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Letters
Friday, February 17, 2006 12:00 AM

All the news stuff that's fit to print

Facing a slow death, newspapers are desperately trying to reach young readers with dumbed-down tabloids full of stories about Kobe, Britney and dental bling.

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Tuesday, February 21, 2006 08:23 AM

Cheerleading

The news media in general lost my interest years ago when they moved from journalism toward cheerleading and regurgitating verbatim what they were instructed to say/print by the very people and organizations which they were supposed to be critically investigating/reporting about. I found I could no longer count on any investigation or documented corroboration in their reporting. It was a source of great ire and sadness for me. I was angry that the media had abandoned any attempt to hold government accountable. I was saddened that I had lost the treasure of being informed by a generally trusted source; one which I had come to know in childhood. There was a point as a young adult I felt it necessary to read at least two and often three different newspapers in order to remain abreast of matters of interest to me, as well as to seek verification that what I read in one newspaper wasn't just their unsubstantiated opinion. I actually feel betrayed by the current general lack of critical journalistic investigation. I had lost an old friend. I was without a trusted source of reliable, objective information. In time, I have found other media outlets which still practice investigative, critical journalism. News items not (or vaguely) reported by the "mainstream" media can at least still be found if one makes the attempt to seek it out. Most people (in my opinion) do not. I have also found it both ironic and reasonable that the Wall Street Journal will often be more truthful (in it's news reporting; their opinion pages are another matter entirely) than the other contemporary daily newspapers I have access to. It's ironic because the Wall Street Journal has, for me, always had opinions which bordered on the absurd, which would have initially led me to believe that they would slant the news to reinforce their opinions. In general I have found this not to be the case. Their rationale, in my opinion, is that they know their target audience are people of means and power. These people need the truth in order to make rational decisions. I usually don't post my opinions, but this is an issue about which I have very strong emotions. It is not that I feel people should think and feel the way I do about issues. It is that they should at least have the truth and the facts present by which to form their opinions. The media (in general) has abandoned us all in this respect (in my opinion).

Tuesday, February 21, 2006 04:01 PM

How about actually practicing JOURNALISM?

instead of being a tool of the government, papers ought to take the lead in reporting atrocities such as, for instance, all the discrepancies, lies, exaggerations, fabrications, secrecy the government engaged in on and after 9/11? No wonder trust of media is at an all time low.

In a free society, no stone would have been left unturned. One example: there was ZIP ZILCH ZERO investigation done into why 7 World Trade Center, a building that sustained minimal damage on 9/11, completely collapsed, a feat never before seen except in the twin towers taken down (suspiciously again) that same day, even though many buildings have been hit by planes and many buildings have had huge fires in the past without collapsing.

Instead of real journlism we get an endless parade of feel good victim stories. Instead of hanging the treasonous Bush Cabal by its evil petard, we get stories on Britney and Koby.

But I know, the papers are all owned by people who are delighted the USA is becoming a police state. The better to control us proles.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006 01:49 PM

and Salon calls the kettle black

Well, at least they know exactly what we've been complaining about.

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