All you have to do is read the headline.

"What happens when the white guys are back in charge," writes a CNN contributor.

"Another day, another team photo of the GOP celebrating together in a white-male photo shoot, as they prepare to strip away rights of women and protections for the most vulnerable. And another blunt reminder of why 1. political representation matters, and 2. few women in the room means the concerns of women get left out," writes Jill Filipovic. A brief editors note says she is a "journalist based in New York and Nairobi, Kenya," before pitching her latest book, "The H-Spot: The Feminist Pursuit of Happiness" and directing readers to follow her on Twitter.

The story includes a video that opens with a cropped photo of Trump and a lot of white guys. Like this one:

"Journalist" Filipovic uses the piece to air her grievances about the 2016 election — and to get graphic.

In the 2016 presidential election, there was a lot of talk about whether representation mattered. Some accused Hillary Clinton voters of voting with their vaginas. Some implored Americans to put gender aside and vote for the best person for the job -- even as Trump bragged about groping women and ran a campaign of aggrieved misogyny, blatantly appealing to angry white men. Now, the white guys are as in charge as they've ever been -- and they're using their power to improve their own lot at the rest of our expense. Were Congress 51% female, it's hard to imagine it would have passed a bill that lets states treat pregnancy as a pricey medical luxury rather than a normal part of most women's lives -- that is, covered as an "essential benefit." It's hard to imagine the bill would have allowed insurers in some states to treat injuries caused by rape or domestic violence as preexisting conditions and raise women's premiums accordingly.



Were there more people of color in the Republican Congress, one imagines this bill wouldn't be so devastating to the poor -- the poor in the US still being disproportionately black and brown. Elizabeth Warren has famously said that if you're not at the table, you're probably on the menu. Rich, older white men, who benefit handsomely from this health care bill, are dining well. And the rest of us are watching our basic right to get care for our minds and bodies eaten away.

Of course, with CNN, you just can't trust a word they say.

Rep. Diane Black, a Republican from Tennessee, was there. Elaine Chao, U.S. Secretary of Transportation and the first Asian American woman and first Chinese American in U.S. history to be appointed to a President's Cabinet, was there. Betsy DeVos, U.S. Secretary of Education, was there. Omarosa Manigault, White House Director of communications for the Office of Public Liaison, (who is black) was there. Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the the highest ranking Indian American in the Trump administration after US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, was there. As were a host of other women, both on stage and in the large audience. And quite a few, as Filipovic calls them "of color."

You can see a LOT of women in this un-cropped photo:

Yet that doesn't fit CNN's narrative (Trump is racist!).

So we'll do some "news" right now -- CNN style.

Only white women hate the new health care bill. See the picture? See for yourself. A picture is worth a thousands words. And a picture tells everything. As long as it's cropped the way you want it: