Rage of the Day
Jonathan Turley has pinpointed a critical tension in modern digital journalism: the collision between the immediacy of social media and the enduring standards of academic and editorial integrity. What’s unfolding here isn’t just a broken link—it’s a case study in how the ephemeral nature of platforms like Bluesky can undermine the very arguments they’re meant to support. John Pfaff’s deletion of his post may well reflect personal growth or a recognition that his language crossed a line. That’s commendable. But when a blog like J. Turley’s builds a critique by linking to a dead link as proof of bad intent, without a screen capture of the original, it creates a gap between the argument and its evidence. The reader is left in the dark, unable to judge whether J. Turley’s characterization of Pfaff as another instance of the age of rage is self-affirming, or if it is an example of the volatility of his own online discourse. Without access to the primary source, the critique risks appearing ...