Well, it finally happened. The Pentagon decided to treat the press like grown-ups — or at least like visitors to literally any other military base in America — and the media elite lost their minds.
You’d think Pete Hegseth had revoked their press passes and replaced them with ankle monitors. But nope. All he did was roll out a basic, standardized access policy that basically says: wear a badge, follow the rules, don’t solicit espionage, and act like you’re not above national security protocols. Seems reasonable enough.
Pentagon access is a privilege, not a right. So, here is @DeptofWar press credentialing FOR DUMMIES:
Press no longer roams free
Press must wear visible badge
Credentialed press no longer permitted to solicit criminal acts
DONE. Pentagon now has same rules as every…
— Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) October 13, 2025
Unless, of course, you’re The Washington Post, The Atlantic, or The New York Times — in which case this is apparently the end of democracy as we know it.
Let’s be honest: these are the same outlets that just last year were screaming for “accountability” and “oversight” when it came to Trump’s supposed “disdain for the press.” Now, in a twist of absolute irony, they’re outraged that a War Secretary — one who’s not interested in treating journalists like untouchable saints — has the gall to say, “Hey, maybe follow the same rules we make everyone else follow.”
Matt Murray of WaPo gave us the expected hand-wringing about “unnecessary constraints.” You’d think they were being forced to sign NDAs and burn their notebooks. Instead, they’re being asked to sign a memo that basically says, “Don’t endanger national security while you’re snooping around the Pentagon.” The horror.
— Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) October 13, 2025
Then came Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic, in full performative pearl-clutching mode, declaring that the policy “violates First Amendment rights.” Which part, exactly? The part where reporters can no longer pretend to be above the law? Or the part where they’re expected to not encourage people to commit crimes in the name of a juicy scoop?
And Pete Hegseth’s response? A hand-wave emoji. Not a speech, not a press conference, not a 3,000-word essay on Substack. Just a single emoji that says everything the American people already feel: “We’re done with your drama.”
— Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) October 13, 2025
Let’s not miss the real story here. The press has gotten so used to being catered to, coddled, and praised for doing the bare minimum — or in some cases, straight-up political activism dressed up as journalism — that the moment someone holds them to a real standard, they scream “oppression.” This isn’t about transparency. It’s about entitlement.
But here’s where it gets interesting.
Some conservative outlets — yes, even Newsmax and The Wall Street Journal — are suddenly uncomfortable too. Not because they’re embracing the drama of their leftist colleagues, but because the policy could possibly be weaponized by future administrations. It’s a fair concern — if you trust the media to be honest brokers (spoiler: most Americans don’t).
Still, let’s not conflate this with censorship. This isn’t the Pentagon telling journalists what they can’t report. It’s the Pentagon saying: “We’re done playing by your rules. Now you play by ours.”
Here’s what the press doesn’t want to admit: they still have access. No one is banning them. No one is stopping them from reporting. They’re being asked to do what service members, contractors, and even janitors at Fort Bragg do every single day: follow a protocol, wear an ID badge, and don’t break federal law while you’re on base.
And for that, the self-appointed defenders of the First Amendment are acting like they just got thrown in the brig.
The cherry on top? Hegseth’s little mic-drop moment at the end: “Pentagon access is a privilege, not a right.” Boom. That’s it. That’s the line.
If the media wants access to one of the most sensitive facilities on the planet, maybe — just maybe — they should be held to the same standard as the 19-year-old private mopping the floor outside the Situation Room.
But hey, maybe that’s too much to ask from journalists who’ve spent the last decade acting like they’re auditioning for a West Wing reboot.
So the real question isn’t whether this policy is fair. It’s whether the media can handle being treated like everyone else — or whether their addiction to special treatment will finally come crashing down under the weight of a security badge.
Either way, Hegseth’s waving. And something tells me he’s not the one who’s going to blink first.
The post Hegseth Enforcing New Media Policy At The Pentagon and Dismissing Outlets That Won’t Sign Off appeared first on Red Right Patriot.














Press no longer roams free
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