|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

under the hammer


Under the Hammer


Pages 1 2
...continued from page 1

Considering the major gaffes by ABC News lately that is really something. ABC reported that the Aurora, Colorado, shooter was a member of the Tea Party and that his mother confirmed he was the shooter when neither was true. Then ABC reported that Tony Scott, the filmmaker who recently committed suicide, had inoperable brain cancer and that also was based on rumor not fact.

Consider that the American people think ABC, with all of those recent mistakes, is more reliable than The New York Times and you have an idea of how far The New York Times has fallen.

Brisbane is also right in his description of what the problem is at The New York Times. It isn't part of some great conspiracy but simply that the people who work there share the same far-left world view or, as he calls it, "progressivism."

A great example of this occurred at The Washington Post in the 1980s when Post reporters were allowed to march in the pro-abortion parade. The reason the editors allowed this change in the policy against participating in political demonstrations was that they said they didn't think anyone would mind because everyone was in favor of abortion. It is an interesting opinion in a city where a huge pro-life rally involving hundreds of thousands of people takes place every year. Of course, none of those hundreds of thousands evidently worked in the news department of The Washington Post, or if they did they didn't tell anyone about their bizarre belief that a baby was a human being before birth.

People have too many ways to get news these days, and the people that use a few of these avenues soon realize that they are getting news with a very decided slant from the mainstream media.

Here is a paragraph from the front page of The New York Times on Monday, August 27 by Adam Nagourney in Tampa: "Mitt Romney arrives here this week to accept his nomination from the increasingly disparate coalition of factions known as the Republican Party, confronting the challenge of unifying them behind him and – should he win –exerting his own authority over a party that is in many ways still forging a post-Bush identity."

Certainly that is all true, but it is the way it is written that creates the bias. In the Democratic Party they talk about the same thing – calling it "the big tent," and celebrating the diversity of the party. In the Republican Party it is termed "disparate." Of course there are a lot of factions in the Republican Party. It is one of the two major parties in the country with millions of members from all 50 states, or as Obama says 57 states.

To top it off, the photo that goes with the article is of a bunch of children with Ron Paul signs. For those who have been asleep for the past couple of months Ron Paul is pretty much a nonfactor at this point in the presidential race.

, , ,

The attitude of the mainstream media toward the mistakes made by Obama and Vice President Joe Biden falls into that same category. They are laughed off for Obama and dismissed for Biden as "Joe just being Joe." The fact that Biden doesn't know what state he is in or what century and talks about putting black people back in chains is OK. When he asked someone in a wheelchair to stand up and be recognized that is just Joe being Joe.

But what do you think about when you read these words: Vice President Dan Quayle. I don't know that there has ever been a survey done, but "potato" or more accurately "potatoe" always pops into my head. Because Quayle actually read what was on a card given to him by a teacher that misspelled potato he was forever branded. The media wrote about it until it was part of the national fabric of political thought – a really easy trivia question for anyone old enough to remember.

Biden has made much worse mistakes, but the media mentions them and then lets them go and they don't stick. It's one of the big differences.

Obama either doesn't know how to spell Ohio or doesn't understand how to make letters with his arms, but that's OK. It's not really a problem. But if Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan makes that mistake you can bet you will read about it over and over again.

Pages 1 2

printPrint
emailEmail Link
CommentFeedback
shareShare
  1. print email
    August 30, 2012 | 02:18 PM

    "The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president."

    Mitch McConnell - Senate Minority Leader (R)

  2. print email
    Hammer's liberal conspiracy tinfoil hat
    August 31, 2012 | 02:11 PM

    This column is another example of Hammer's oft-repeated sideways suggestion that there is some kind of conspiracy revealed in the supposed 'domination' of the newspaper industry by liberals. Yet one would expect that someone in the newspaper business himself would know the primary economic driver of his own industry: readership. Newspapers that serve large urban areas are not 'dominated by liberals' - their readership is.

    It's not as if there exists some clandestine agenda among newspaper editors to foist a liberal ideology on their erstwhile conservative readers. Instead, the content of most every newspaper is a reflection of the audience that surrounds them. Plainly put - they adopt the perspective of their reader. Students of demography will tell you there is a long-standing truism in politics: cities are liberal, counties are conservative. We can observe this same general division along geo-political lines virtually all over the world, and throughout history.

    In big cities, the media is not what is liberal, it's the people who are liberal. Making his living off an appeal to our own local alternative urban conservative minority (the exception to the rule, as it were) you would expect Hammer to have been more keenly aware of this than most.



    Matt Duehring
  3. print email
    Obama 2016
    August 31, 2012 | 06:44 PM

    I noticed it did not take the newest liberal over at the local paper, to prove himself as a liberal.
    Many were hoping a new editor would revert, it back to a newspaper.
    Same old game.
    Hammer, you should be honored, I see the liberal rag, has taken you on lately.

    Miley
  4. print email
    fair and objective
    September 04, 2012 | 03:22 AM

    "The contempt that Obama has for the American people should be amazing, but we have all just gotten used to it."--it's amazing the sensationalist claptrap you put out and people "pay" for by buying advertising in your "news" paper. Thank God we don't all have our own papers as forums to spew poorly researched diatribes on the condition of media and politics in the country. Yes, there is a liberal bias when it comes to certain news outlets, but FOX News is the most watched cable news network in the country. So...where's the bias?

    Ryan Walker
  5. print email
    DNC Distress
    September 06, 2012 | 07:20 PM

    Did anyone else notice that during FOX8 coverage of the NC representation before Hunt's speech, the NC flag was held/waved/displayed upside down? So much for well represented.

    CBrown
Reader Feedback Submission
Use this form to submit Reader Feedback. Your submission will be reviewed by our staff before appearing on the Web site.
* required value
Your Name

Subject

Comment*

Verification*


PharmQuest
Rhino Search