Liberal Media Bias?

Lumpy wrote:

“Guess you weren’t paying attention during the 2000 election, where the media gave Bush a free pass, while raking Gore over the coals.”

Was it not the evil conservative (which they’re not) Fox News that broke the story just days before the election about Bush’s past drinking problems (DUIs)? Both Bush and Gore got raked over the coals. No one got a free pass.

“I guess you didn’t notice that during the run-up to invading Iraq, the press basically parrotted whatever the White House talking points were, rather than (for example) really examining the White House’s claims that there was a connection between Saddam and Al Qaeda, or that Iraq was actually an imminent threat with WMDs.”

The Bush Administration put forth a good case. Again, using foreign intelligence (that never wavered in their beliefs of an imminent threat, unlike our CIA), not just our own to make a case with WMDs. WMDs, as has been said a hundred times, was one of many reasons for the invasion. Many of the media outlets probably came to similar conclusions as the Bush admin., that doesn’t mean they’re conservative.

Lumpy, if you can’t see the Left leaning/Internationalist bent on the news, I can’t help you and won’t be able to convince you.

When was the last time ABC, NBC, or CBS said anything about our pathetic border policy? The answer is never. Probably because that isn’t PC and they could care less. Hell, they probably don’t want any borders.

Dustin

Peroutka in 04

Another good example, from Andrew McCarthy:

GOTTA LOVE THE NYT–PART 324,891 [Andy McCarthy]
I know it’s ho-hum by now, but the New York Times, which finally got around to covering the Sandy Berger fich-fest today, waited until PARAGRAPH 16 of its story to mention the post-Millennium after action review – the document Berger has been reported to have somehow “inadvertently” snatched on multiple occasions. This minor detail – i.e., the apparent inadvertent target of Berger’s apparent inadvertent exertions – is the subject of a dead-on lead Wall Street Journal editorial this morning, and rated this near the top (paragraph 3) of today’s Washington Post story: “A government official with knowledge of the probe said Berger removed from archives files all five or six drafts of a critique of the government’s response to the millennium terrorism threat, which he said was classified ‘codeword,’ the government’s highest level of document security.” I’m starting to have trouble even remembering the good old days when the Times at least pretended at objectivity.
Posted at 09:33 AM

Wasn’t the story used as an example of a “dirty trick” used by the Democrats? (What a dirty trick for the Democrats to bring this up at the last second!) Thanks for letting me know FoxNews was behind the story.

From what I hear, real conservatives are pissed that Team Bush has relaxed the border crossings from Mexico (up 40% this year, from what I’ve heard). You want the news to spend time on border policy? Allrighty then.

Read Biltrightwave’s post again guys.

The whole point of arguing the media bias seems moot. If it is biased, there seems to be sweet dick all anybody can do about it.

Well, unless you happen to be rich and decide to buy the media so you can slant it your way…

Anybody have a few hundred million dollars they’d like to lend me? How about one of them there hyper-rich hyper-partisan types?

Lumpy,

Fox News and especially Bill O’Reilly hammer bush on the Border policy. I love when people accuse Bill O of being a big right wing conservative extremist. He has a strong oppinion but he is far from an extremist, and he takes issue with anyone right or left.

And Fox news didn’t run the story as a (Shady Tacticts story) like you claim, why would someone run an exclusive story and claim that the running of the story was dirty tacticts. Your thought process here defies logic.

Vegita ~ Prince of all Sayajins

[quote]Lumpy wrote:
Was it not the evil conservative (which
Read Biltrightwave’s post again guys.
[/quote]

biltrightwave’s post was a good critique of the particular study in question. It was not a refutation of the idea of media bias.

[quote]vroom wrote:

The whole point of arguing the media bias seems moot. If it is biased, there seems to be sweet dick all anybody can do about it.

[/quote]

That is true, but it is worth discussing. It is a major reason why I listen to talk radio. I feel like I get news there that is actually important.

Lumpy,

From what I remember the Bush DUI story was first reported by Fox News and had nothing to do with Democrat “dirty tricks”. It was simply a news story. It was also an illustraition of how supposedly conservative Fox News is.

The border situation should concern all Americans, not just real conservatives, as you say. You’ve mentioned you live in New York, I would suggest you take a trip to the south and southwestern states and see first hand what unfettered, illegal immigration has and will do to our country.

Bush’s lack of concern for our borders is one of the main reasons why I’m not voting for him this year. As I mentioned above, talk radio and a select few on TV will discuss border policy. The alphabet stations, CNN and MSNBC will not.

Dustin

Peroutka in 04

Some good stuff on network news media bias in the Sandy Berger coverage.

http://www.mrc.org/realitycheck/2004/fax20040721.asp

Sandy Berger’s Defense
Lawyers in the Press

It?s like the Clinton administration never ended. Once again, a Clinton aide is caught doing suspicious things with documents ? ?inadvertently? disposing of a few ? and some national newscasters are making excuses for potentially criminal behavior, or changing the subject to identifying a vast partisan conspiracy at work.

Sandy Berger, President Clinton?s National Security Adviser during his second term, removed highly classified material from the National Archives, triggering a federal criminal investigation. When the story broke, some reporters protested the story?s timing. 

CBS anchor Dan Rather insisted ?this was triggered by a carefully orchestrated leak about Berger, and the timing of it appears to be no coincidence.? Reporter John Roberts found: ?Republicans and Democrats alike say the timing of the investigation’s disclosure smells like politics, leaked to the press just two days before the 9/11 Commission report comes out.?

The problem with Rather?s ?carefully orchestrated leak? language is that he has no idea of the leaker or their orchestration. On August 17, 2000, Rather used the same phrase when it leaked on the night of Al Gore?s convention speech that a new grand jury would investigate Bill Clinton. Rather suggested a GOP dirty trick: ?Timing is everything,? he began, and now Gore must speak ?against the backdrop of a potentially damaging, carefully orchestrated leak about President Clinton.? The next night, CBS?s Jim Stewart noted ?a judge appointed by a Democrat,? Jimmy Carter, was actually the leaker. Rather never apologized for his error.

ABC also portrayed the controversy last night as a ?political firestorm between Republicans and Democrats,? but Pierre Thomas noted what CBS ignored: ?some of the information  was apparently critical of Clinton?s anti-terror efforts.? ABC?s Nightline, which often spotlights critics of Bush?s foreign policy, skipped Berger last night.

Today on Good Morning America, co-host Charlie Gibson interviewed George Stephanopoulos, who predicted ?I think this is likely to blow over.? Gibson did not explain that George worked for years with Sandy Berger, or ask him questions based on that experience. ABC also failed to produce their consultant Richard Clarke, who wrote the document at the center of the probe.

NBC reporter Pete Williams noted Berger?s defenses, then balanced them: ?Government officials tell NBC News that Archives employees say it wasn?t so innocent, that they noticed documents were missing after day one? and that the purloined pages suggest the Clinton team ?was not paying enough attention to terrorism.? By contrast, Today has underlined Berger?s defense with soft interviews two days in a row. Yesterday, Katie Couric talked to Berger?s friend David Gergen. Today, Couric interviewed Berger?s defense lawyer, former Clinton aide Lanny Breuer. No Berger critics have been interviewed.

CNN?s NewsNight also featured Gergen last night, with his talk of Berger the ?hero? of the war on terror. Reporter Kelli Arena went furthest in describing Archives employee claims that Berger shoved documents in his socks and pants. CNN also had a tough Wolf Blitzer Reports interview with Berger?s lawyer, with Blitzer insisting ?Sandy Berger doesn?t do things inadvertently,? and asking: ?How is it possible that this document so sensitive, which he took home, took to his office at his home, presumably, disappeared?? The other networks should ask that, too.

? Tim Graham and Brent Baker

More good stuff on general news media favoritism of John Kerry:

http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040712.asp#1

Mag Editor: Media ?Want Kerry to Win,?
Cover: ?Sunshine Boys?

Recognition of the obvious. The media ?wants Kerry to win? and so ?they?re going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and dynamic and optimistic? and ?there?s going to be this glow about? them, Evan Thomas, the Assistant Managing Editor of Newsweek, admitted on Inside Washington over the weekend. He should know. His magazine this week sports a smiling Kerry and Edwards on its cover with the yearning headline, ?The Sunshine Boys?? Inside, an article carrying Thomas? byline contrasted how ?Dick Cheney projects the bleakness of a Wyoming winter, while John Edwards always appears to be strolling in the Carolina sunshine.? The cover story touted how Kerry and Edwards ?became a buddy-buddy act, hugging and whispering like Starsky and Hutch after consuming the evidence.?

 Newsweek?s competitor, Time, also gushed about the Democratic ticket, dubbing them, in the headline over their story, ?The Gleam Team.?

 Washington Post media reporter Howard Kurtz also realized the media?s championing of the Democratic ticket and made it a focus of his Sunday Reliable Sources show on CNN. The on screen topic cues: ?Edwards Lovefest?? and ?Media?s Dream Team.?

 Kurtz?s Washington Post on Sunday well illustrated the media?s infatuation with Kerry and Edwards. ?Kerry Vows to Restore 'Truth' to Presidency,? announced a July 11 front page headline. Inside, on page A-8, a headline declared: ?Kerry, Edwards Revel in Brotherhood of Campaign.? The subhead: ?Energy, Enthusiasm Infectious as Democrats Take Message to Battleground States.?

 For the front page story by Jim VandeHei and Dan Balz: www.washingtonpost.com

 For the inside article by the same two reporters, but with their names flipped: www.washingtonpost.com

 On Inside Washington, a weekend discussion show taped at and run by the Gannett-owned CBS affiliate in Washington, DC, WUSA-TV, and carried by many PBS stations across the country, Thomas pointed out the boost to the Kerry/Edwards ticket provided by the press corps:
 ?There?s one other base here: the media. Let?s talk a little media bias here. The media, I think, wants Kerry to win. And I think they?re going to portray Kerry and Edwards -- I?m talking about the establishment media, not Fox, but -- they?re going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and dynamic and optimistic and all, there?s going to be this glow about them that some, is going to be worth, collectively, the two of them, that?s going to be worth maybe 15 points.?

 The week?s Newsweek, dated July 19, certainly backs up Thomas? contention. Over a smiling picture on the cover of Kerry and Edwards, Newsweek ever hopefully asks: ?The Sunshine Boys?? To see the cover: www.msnbc.msn.com

 Inside, at least in the Web-posted version, the headline reads: ?Warming Up Kerry.? The subhead: ?Blue skies: Their energy was infectious, but their numbers barely moved. Can Kerry-Edwards convert smiles into votes against Team Bush? Game on.? Howard Fineman and Richard Wolffe asserted at one point:
 ?Indeed, Edwards's ingratiating incandescence has already brightened Kerry. The two became a buddy-buddy act, hugging and whispering like Starsky and Hutch after consuming the evidence.?

 Whatever that means.

 For the article in full: http://www.msnbc.msn.com

 ?The Boyish Wonder? is the headline over a story on which Thomas shared a byline with Susannah Meadows and Arian Campo-Flores. The subhead: ?Happy warrior: He was no superstar. But John Edwards's determination and ability to read the defense took him to the top.? The trio began the laudatory piece:
 ?In politics, self-made men seem to fall into two categories: sunny and dark. Both Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon began as farm boys, but while Ike radiated corn-fed smiles, Nixon seemed to be constantly brooding over some slight. In the 2004 election, Dick Cheney projects the bleakness of a Wyoming winter, while John Edwards always appears to be strolling in the Carolina sunshine...?

 For the second Newsweek story in full: http://www.msnbc.msn.com 

This doesn’t indicate biased coverage does it? Nah, couldn’t be…

[Scroll down about 3/4 of the way if you want to follow the link]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14102-2004Jul25.html?nav=rss_politics

Wilson, Take 2

Former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV’s allegations that President Bush misled the country about Saddam Hussein seeking uranium from Africa was a huge media story, fueled by an investigation into who outed his CIA-operative wife. According to a database search, NBC carried 40 stories, CBS 30 stories, ABC 18, The Washington Post 96, the New York Times 70, the Los Angeles Times 48.

But a Senate Intelligence Committee report that contradicts some of Wilson’s account and supports Bush’s State of the Union claim hasn’t received nearly as much attention. “NBC Nightly News” and ABC’s “World News Tonight” have each done a story. But CBS hasn’t reported it – despite a challenge by Republican Chairman Ed Gillespie on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” noting that the network featured Wilson on camera 15 times. A spokeswoman says CBS is looking into the matter.

Newspapers have done slightly better. The Post, which was the first to report the findings July 10, has run two stories, an editorial and an ombudsman’s column; the New York Times two stories and an op-ed column; and the Los Angeles Times two stories. Wilson, meanwhile, has defended himself from what he calls “a Republican smear campaign” in op-ed pieces in The Post and Los Angeles Times.

Is the New York Times liberal? Of course it is – at least according to its Public Editor, aka Ombudsman:

Is The New York Times a Liberal Newspaper?
By DANIEL OKRENT

Published: July 25, 2004

Of course it is.

The fattest file on my hard drive is jammed with letters from the disappointed, the dismayed and the irate who find in this newspaper a liberal bias that infects not just political coverage but a range of issues from abortion to zoology to the appointment of an admitted Democrat to be its watchdog. (That would be me.) By contrast, readers who attack The Times from the left - and there are plenty - generally confine their complaints to the paper’s coverage of electoral politics and foreign policy.

I’ll get to the politics-and-policy issues this fall (I want to watch the campaign coverage before I conclude anything), but for now my concern is the flammable stuff that ignites the right. These are the social issues: gay rights, gun control, abortion and environmental regulation, among others. And if you think The Times plays it down the middle on any of them, you’ve been reading the paper with your eyes closed.

But if you’re examining the paper’s coverage of these subjects from a perspective that is neither urban nor Northeastern nor culturally seen-it-all; if you are among the groups The Times treats as strange objects to be examined on a laboratory slide (devout Catholics, gun owners, Orthodox Jews, Texans); if your value system wouldn’t wear well on a composite New York Times journalist, then a walk through this paper can make you feel you’re traveling in a strange and forbidding world.

Start with the editorial page, so thoroughly saturated in liberal theology that when it occasionally strays from that point of view the shocked yelps from the left overwhelm even the ceaseless rumble of disapproval from the right.

Across the gutter, the Op-Ed page editors do an evenhanded job of representing a range of views in the essays from outsiders they publish - but you need an awfully heavy counterweight to balance a page that also bears the work of seven opinionated columnists, only two of whom could be classified as conservative (and, even then, of the conservative subspecies that supports legalization of gay unions and, in the case of William Safire, opposes some central provisions of the Patriot Act).

But opinion pages are opinion pages, and “balanced opinion page” is an oxymoron. So let’s move elsewhere. In the Sunday magazine, the culture-wars applause-o-meter chronically points left. On the Arts & Leisure front page every week, columnist Frank Rich slices up President Bush, Mel Gibson, John Ashcroft and other paladins of the right in prose as uncompromising as Paul Krugman’s or Maureen Dowd’s. The culture pages often feature forms of art, dance or theater that may pass for normal (or at least tolerable) in New York but might be pretty shocking in other places.

Same goes for fashion coverage, particularly in the Sunday magazine, where I’ve encountered models who look like they’re preparing to murder (or be murdered), and others arrayed in a mode you could call dominatrix chic. If you’re like Jim Chapman, one of my correspondents who has given up on The Times, you’re lost in space. Wrote Chapman, “Whatever happened to poetry that required rhyme and meter, to songs that required lyrics and tunes, to clothing ads that stressed the costume rather than the barely clothed females and slovenly dressed, slack-jawed, unshaven men?”

In the Sunday Styles section, there are gay wedding announcements, of course, but also downtown sex clubs and T-shirts bearing the slogan, “I’m afraid of Americans.” The findings of racial-equity reformer Richard Lapchick have been appearing in the sports pages for decades (“Since when is diversity a sport?” one e-mail complainant grumbled). The front page of the Metro section has featured a long piece best described by its subhead, “Cross-Dressers Gladly Pay to Get in Touch with Their Feminine Side.” And a creationist will find no comfort in Science Times.

Not that creationists should expect to find comfort in Science Times. Newspapers have the right to decide what’s important and what’s not. But their editors must also expect that some readers will think: “This does not represent me or my interests. In fact, it represents my enemy.” So is it any wonder that the offended or befuddled reader might consider everything else in the paper - including, say, campaign coverage - suspicious as well?

Times publisher Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr. doesn’t think this walk through The Times is a tour of liberalism. He prefers to call the paper’s viewpoint “urban.” He says that the tumultuous, polyglot metropolitan environment The Times occupies means “We’re less easily shocked,” and that the paper reflects “a value system that recognizes the power of flexibility.”

He’s right; living in New York makes a lot of people think that way, and a lot of people who think that way find their way to New York (me, for one). The Times has chosen to be an unashamed product of the city whose name it bears, a condition magnified by the been-there-done-that irony afflicting too many journalists. Articles containing the word “postmodern” have appeared in The Times an average of four times a week this year - true fact! - and if that doesn’t reflect a Manhattan sensibility, I’m Noam Chomsky.

But it’s one thing to make the paper’s pages a congenial home for editorial polemicists, conceptual artists, the fashion-forward or other like-minded souls (European papers, aligned with specific political parties, have been doing it for centuries), and quite another to tell only the side of the story your co-religionists wish to hear. I don’t think it’s intentional when The Times does this. But negligence doesn’t have to be intentional.

The gay marriage issue provides a perfect example. Set aside the editorial page, the columnists or the lengthy article in the magazine (“Toward a More Perfect Union,” by David J. Garrow, May 9) that compared the lawyers who won the Massachusetts same-sex marriage lawsuit to Thurgood Marshall and Martin Luther King. That’s all fine, especially for those of us who believe that homosexual couples should have precisely the same civil rights as heterosexuals.

But for those who also believe the news pages cannot retain their credibility unless all aspects of an issue are subject to robust examination, it’s disappointing to see The Times present the social and cultural aspects of same-sex marriage in a tone that approaches cheerleading. So far this year, front-page headlines have told me that “For Children of Gays, Marriage Brings Joy,” (March 19, 2004); that the family of “Two Fathers, With One Happy to Stay at Home,” (Jan. 12, 2004) is a new archetype; and that “Gay Couples Seek Unions in God’s Eyes,” (Jan. 30, 2004). I’ve learned where gay couples go to celebrate their marriages; I’ve met gay couples picking out bridal dresses; I’ve been introduced to couples who have been together for decades and have now sanctified their vows in Canada, couples who have successfully integrated the world of competitive ballroom dancing, couples whose lives are the platonic model of suburban stability.

Every one of these articles was perfectly legitimate. Cumulatively, though, they would make a very effective ad campaign for the gay marriage cause. You wouldn’t even need the articles: run the headlines over the invariably sunny pictures of invariably happy people that ran with most of these pieces, and you’d have the makings of a life insurance commercial.

This implicit advocacy is underscored by what hasn’t appeared. Apart from one excursion into the legal ramifications of custody battles (“Split Gay Couples Face Custody Hurdles,” by Adam Liptak and Pam Belluck, March 24), potentially nettlesome effects of gay marriage have been virtually absent from The Times since the issue exploded last winter.

The San Francisco Chronicle runs an uninflected article about Congressional testimony from a Stanford scholar making the case that gay marriage in the Netherlands has had a deleterious effect on heterosexual marriage. The Boston Globe explores the potential impact of same-sex marriage on tax revenues, and the paucity of reliable research on child-rearing in gay families. But in The Times, I have learned next to nothing about these issues, nor about partner abuse in the gay community, about any social difficulties that might be encountered by children of gay couples or about divorce rates (or causes, or consequences) among the 7,000 couples legally joined in Vermont since civil union was established there four years ago.

On a topic that has produced one of the defining debates of our time, Times editors have failed to provide the three-dimensional perspective balanced journalism requires. This has not occurred because of management fiat, but because getting outside one’s own value system takes a great deal of self-questioning. Six years ago, the ownership of this sophisticated New York institution decided to make it a truly national paper. Today, only 50 percent of The Times’s readership resides in metropolitan New York, but the paper’s heart, mind and habits remain embedded here. You can take the paper out of the city, but without an effort to take the city and all its attendant provocations, experiments and attitudes out of the paper, readers with a different worldview will find The Times an alien beast.

Taking the New York out of The New York Times would be a really bad idea. But a determination by the editors to be mindful of the weight of its hometown’s presence would not.

?

With that, I’m leaving town. Next week, letters from readers; after that, this space will be occupied by my polymathic pal Jack Rosenthal, a former Times writer and editor whose name appeared on the masthead for 25 years. I’m going to spend August in a deck chair and see if I can once again read The Times like a civilian. See you after Labor Day.

The public editor is the readers’ representative. His opinions and conclusions are his own. His column appears at least twice monthly in this section.

This is a question Dan Rather actually posed to John Kerry – it’s obviously not biased at all… [as a lawyer, I am very keenly aware of how to embed a premise within a question…]

“Have you ever had any anger about President Bush, who spent his time during the Vietnam War in the National Guard, running in effect a campaign that does its best to diminish your service in Vietnam? You have to be at least irritated by that, or have you been?”

XXXXX DRUDGE REPORT XXXXX MON JULY 26, 2004 11:05:28 ET XXXXX

USA TODAY SPIKES ANN COULTER COLUMN AT CONVENTION

USA Today editors have spiked a daily convention column they commissioned from conservative controversialist Ann Coulter, the DRUDGE REPORT has learned.

Coulter filed her first report from Boston Sunday night, only to be told hours later that editors found it “unusable” and “not funny.”

“Apparently no one at USA TODAY had ever read Ann Coulter before!” Coulter, who has sold nearly a million copies of her various works and his written a syndicated column for five years, said from Boston.

MOORE ON THE FLOOR, BUT ANN IN THE CAN

Meanwhile Leftwing controversialist and Bush hater Michael Moore has free reign on the floor of the Dem convention hall – and has been hired to write for USA TODAY at the Republican convention!

“Coulter has been hired for Boston, Moore has been hired for NY,” a USA TODAY source explained, unaware of the fallout with Coulter in Boston.

Joe

I am totally disgusted that no one picked up on Dustins pig ignorant and frankly racist comment:

“All that was accomplished was the radical sub-human Muslims gaining a foothold in the Balkans and killing Christians”.

This is totally the case of a clueless person talking about something he has no idea. To call someone “sub-human” boggles me. Its people like Dustin and his view of who is ‘human’ and ‘sub-human’ that legitimises things like ethnic cleansing and the degradation of humanity.

[quote]And Fox news didn’t run the story as a (Shady Tacticts story) like you claim, why would someone run an exclusive story and claim that the running of the story was dirty tacticts. Your thought process here defies logic.
[/quote]

Umm, wha?

You are correct, FoxNews did NOT run the story and then call foul on itself. Yes, that does defy logic. Instead, FoxNews ran the story and then the Bush campaign complained it was a last-second dirty trick from the other side, to leak the story just days before the election.

As far as the NY Times having a liberal slant regarding social issues, remember that the NY Times is a local paper that reflects local standards. Most people here in NY are tolerant of gays, for example, so the paper reflects that. The NY Times is not going to address issues as if it is a paper from small town Texas. The NY Times is also not trying to be USA Today. If you don’t care for the NY bias, then stick to your local paper.

There are also conservatives working at the NY times, such as David Brooks.

If the paper was so liberal, it would not be apologizing now, for giving a biased slant on the run up to the Iraq war (the Times just repeated the White House lines on WMD and the Iraq-911 connection, which turned out to be false).

The truth is a lot more sloppy… there are liberal and conservative writers at the NY Times (and every other major media outlet) and most reporters try to write in an unbiased way, or to at least conceal a bias. Reporters and editors are also voters and taxpayers and it is ridiculous to think there is no bias whatsoever. But people refer to “The Media” as if it is all the same thing, and everyone in the media has the same opinions and same goals. As if everyone at the NY Times thinks the same way.

That is an overly simplistic view of the media.

Both of these are so true…

"…Can you imagine if it was learned that a former Reagan or Bush official was under investigation for removing sensitive documents? The three major networks would be running 'round the clock coverage of the scandal. Conversely, one of their fellow travelers stuffs classified documents into his clothing and it is apparently deemed a non-issue.

By Berger’s own admission, he smuggled out classified documents which dealt with matters of terrorism. He placed these papers into his pants, jacket, socks, and his briefcase. Imagine for a moment, if Donald Rumsfeld had admitted to the same…The press would call for his head on a silver platter!

The liberal pundits refused to deal with the issue of Berger stealing sensitive documents, and instead focused upon the “timing” of this information. I wonder how much concern for “timing” Alan Colmes and Katie Couric would have if a conservative had pilfered these same papers?

A hard and fast rule amongst liberals is to ignore the facts and spin, spin, spin! Or in this case, just drop the story and wait for someone on the right to screw up!

The news media has an obligation to report the news and to report it fairly. Unfortunately, the news media has been over-run with liberals and has become nothing more than the mouthpiece of the Democratic Party. Today, most of the people who consider themselves to be journalists would be better described as propagandists.

The liberal news media may not be actually lying about Sandy Berger. However, their failure to report on this scandal should be considered a lie of omission.

Mike Royko is turning over in his grave!

http://www.americandaily.com/article/4439

And this:http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/143lkblo.asp

Liberal Media Evidence
A new poll by the Pew Center proves that the media is as liberal as ever. When will “diversity” mean more conservatives?
by Fred Barnes
05/28/2004 12:00:00 AM
THE ARGUMENT over whether the national press is dominated by liberals is over. Since 1962, there have been 11 surveys of the media that sought the political views of hundreds of journalists. In 1971, they were 53 percent liberal, 17 percent conservative. In a 1976 survey of the Washington press corps, it was 59 percent liberal, 18 percent conservative. A 1985 poll of 3,200 reporters found them to be self-identified as 55 percent liberal, 17 percent conservative. In 1996, another survey of Washington journalists pegged the breakdown as 61 percent liberal, 9 percent conservative. Now, the new study by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found the national media to be 34 percent liberal and 7 percent conservative.

Over 40-plus years, the only thing that’s changed in the media’s politics is that many national journalists have now cleverly decided to call themselves moderates. But their actual views haven’t changed, the Pew survey showed. Their political beliefs are close to those of self-identified liberals and nowhere near those of conservatives. And the proportion of liberals to conservatives in the press, either 3-to-1 or 4-to-1, has stayed the same. That liberals are dominant is now beyond dispute.

Does this affect coverage? Is there really liberal bias? The answers are, of course, yes and yes. It couldn’t be any other way. Think for a moment if the numbers were reversed and conservatives had outnumbered liberals in the media for the past four decades. Would President Bush be getting kinder coverage? For sure,
and I’ll bet any liberal would agree with that. Would President Reagan have been treated with less hostility if the national press was conservative-dominated? Yes, again. And I could go on.

The Pew poll also found that 55 percent of national journalists believe that Bush should be treated more critically by the press than he has been. They think he’s gotten off too easy, despite empirical evidence of media Bush bashing. The Center for Media and Public Affairs has examined the coverage of Bush by the broadcast network evening news shows and found only two periods of favorable coverage: in the weeks after September 11 and during the actual war in Iraq. This year, roughly 75 percent of the stories about the Democratic presidential candidates were positive. For Bush, they’ve been 60-plus percent negative.

With the evidence of liberal dominance so overwhelming, a leading press critic is now calling for more ideological diversity in the media. Tom Rosenstiel, who helped design the Pew poll and who runs the Project for Excellence in Journalism, says it’s necessary not to think just of diversity that makes newsrooms “look like America,” but to create a press corps that “thinks like America.”

In truth, the effort to hire more minorities and women has had the effect of making the media more liberal. Both these groups tend to have liberal politics, and this is accentuated by the fact that many of the women recruited into journalism are young and single, precisely those with the most liberal views. “By diversifying the profession in one way,” Rosenstiel says, “they were making it more homogenous in another.”

How true!!

Joe

[quote]Lumpy wrote:

As far as the NY Times having a liberal slant regarding social issues, remember that the NY Times is a local paper that reflects local standards. Most people here in NY are tolerant of gays, for example, so the paper reflects that. The NY Times is not going to address issues as if it is a paper from small town Texas. The NY Times is also not trying to be USA Today. If you don’t care for the NY bias, then stick to your local paper.[/quote]

When a paper is claiming to be the American paper of record, it in incumbent on that paper to attempt to balance its news coverage. This is unbiased reporting, and it used to be considered the goal, even if it was difficult to obtain perfectly in practice. The NY Times has ceased even trying – its whole paper is the opinion section.

Two token conservatives highlight, rather than balance, the liberal bias. That said, this is the opinion section, and if the worst thing about the paper was that it had a liberal opinion section you would hear nary a complaint from me. However, the problem is the liberal bias in the news reporting (and less so the other sections such as culture, given it isn’t acknowledged).

Actually, your example cuts precisely the wrong way. If you look back at NYT coverage, it was solidly against the White House. It just didn’t think to question the WMD claims, mostly because every other country in the world seemingly agreed Saddam had WMD (as I have pointed out in previous threads). What they are doing is apologizing for not being enterprising enough in their opposition to the White House, which, if you think about it, doesn’t rely belie a liberal bias. Especially when they’re complaining that their news coverage wasn’t biased enough.

[quote]The truth is a lot more sloppy… there are liberal and conservative writers at the NY Times (and every other major media outlet) and most reporters try to write in an unbiased way, or to at least conceal a bias. Reporters and editors are also voters and taxpayers and it is ridiculous to think there is no bias whatsoever. But people refer to “The Media” as if it is all the same thing, and everyone in the media has the same opinions and same goals. As if everyone at the NY Times thinks the same way.

That is an overly simplistic view of the media.[/quote]

No, this betrays a misunderstanding of the argument. Of course not everyone thinks the same way, and of course at an entity the size of the NYT you will have some conservative writers. The problem is institutional bias toward liberalism due to the overwhelming majority of writers/reporters/editors liberal views, combined with their lack of any attempt to keep those views out of the news section, where they do not belong.

There is not a single liberal newspaper in the United States. I sure wish there was one; I’d buy it.

All America has is conservative-owned, conservative-controlled, conservative-written media across the board. I think it’s a sham how the entire US media refused to show any images of anything that might be REMOTELY non-supportive of Bush’s Iraq War effort. I support the War there, but it’s clear that our media is controlled totally by conservatives because you had to go out of the country to read any facts from Iraq which showed things as they really happened.

[quote]Pyotr wrote:
There is not a single liberal newspaper in the United States. I sure wish there was one; I’d buy it.

All America has is conservative-owned, conservative-controlled, conservative-written media across the board. I think it’s a sham how the entire US media refused to show any images of anything that might be REMOTELY non-supportive of Bush’s Iraq War effort. I support the War there, but it’s clear that our media is controlled totally by conservatives because you had to go out of the country to read any facts from Iraq which showed things as they really happened.[/quote]

You’ve got to be kidding me. First of all, you define liberal vs. conservative based on one single issue – and that’s not even counting the fact you’re incorrect.

Second, whoever owns the various media outlet has approximately zero say on editorial control and policy. You would hear the media crying bloody murder if anyone attempted to exert editorial control from the ownership position. About the only thing an owner can do is hire the publisher.

Third, I don’t suppose you read – if you did, you might note the preponderance of negative stories coming out of Iraq, versus the lack of stories on successes or accomplishments. You can find out about these if you do some searching, but they’re not exactly front-and-center at the NYT or WaPo.

Get yourself some subscriptions to the Nation, NYT and Mother Jones, and I’m sure you’ll be a happy little camper.

http://www.thatliberalmedia.com/archives/002397.html#002397

The Biased (Or Attention-Deficit) Media

Howard Kurtz notes a disconnect in the coverage of Joe Wilson’s disintegrating credibility. In a secondary article of his Media Notes column, Kurtz has the numbers to demonstrate either a leftist bias or simply lousy and lazy journalism in the mainstream media, especially broadcast outlets:

Former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV's allegations that President Bush misled the country about Saddam Hussein seeking uranium from Africa was a huge media story, fueled by an investigation into who outed his CIA-operative wife. According to a database search, NBC carried 40 stories, CBS 30 stories, ABC 18, The Washington Post 96, the New York Times 70, the Los Angeles Times 48.

But a Senate Intelligence Committee report that contradicts some of Wilson's account and supports Bush's State of the Union claim hasn't received nearly as much attention. "NBC Nightly News" and ABC's "World News Tonight" have each done a story. But CBS hasn't reported it -- despite a challenge by Republican Chairman Ed Gillespie on CBS's "Face the Nation," noting that the network featured Wilson on camera 15 times. A spokeswoman says CBS is looking into the matter.

Newspapers have done slightly better. The Post, which was the first to report the findings July 10, has run two stories, an editorial and an ombudsman's column; the New York Times two stories and an op-ed column; and the Los Angeles Times two stories. Wilson, meanwhile, has defended himself from what he calls "a Republican smear campaign" in op-ed pieces in The Post and Los Angeles Times.

In case you can’t track Kurtz’s numbers, here’s a handy scorecard for you:

Outlet…Wilson Before…Wilson After
CBS…30…0
NBC…40…1
ABC…18…1
Washington Post…96…2
New York Times…70…3
Los Angeles Times…48…2

Either this demonstrates a severe liberal bias in the media, or a mass epidemic of attention-deficit disorder amongst American journalists. Howard Kurtz reports, y’all decide.

(cross-posted at Captain’s Quarters)