Jump to conclusions much?Where was the outrage by all these bastions of journalistic integrity when Walter Cronkite shockingly admitted to being a liberal?
Well, Maloney jumped to the same conclusion you did. However, it doesn't excuse that the conclusion is somewhat flimsily based on Cronkite's opinion alone.Maloney said:Saying he believes “most of us reporters are liberal,” Cronkite is admitting what many on the left have denied fervently for years: that there is a bias in the news media, and that it tips to the left noticeably.
Did you notice the word "perceived" in there or are you only cherry picking Cronkite's opinions that agree with your conclusion?Maloney said:Cronkite offers the flimsy excuse that “[t]he perceived liberalism of television reporters [...] is a product of the limited time given for any particular item.”
Did you notice that he never said he or anyone else has violated the first ideals of good journalism: that news reports must be fair, accurate, and unbiased?Cronkite said:We are inclined to side with the powerless rather than the powerful. If that is what makes us liberals so be it, just as long as in reporting the news we adhere to the first ideals of good journalism — that news reports must be fair, accurate and unbiased.
Assumes facts not in evidence. Unless Maloney can read Cronkite's mind, he is assuming the there is only one facet in what is really a very complex issue. Maloney has oversimplified the situation (i.e. spun the quote) to fit his point.Maloney said:In Cronkite’s mind, our society is defined primarily in terms of a struggle between the classes:
How do you conclude that because Walter Cronkite is a liberal he, or anyone else, is therefore unable to report more or less objectively?
Did you notice that he never said he or anyone else has violated the first ideals of good journalism: that news reports must be fair, accurate, and unbiased?
Bill O'Reilly makes me embarrassed to consider myself conservative. If I was a liberal I would promote his show.
Ironically (or not, if you really think about it!) he embodies everything he hates about the left.
Because we've compared their lies to reality... it is pretty easy, because there's an average of a couple of lies an hour on Fox "News".How do you conclude that because Fox News has conservatives that they are, therefore, unable to report more or less objectively?
What he said.Because we've compared their lies to reality... it is pretty easy,
Yeah. And they're completely unable to see how their own criticism applies to themselves and their allies.Ironically(or not, if you really think about it!) right-wing authoritarians project all of their own flaws and "inner demons" onto their chosen enemies. It is part of what forms their entire worldview.
An average of a couple lies per hour on Fox News? Can you back that up or are you pulling an O'Reilly?Because we've compared their lies to reality... it is pretty easy, because there's an average of a couple of lies an hour on Fox "News".Certainly, there's very little reporting going on.
Based on the use of a smilieAn average of a couple lies per hour on Fox News? Can you back that up or are you pulling an O'Reilly?
Yeah. And they're completely unable to see how their own criticism applies to themselves and their allies.
Of course, liberals are completely free of such flaws.
OK, wasn't sure. People make this claim all the time and call it "Faux News", but so far it appears to just come from liberals who can't stand news without a liberal spin, and not understanding the difference between a news program and an opinionated talk show.
Not completely, but free to a greater degree than those on the right. Liberals also tend to be more honest, more forgiving, and more able to deal with reality when it conflicts with ideology.

We should call this "O'Reilly's Syndrome" so that we can start the search for a cure.
Out of curiosity, what do you consider an example of a news program with a liberal spin? Not an opinionated talk show, but a news program?but so far it appears to just come from liberals who can't stand news without a liberal spin, and not understanding the difference between a news program and an opinionated talk show.
Okay, maybe I stuttered last time, but how do you reach the conclusion that reporters who have political beliefs are incapable of unbiased reporting?As far as liberal bias in the media, game, set, match:
Okay, maybe I stuttered last time, but how do you reach the conclusion that reporters who have political beliefs are incapable of unbiased reporting?
(I also note that the article you reference has pretty small sample sizes and are mostly informal. The UC poll appears at the end to be the most formalized.)
eta: Incidentally, do you realize that by your own line of thinking the Media Research Center, a conservative organization, can not be trusted because it must have a conservative bias?
Not at all. I'm saying you can't jump to the conclusion that their reporting is biased.You seem to have all bases covered. The media are not predominately liberal, but, even if it is, they are still unbiased.
How do scientists own scientific views not color their results?How could their own political ideology not color their reporting?
For example?The proof is in the pudding. Reading their articles, columns, scripts, etc, betrays their ideology all the time. Once a reporter/journalist uses an adjective, they have mixed opinion with fact.