Wellness Wednesday: How the Truth Can Help You Heal
    • Don Lemon Didn’t Get Arrested Because He Crossed a Line. He Got Arrested Because He Left the Cage.
    • Stand in Your Truth!
    • Karen Hunter Partners with Pressto to Award Journalism Scholarships to 5 Schools Throughout the African Diaspora
    Democracy journalism The Washington Post Thehub.news
    Dr. Stacey Patton

    Dr. Stacey Patton is an award-winning journalist, author, historian and nationally recognized child advocate whose research focuses on the intersections of race and parenting in American life, child welfare issues, education, corporal punishment in homes and schools, and the foster care and school-to-prison pipelines. Her writings on race, culture, higher education, and child welfare issues have appeared in The New York Times, Washington Post, BBC News, Al Jazeera, TheRoot.com, NewsOne, Madame Noire, and The Chronicle of Higher Education. She has appeared on ABC News, CNN, MSNBC, Al Jazeera, and Democracy Now. Dr. Patton is the author of That Mean Old Yesterday, Spare the Kids: Why Whupping Children Won't Save Black America, and the forthcoming books, Strung Up: The Lynching of Black Children in Jim Crow America, and Not My Cat, a children's story. She is also the creator of a forthcoming 3-D medical animation and child abuse prevention app called "When You Hit Me."

    Related Stories

    Minnesota Is Witnessing the Best and Worst of America

    February 3, 2026

    Reconstruction’s Revenge: The Birth of Jim Crow and the Ritual of Lynching

    February 2, 2026

    Now That State Terror Has Crossed the Color Line, Do White Folks Finally Believe Us? History Has Notes.

    January 27, 2026

    Karen Hunter on the Politics of Petty Cruelty: “This Is a Nation of Kill My Neighbor’s Cow”

    January 5, 2026

    Complete Chaos: Trump’s DEI Order Sparks Controversy and Confusion

    January 31, 2025

    Op-Ed: Congress Must Act Now — Americans Are Ready and So Is the Next President — “It’s Time to Legalize Cannabis”

    October 14, 2024
    Recent Posts
    • The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism
    • The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains
    • Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple
    • Walatta Petros: The Noblewoman Who Defied a King and Saved Ethiopian Christianity
    • This Day in History: February 6th

    Can White People Join the New Black Panther Party?

    By Dr. Stacey Patton

    The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

    By Dr. Stacey Patton

    The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

    By Cuisine Noir

    Subscribe to Updates

    A free newsletter delivering stories that matter straight to your inbox.

    About
    About

    TheHub.news is a storytelling and news platform committed to telling our stories through our lens.With unapologetic facts at the center, we document the lived reality of our experience globally—our progress, our challenges, and our impact—without distortion, dilution, or apology.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube

    The Firing of Hundreds at The Washington Post Is Part of a Deviant Plan to Hollow Out Journalism

    By Dr. Stacey Patton

    The Supreme Court May Soon Diminish Black Political Power, Undoing Generations of Gains

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Cabbage: A Savory Soul Food Staple

    By Cuisine Noir

    Walatta Petros: The Noblewoman Who Defied a King and Saved Ethiopian Christianity

    By Dr. Rev Otis Moss III

    Subscribe to Updates

    A free newsletter delivering stories that matter straight to your inbox.

    © 2026 TheHub.news A 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.