Spindrift
Time Person of the Year, 2006
From my above checks:
cnn.com - 216
foxnews.com 7779
cbs.com 27
YES! Cnn and Cbs "covered it"!!!!
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cbs.com covered it.
foxnews.com beat it to death.
From my above checks:
cnn.com - 216
foxnews.com 7779
cbs.com 27
YES! Cnn and Cbs "covered it"!!!!
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I have no issue with you supporting liberal bias in news coverage whatsoever.cbs.com covered it.
foxnews.com beat it to death.
Actually we were discussing the definition of 'mainstream media' and Robert Prey's inability to provide a definition.I have no issue with you supporting liberal bias in news coverage whatsoever.
As it was, we were discussing whether liberal bias existed in the "mainstream media". I've offered some of the reasons why and how that occurs.
By the way....please also note that I mentioned the well known liberal news website, Huffington Post, had done well on covering these stories. So the "Mainstream media" and the liberal bias therein is with cable and satellite news, include broadcast news if anyone is still watching that. "Mainstream media" does not include internet news sources such as Huff.
I notice the following story on Instapundit.com, one of my primary sources for aggregation of libertarian news..."mainstream media" is losing out bigtime, likely because of some of the factors I have mentioned, such as their missing or omitting big, interesting stories.
http://pjmedia.com/lifestyle/2012/0...slow-death-losing-400000-customers-this-year/
No it does not mean that. Not at all. Most of my comments were about "mainstream media" NOT COVERING stories. In similar fashion, we can easily document "media bias". But all of these comments concern cable and broadcast stations.Actually we were discussing the definition of 'mainstream media' and Robert Prey's inability to provide a definition.
However from context, mainstream media means any media outlet which conveys a story with which conservatives disagree.
No it does not mean that. Not at all. Most of my comments were about "mainstream media" NOT COVERING stories. In similar fashion, we can easily document "media bias". But all of these comments concern cable and broadcast stations.
That is as far as I know what "mainstream media" refers to - broadcast and cable. Maybe it used to refer to Time, Newsweek, NY Times, etc - - but those print publications have gone so far down they hardly count anymore.
ABC's Brian Ross an alleged journalist "reporter" attempted to smear the Tea Party with the Batman shooting betraying its inherent liberal bias
What's Fast and furious?
Really.A movie, but I don't see the relation with the media or the Tea Party.
Really.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) ran a series of "gunwalking" sting operations[2][3] between 2006[4] and 2011.[2][5] This was done under the umbrella of Project Gunrunner, a project intended to stem the flow of firearms into Mexico by interdicting straw purchasers and gun traffickers within the United States.[6] "Gun walking" or "letting guns walk" was a tactic whereby the ATF "purposely allowed licensed firearms dealers to sell weapons to illegal straw buyers, hoping to track the guns to Mexican drug cartel leaders."[7] The stated goal of allowing these purchases was to continue to track the firearms as they were transferred to higher-level traffickers and key figures in Mexican cartels, with the expectation that this would lead to their arrests and the dismantling of the cartels.[8][9] The tactic was questioned during the operations by a number of people, including ATF field agents and cooperating licensed gun dealers.[10][11][12][13][14] Operation Fast and Furious, by far the largest "gunwalking" probe, monitored the sale of over 2,000 firearms, of which nearly 700 were recovered as of October 20, 2011.[15] A number of straw purchasers have been arrested and indicted; however, as of October 2011, none of the targeted high-level cartel figures have been arrested.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATF_gunwalking_scandal#cite_note-lat1-6
I already have. But you might ask yourself the question, why am I asking these questions? How do they contribute to mutual understanding? Or is it just continual nitpicking?Any chance you'll answer post #266?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=8517995#post8517995
I think a specific understanding of what "mainstream media" is is germaine to a discussion on a USA Politics forum, when the term is used to suggest ones' opponent is mis-or-under-informed with regards to salient information in an election year.I already have. But you might ask yourself the question, why am I asking these questions? How do they contribute to mutual understanding? Or is it just continual nitpicking?
Because when terms are commonly used and understood in public discourse, there isn't any obvious gain if you try to redefine them in the context of an internet forum.
Non whatsoever.
I already have. But you might ask yourself the question, why am I asking these questions? How do they contribute to mutual understanding? Or is it just continual nitpicking?
Because when terms are commonly used and understood in public discourse, there isn't any obvious gain if you try to redefine them in the context of an internet forum.
Non whatsoever.
Overall, Randfan's wikepedia link and this associated one:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Fast_and_Furious
do provide a good general background to these operations. There are some inaccurate statements, but hey, it's wikipedia.
I agree with that and thus have taken the time to note on several topics, variations in coverage between the "mainstream media" and Fox News. I'm not sure that we have any disagreement that when Fox News chooses to distance itself from the mainstream media, or when people use the term "mainstream media" to refer to broadcast or cable implicitly excluding Fox News, that Fox New isn't a conservative site or otherwise biased. That was never the question or the issue.I think a specific understanding of what "mainstream media" is is germaine to a discussion on a USA Politics forum, when the term is used to suggest ones' opponent is mis-or-under-informed with regards to salient information in an election year.....
because (A) they were well managed and (B) they were covert operations.The first sentence of the article you linked:
"The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) ran a series of "gunwalking" sting operations[2][3] between 2006[4] and 2011.[2][5] "
So why wasn't the media reporting this and slamming the administration in 2006?
So FoxNews is "mainstream media"? If not, why not?
Actually we were discussing the definition of 'mainstream media' and Robert Prey's inability to provide a definition.
However from context, mainstream media means any media outlet which conveys a story with which conservatives disagree.
Because unlike the rest of the national media, Fox really is relatively fair and balanced.