----------
From: Gautam Mukunda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Let me quote from an ABC News institution, in fact -
The Note:
Like every other institution, the Washington and
political press corps operate with a good number of
biases and predilections. 

They include, but are not limited to, a near-universal
shared sense that liberal political positions on
social issues like gun control, homosexuality,
abortion, and religion are the default, while more
conservative positions are "conservative positions." 

They include a belief that government is a mechanism
to solve the nation's problems; that more taxes on
corporations and the wealthy are good ways to cut the
deficit and raise money for social spending and don't
have a negative affect on economic growth; and that
emotional examples of suffering (provided by unions or
consumer groups) are good ways to illustrate economic
statistic stories. 

More systematically, the press believes that fluid
narratives in coverage are better than static
storylines; that new things are more interesting than
old things; that close races are preferable to loose
ones; and that incumbents are destined for dethroning,
somehow. 

The press, by and large, does not accept President
Bush's justifications for the Iraq war -- in any of
its WMD, imminent threat, or evil-doer formulations.
It does not understand how educated, sensible people
could possibly be wary of multilateral institutions or
friendly, sophisticated European allies. 

It does not accept the proposition that the Bush tax
cuts helped the economy by stimulating summer
spending. 

It remains fixated on the unemployment rate. 

It believes President Bush is "walking a fine line"
with regards to the gay marriage issue, choosing
between "tolerance" and his "right-wing base." 

It still has a hard time understanding how, despite
the drumbeat of conservative grass-top complaints
about overspending and deficits, President Bush's base
remains extremely and loyally devoted to him -- and it
looks for every opportunity to find cracks in that
base. 

Of course, the swirling Joe Wilson and National Guard
stories play right to the press's scandal bias -- not
to mention the bias towards process stories (grand
juries produce ENDLESS process!). 

The worldview of the dominant media can be seen in
every frame of video and every print word choice that
is currently being produced about the presidential
race. 

[End quote]
Now, that's not me talking.  That's an employee of ABC
News in an official writing, not even something
published independently.

----
Here's where your entire argument falls apart.  First you are arguing
that this person you quote is a part of the 'left-wing media elite'.  But
the person you quote is just repeating all of the pre-spun right-wing
talking points I read every day from every single right-wing source, and
fox news and MSNBC and all the right-wing web logs, and newsgroups. 
Every single thing he says is the exact same propaganda I read every day,
fed for you and other right-wing hacks and partisans to spread.  And you
are trying to pass this right-wing propaganda you quote as coming from a
biased left-wing media elite.

Your constant use of false dichotomies and post hoc ergo propter hoc
argumentation is rather...unenlightening.

I read this kind of right-wing propaganda every day.  Just because you
are spouting it doesn't make it any more true.

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to