NPR :press: on Nostr: Presidential pets can breed controversy. A dog was once suspected of being a spy ...
Published at
2023-10-07 11:02:21Event JSON
{
"id": "73c71764872f313e966d01a727ac4d787d91e554355b7f3ae680f6a381b6056c",
"pubkey": "5645d93f376884cc034b5a9c2b3bda53f1dd8de5e757ba9c782cfe02f6e1373a",
"created_at": 1696676541,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"t",
"press"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://press.coop/users/NPR/statuses/111193393856148911",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "Presidential pets can breed controversy. A dog was once suspected of being a spy\n\nHistorically, pets — everything from birds to cats to dogs — have been part of the White House. And Biden's dog Commander isn't alone. More than a few have ended up embroiled in some controversy. #press\n\nhttps://www.npr.org/2023/10/07/1203862402/bidens-dog-bites-commander?utm_medium=JSONFeed\u0026utm_campaign=news\u0026utm_source=press.coop\n\nhttps://media.npr.org/assets/img/2023/10/06/white-house-pets-update_wide-694d2daaa8ea229fb41c936e44a4a0952fd1e359.jpg",
"sig": "25696864b7ca229121cb09c48b774866aa9da3b35bb9b47a0060d3d9da84ec039bfda649462b3f7435b0e472843f02cb80d86e65225fb0961cec57e053a144a9"
}