Media liberals conspire to shape news

actually, you're the joke...once again defending liberal bias in the media by insulting those that claim there is liberal bias....it would be fine, except you run around claiming you call out liberal bias in the media and as we can see from this thread and other threads, that is simply not true

I was goofing w/ tinfoil, because he's sensitive about the Beck thing. I kind of figured you'd seize on it for the gotcha, but no regrets - it's still great to see tinny's reaction about Beck.

If you're so sure that I never call out MSNBC's liberal bias, would you like to take a bet? I can find at least 3 examples in the next 5 minutes where I say they're biased, without your prompting. If I do, you have to proclaim your idiocy.

What do you say?
 


So the audio is transcribed by biggovernment.com?

The same biggovernment.com that was JUST BUSTED FOR RELEASING DOCTORED VIDEOTAPE?

The same biggovernment.com who got BUSTED FOR TAKING STATEMENTS OUT OF CONTEXT?

What we have here is a CREDIBILITY DEFECIT...find a more credible source or this is just another pathetic case of Tightie Rightie Whining.
 
LOL

I love desh. Booga booga! Breitbart!!

Like I said before, at least liberals admit they don't care about biased news.

The story is all over the news. I love how the litmus test for liberals is whether a main stream outlet runs with the story. Does CBS have to report about its own biased reporters for the story to be legitimate?

I suspect that this is true in the liberal mind.
 
The worst news bias I can recall was the right-wing cheerleading for the Iraq war, especially Faux. These people did a great job of smearing anyone against that debacle as treasonous and un-American.

A University of Maryland study on American public opinion found that:

* Fifty-seven percent of mainstream media viewers believed the falsity that Iraq gave substantial support to Al-Qaeda, or was directly involved in the September 11 attacks (48% after invasion).
* Sixty-nine percent believed the falsity that Saddam Hussein was personally involved in the September 11 attacks.
* Twenty-two percent believed the falsity that weapons of mass destruction had been found in Iraq. (Twenty-one percent believed that chem/bio weapons had actually been used against U.S. soldiers in Iraq during 2003)
* In the composite analysis of the PIPA study, 80% of Fox News watchers had one or more of these misperceptions, in contrast to 71% for CBS and 27% who tuned to NPR/PBS.[17]

In February 2004, a study was released by the liberal national media watchdog group FAIR. According to the study, which took place during October 2003, current or former government or military officials accounted for 76 percent of all 319 sources for news stories about Iraq which aired on network news channels.

Media coverage of the Iraq War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia@@AMEPARAM@@/wiki/File:Unbalanced_scales.svg" class="image"><img alt="Unbalanced scales.svg" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fe/Unbalanced_scales.svg/45px-Unbalanced_scales.svg.png"@@AMEPARAM@@commons/thumb/f/fe/Unbalanced_scales.svg/45px-Unbalanced_scales.svg.png
 
The worst news bias I can recall was the right-wing cheerleading for the Iraq war, especially Faux. These people did a great job of smearing anyone against that debacle as treasonous and un-American.

A University of Maryland study on American public opinion found that:

* Fifty-seven percent of mainstream media viewers believed the falsity that Iraq gave substantial support to Al-Qaeda, or was directly involved in the September 11 attacks (48% after invasion).
* Sixty-nine percent believed the falsity that Saddam Hussein was personally involved in the September 11 attacks.
* Twenty-two percent believed the falsity that weapons of mass destruction had been found in Iraq. (Twenty-one percent believed that chem/bio weapons had actually been used against U.S. soldiers in Iraq during 2003)
* In the composite analysis of the PIPA study, 80% of Fox News watchers had one or more of these misperceptions, in contrast to 71% for CBS and 27% who tuned to NPR/PBS.[17]

In February 2004, a study was released by the liberal national media watchdog group FAIR. According to the study, which took place during October 2003, current or former government or military officials accounted for 76 percent of all 319 sources for news stories about Iraq which aired on network news channels.

Media coverage of the Iraq War - Wikipedia, the free [email]encyclopedia
Get 'em girlfriend! Good!
 
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