RE: virus: FW: News Coverage as a Weapon

From: Blunderov (squooker@mweb.co.za)
Date: Sat May 29 2004 - 05:23:47 MDT

  • Next message: Joe Dees: "RE: virus: Chalabigate."

    Joe Dees
    Sent: 29 May 2004 12:31 PM
     
    Actually, Thornton is a professor at a California university.
    People implicitly expect to have their news reflect a valid representation
    of the actual state or process of affairs as far as the subject of the
    reportage is concerned. Unfortunately, this expectation is unfulfilled, due
    to the twin pressures of 'if it bleeds, it leads' (negative news and
    setbacks are 'sexier' that positive news and accomplishments), and the
    liberal (translation, anti-bush, therefore anti-war) bias of reporters. I'm
    not saying that they all do so consciously (although many do); it's just
    that when you are swimming in the same anti-Bush and anti-war stream as your
    fellow fishes, the water in which your school swims and which buoys most of
    you along is invisible to you (but not to the populace at large, which is
    why news reporters rank around the level of used-car salesmen and repo men
    in the trust and respect granted to them by the general citizenry).

    ----
    [Blunderov] Surely though, the properties of water are universal? In which
    case the waters in which pro-Bush, pro-war fishes swim should be invisible
    to them too? 
    I came across just such a fish the other day; 'The National Review On-line'.
    It was too small so I threw it back.
    Best Regards
    ---
    To unsubscribe from the Virus list go to <http://www.lucifer.com/cgi-bin/virus-l>
    


    This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Sat May 29 2004 - 05:25:38 MDT