Sentences We Didn’t Finish By The Scrapbook October 5, 2015 4:00 am FacebookTwitterEmailPrint Add Washington Examiner on Google FacebookTwitterEmailPrint ‘Trigger warnings are nothing new. The practice originated in Internet communities, primarily for . . .” (“Why I Use Trigger Warnings,” by Kate Manne, assistant professor of philosophy at Cornell, New York Times, September 20). Recommended Stories Noem, Mullin, and O’Brien show how Trump 2.0 is differentThis senator offered a refreshingly candid explanation for her retirement plansIran — whose decision is it? TagsThe ScrapbookTWS Archive Related Content Investigations Biden officials who backed Microsoft software breached by China now work for Microsoft Editorials Newsom’s affordability minimum wage raised prices and cost jobs Congressional YouTubers enter politics, testing their influence in 2026 House races Op-Eds More promises kept: Trump is expanding opportunities to invest in America’s future Senate Thune says Trump relationship still ‘strong’ despite SAVE America rough patch