Where aljazeera
Let me just guess that their version of "right of center" is the Lincoln project?Claude! said:It's interesting, but I'm not sure I'd take it as gospel. From what I can glean, they have analysts from left, right, and center review stories and assign a political bias and a news value/reliability score. What I can't determine is their methodology for determining a left/right bias or for news value/reliability - is there an objective framework the analysts are working from, or is it down to a "looks right to me" judgment call?713nervy said:
Not according to independent researchers whose entire job it is to review and rank these things. Bummer that all of your panties are in a bunch about it but that's a you problem. Maybe do some research before calling it fake.
Ginormus Ag said:
Paul Harvey. Not much has happened since 2009, though.
713nervy said:
Not according to independent researchers whose entire job it is to review and rank these things. Bummer that all of your panties are in a bunch about it but that's a you problem. Maybe do some research before calling it fake.
This interpretation of it from USA Today (https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/columnist/2024/05/08/npr-ceo-katherine-maher-congress-media-bias-uri-berliner/73597888007/) doesn't seem to help with the context to me:713nervy said:
That seems like something wildly out of context and that the politics board would LOVE.
Quote:
What she meant, as the context of the talk makes clear, is that our insistence that other people accept our interpretation of what's true is a problem, even if we are correct.
Their truth is more important than yours.maroon barchetta said:
But but but…
What if someone "speaks their truth"? We have to accept it, right?
txags92 said:This interpretation of it from USA Today (https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/columnist/2024/05/08/npr-ceo-katherine-maher-congress-media-bias-uri-berliner/73597888007/) doesn't seem to help with the context to me:713nervy said:
That seems like something wildly out of context and that the politics board would LOVE.Quote:
What she meant, as the context of the talk makes clear, is that our insistence that other people accept our interpretation of what's true is a problem, even if we are correct.
So we can't insist that facts exist and that truth is undebatable? We have to find a consensus somewhere in the middle between fact and fantasy instead? That doesn't sound ideal for the head of an allegedly unbiased journalistic organization that should be laser focused on sorting out truth from fiction. If you can't start from the facts and work from there, it is all fiction.
txags92 said:Their truth is more important than yours.maroon barchetta said:
But but but…
What if someone "speaks their truth"? We have to accept it, right?
I know, I had added more to my response, but didn't want to take this too far into F16 topics.maroon barchetta said:
I was just making fun of the phrase "speaking their truth" because it gets used when people want some way to justify their insane ramblings.
Typical resort to insults when humor sheds light on the ridiculousness of a position.713nervy said:txags92 said:Their truth is more important than yours.maroon barchetta said:
But but but…
What if someone "speaks their truth"? We have to accept it, right?
You slapdicks just demonstrated her point.
txags92 said:I know, I had added more to my response, but didn't want to take this too far into F16 topics.maroon barchetta said:
I was just making fun of the phrase "speaking their truth" because it gets used when people want some way to justify their insane ramblings.
Taken in the abstract, 713Nervy's interpretation of what Maher is saying seems innocuous, but when you place it against the backdrop of Maher's other woke and left leaning tweets and comments, it places her into the camp that believes truth or facts are not immutable, but instead are based on perception by individuals. Facts and truth are the linchpin of journalism. You can argue around the edges that the conclusions one side or the other draws from the facts shouldn't be seen as absolute, but reporting the facts and the truth itself should remain the focus of any responsible journalistic organization. I would argue that journalism today has skewed way too far into trying to tell people what to think about any given story than what the facts are, but that is probably a topic for elsewhere.
Reed McDonald 92 said:
Excellent thread. And 713Nervy, I am your fan. FACT!
I too, just want the facts. Full disclosure- I have one of those so-called worthless journalism degrees.
Reed McDonald 92 said:
Excellent thread. And 713Nervy, I am your fan. FACT!
I too, just want the facts. Full disclosure- I have one of those so-called worthless journalism degrees.
Orlwm_Ag said:
That seems like something wildly out of context and that the politics board would LOVE.