Taking Back Our Stolen History
USA Today
USA Today

USA Today

USA TODAY is a leader in mobile applications with more than 21 million downloads on mobile devices, but has seen its . In 2020, the Sunday issue of USA Today had a circulation of just 802.68 thousand copies, down from 2.55 million in 2018. Daily circulation also fell significantly, from over 3 million in 2019 to 1.06 million in 2020.

It is known mostly for its complete and detailed coverage of sports, but also features regional issues ignored by major city-based newspapers. Critics have called it “McPaper”, having all the nutritional value of a meal at a fast food restaurant such as McDonald’s. USA Today fact checkers claim symbols that Hillary Clinton wears and Nancy Pelosi has on her webpage and are available in the Trump 2020 store are Nazi symbols.

It is owned by the leftist media conglomerate Gannett Corporation, one of the most diverse sources of news, information and communications in the United States. Gannett serves readers and viewers through its operations in 43 states and Washington, D.C., Guam, the United Kingdom, Canada, Belgium, Germany and Hong Kong. One of the world’s largest information companies, Gannett owns and operates about 50 television stations in the United States. The company also has a national group of commercial printing facilities and subsidiaries involved in survey research, direct marketing and new media development.

USA TODAY was conceived in Cocoa Beach, Florida under the code name “Project NN.” After two years of research on what readers wanted, what advertisers needed and what technology permitted, on September 15, 1982, USA TODAY began publication to readers news about the USA in an entirely different way; regionalized content was sent to printing plants in the metro areas where Gannett owned newspapers, via satellite.

The newspaper quickly established itself, selling more than 1.3 million copies a day all across the nation by the end of 1983. In 2001, the company moved to a new Gannett/USA TODAY headquarters in McLean, Virginia.

USA Today is particularly liberal on Title IX and the issue of women in sports.

Source: Conservapedia

USA Today issues daily fact checks, but many of their supposed corrections are actually just regurgitated narratives peddled by the mainstream media and often indistinguishable from leftist politicians’ talking points. The newspaper has a history of propping up slanted, unnecessary, and long-winded explanations attempting to justify certain statements and behaviors to fit their narrative.1