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Showing posts with label mainstream media peddling republican talking points. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mainstream media peddling republican talking points. Show all posts

Saturday, February 24, 2024

QOTD -- Wrong? The Media Doesn't Do That!

 

"... The story is no longer whether Joe Biden committed high crimes and misdemeanors by maintaining relations with his ne’er-do-well son. In fact, there has never been any credible evidence to support that conclusion.

"The real story is that the ludicrous Republican impeachment investigation has now been exposed as a Russian intelligence op. This, even as Republicans do Russian President Vladimir Putin’s bidding by blocking support for Ukraine and only a few short years after Trump aides welcomed Russian moves to help the Trump campaign in 2016.

"But the political reporters at our most esteemed newsrooms who went to great lengths to portray the Biden impeachment investigation as a serious inquiry seem unable to change gears.

"I’m not surprised. It  would require them to admit they were wrong. They don’t do that..." -- media critic Dan Froomkin, Press Watch, on the latest media fail "The Hunter Biden story has done a total 180 but the MSM is in denial."  Froomkin brings the receipts, as usual.  Legacy media outlets (the New York Effing Times, WaPo, etc.) continue to succumb to horse race journalism, both sidesism, copying Republican talking points, and lede- burying, the ultimate effect being democracy dying in darkness. To be fair, one non- cable source we monitor that we think does a decent job of exposing the constant Republican lies and gaslighting in a short- attention- span format is David Muir's "ABC World News Tonight."  You be the judge.

BONUSMore discussion here.

BONUS IIAnother dishonest broker.


Tuesday, July 23, 2019

QOTD -- Last Chance For A Do-Over


Media columnist Margaret Sullivan in today's Washington Post:
In political media, as in love, there aren’t many chances to correct a serious wrong.
But the news media will get just that on Wednesday when Robert S. Mueller III testifies before Congress, months after his long-awaited report on Donald Trump and possible Russian collusion to swing the 2016 election was competed.
Recall how gullible — and therefore misleading to the public — the news media was in March when Attorney General William Barr characterized the unreleased report in a four-page letter.
Coverage of that letter set in place an inaccurate narrative that has been almost impossible to dislodge.
Many news organizations, including some of the most prominent, took what Barr said at face value or mischaracterized the report’s findings.
They essentially transmitted to the public — especially in all-important headlines and cable-news bulletins — what President Trump desperately wanted as the takeaway: No collusion; no obstruction.
Most of the credulous stenographers of the mainstream media got it terribly wrong last March when they foolishly trusted Trump's consigliere William Barr to be telling the truth about the damning findings of the Mueller report.  If they blow it again following Mueller's testimony tomorrow (for example, reducing it to "partisan bickering"), you'd have a hard time convincing us they're not "the enemy of the people."

The soul of our country and its democracy are at stake every day.  Figure that out -- or don't, to your everlasting shame and peril.

Friday, May 3, 2019

Frittering Away American Democracy, One Tweet At A Time (UPDATED)


Many media outlets appear to have learned nothing from how Putin puppet Donald "Not Exonerated" Trump used them to amplify his rancid messaging in 2016, or perhaps they don't give a damn:
Major media outlets failed to rebut President Donald Trump's misinformation 65% of the time in their tweets about his false or misleading comments, according to a Media Matters review. That means the outlets amplified Trump's misinformation more than 400 times over the three-week period of the study -- a rate of 19 per day.
The data shows that news outlets are still failing to grapple with a major problem that media critics highlighted during the Trump transition: When journalists apply their traditional method of crafting headlines, tweets, and other social media posts to Trump, they end up passively spreading misinformation by uncritically repeating his falsehoods.
The continuing passivity of many major media -- whose truth- telling is supposed to be one of democracy's guardians against a would- be autocrat like Trump -- in clearly disputing Trump's Niagara of lies signals that the run- up to the 2020 election will be marked by the same both siderism and false equivalencies that gave us our "young, vibrant" presnut.

The worst offenders?  The Hill, with 3.25 million Twitter followers, which passes along Trump lies and misinformation without rebuttal or context 88 percent of the time;  the main Twitter feed for ABC News, with 14.3 million followers, failing to dispute Trump 74 percent of the time CBS News, with 6.71 million followers, failing to dispute 87 percent of the time; and NBC News, with 6.52 million followers, failing to dispute 52 percent of the timeMSNBC?  Even the "librul" cable network's Twitter, with 2.41 million followers, failed to dispute 55 percent of the time.  With friends like them...

Among the better media:  the Washington Post Twitter feed, which failed to dispute only 11 percent of the time.

Not mentioned in the article was the New York Times, but we can offer some anecdotal evidence from the past week that would suggest placing them squarely in the offender camp:

Then we have perhaps the most dogged flogger of the "Hillary's emails!" nothingburger inserting a phony Trump "spying" narrative in a tweet about why the FBI was alarmed at the Trump campaign's ties with Russia:

These smug corporate media and their jaded "journalists" are the same ones Masha Gessen warned about, those that choose to fall in line to preserve their access.  The difference is that now we've seen the damage they've done, and they're being called out more forcefully and systemically.  Whether that's enough or not remains to be seen. But as Jonathan Swift wrote in 1710, "Falsehood flies, and the Truth comes limping after it" -- and he didn't say it on Twitter.

UPDATE:  Schmidt's tweet/ story pleased a certain "young, vibrant person." Mission accomplished: access protected.


Saturday, April 6, 2019

Tweets Of The Day


Just catching up with these evergreen observations:





Of all the examples we could point to as evidence of the truth of Mr. Wilkinson's observations, we're just selecting two pieces by the same gullible media critic from our hometown "librul" newspaper as prime examples of the credulous rush to sanctify consigliere Barr's coverup letter purporting to "exonerate" Donald "Not Exonerated" Trump:  see here and here.  Be prepared.  They're nauseating.

Monday, April 1, 2019

Tweets Of The Day -- The Born Yesterday Media





Friday, March 23, 2018

Quote Of The Day


Primo snark:
"... I’d say the decision of the nation’s political media that Hillary Clinton’s compliance with email server management best practices was the most important issue facing the country has held up even better than Maureen Dowd’s columns about Trump’s opposition to militarism."  -- Scott Lemieux on Cadet Bone Spurs' appalling "Fox and Friends Presidency."

Saturday, December 16, 2017

The Media's Drift In Trump's Direction - PBS Edition


Watching "librul" PBS' "Washington Week in Review" last night, we were struck by the whole atmosphere of the show - five "insider" journalists summarizing the events of the past week ... without giving any sign that things are not normal. In fact, as you can read for yourself, there was a largely anodyne, horserace approach to the circus that's in town.

Here are just a few excerpts from the transcript (our emphasis throughout):

Nancy Cordes (CBS News) on the wealthfare tax bill:

... the fact that they said they would get it done on Friday and they did is actually a big sign of how unified this party is.  And it’s the culmination of a decades-long dream.  So it seems like, you know, the party’s really hanging together now, and looking to avoid any last-minute derailment.
Yes, super unified!  Just ask Steve "Loose Cannon" Bannon! They're only unified long enough to screw America and future generations. MAGA!

Shawna Thomas (VICE News) on the rush to pass the wealthfare bill:

... Everyone has been saying we have to pass this bill by the end of the year.  We have to pass this bill by the end of the year.  They didn’t really have to pass this bill by the end of the year.  (Laughter.)

Harhar! And, no, it wasn't because of Doug Jones' victory -- they targeted passage before Christmas long before the Alabama election -- it was because the bill is a reeking pile of regressive social and economic engineering that they don't want people to understand (too late!).

Kristen Welker (NBC News) on the involvement of nitwit know-nothing Donald "Rump" Trump:
... [H]e was really serving as an energizing force, I think, as opposed to sort of derailing the negotiations.  Today we had a chance to ask him some questions early in the morning, and I asked him if he would support increasing the child tax credit.  He indicated the answer to that was yes.  [Ed. See how piddling a deal this was below.] So it was very clear, as the day was progressing, that this was moving in a good direction for this president.  I don’t think you can overstate it.  President Trump needs a victory after the failure to repeal and replace Obamacare.  He hasn’t had a major legislative victory.  And so this was a full-court press for this president, the vice president, and his entire top staff.
Stand up and cheer for Big Boy Donnie! F*ck you average Americans who'll be losing health insurance! It's the horserace and the appearance of competence that matter most!

Cordes on the bill's repeal of the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate:
Republicans don’t want to talk about it because they’d love to be able to slide that through.  There’s another big GOP priority in this bill they don’t talk a lot about either, and that is opening up part of the Alaskan Wildlife Refuge for oil drilling... 
Hmmm. Republicans don't want to talk about it, and neither does Nancy Cordes!

Cordes again on the child tax credit:
 ... I will say that there are some changes in this final version that may help to win people over, at least in the short term.  The fact that that child tax credit is refundable up to $1,400.  That’s a pretty big chunk of change
No, no it's not you simpleton.  Again, as Andy Slavitt points out, it amounts to $25 a month for a family with two kids (whose daycare costs would average $2,000 a month). Do your f*cking homework!

We could go on (that's just from the first few minutes of the program), but the point is, these "elite" media types are very content to go along with the talking points Republicans have tossed over the transom, while ignoring the yuuuuge elephant in the room:  that we have an abnormal "president" and a party that is increasing its culpability in the rotting out of American values and social fabric. Isn't that newsworthy? (Rhetorical question.)

It's always helpful to keep in mind Masha Gessen's warning to all of us:
The national press is likely to be among the first institutional victims of Trumpism. There is no law that requires the presidential administration to hold daily briefings, none that guarantees media access to the White House. Many journalists may soon face a dilemma long familiar to those of us who have worked under autocracies: fall in line or forfeit access. There is no good solution (even if there is a right answer), for journalism is difficult and sometimes impossible without access to information. 
The power of the investigative press—whose adherence to fact has already been severely challenged by the conspiracy-minded, lie-spinning Trump campaign—will grow weaker. The world will grow murkier. Even in the unlikely event that some mainstream media outlets decide to declare themselves in opposition to the current government, or even simply to report its abuses and failings, the president will get to frame many issues. Coverage, and thinking, will drift in a Trumpian direction, just as it did during the campaign—when, for example, the candidates argued, in essence, whether Muslim Americans bear collective responsibility for acts of terrorism or can redeem themselves by becoming the “eyes and ears” of law enforcement. Thus was xenophobia further normalized, paving the way for Trump to make good on his promises to track American Muslims and ban Muslims from entering the United States.
These people need to be held to account for their lazy complicity in normalizing this monster, his legion of thugs and their efforts to destroy the good that America stood for just a short 13 months ago.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Let's See How The Media Responds This Time


Republicans desperate to shift attention off of treasonous moron Donald "Rump" Trump's hourly demonstrations of his unfitness for office are suddenly pushing the stale stories of "who paid for the Russian dossier?" (publicly known since last October) and "the uranium sale to Russia!" (debunked last year herehere, and here). This involves the White (Supremacist) House, of course, and pro- Trump Republicans on several Congressional committees who've been feeling the heat generated by the right- wing wurlitzer to re- focus on conspiracy- generating right- wing bugaboo Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee.  As for the wurlitzer, it's main pipe is already tooting accordingly:

There are already those in the media who have been complicit in the past with Republican attempts to smear Hillary Clinton who are reacting to this shiny object, this "Trump whisperer" from the librul New York Times being the worst of the lot. She's at it again, freely using the "L" word she bans for all but Democrats and the Clintons:

After which she was reminded:

Consistency and standards are for losers! #MAGA!

There are others who have the attention span and short- term memory of a fruit fly who may take this piece of warmed- over Republican agitprop and run with the herd. There are still others who may be eager to re- establish their favorite false equivalency narrative: "both sides do it!" But in this time of mortal danger to our Republic, and after being routinely snookered by Rump and his merry band of Republican nihilists, one would hope most in the "mainstream media" would have learned their lesson by now. "Hope."

So let's see how the "mainstream media" responds to this transparent attempt to make "the real Russian scandal" about Hillary Clinton and the DNC. Then we'll know if we'll ever have the luxury of "hope" again.

BONUS:  Charles Pierce shares his concerns.  Good read.

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

The Media And The Election (UPDATED)


BERJAYA
Over the years, you've seen us cover the on- going theme of our broken media and its impact on politics in America, to the point that some might consider it beating a dead horse now that the election is over.  But there's a lot of buzz about an article in Vox today by Alvin Chang where he discusses his analysis of two years of what constituted headline- worthy stories at the Fox "News" website and the "liberal" New York Effing Times.  For anyone who followed the Times' front page Clinton derangement (as opposed to its editorial page), it shouldn't come as a great surprise that the stories headlined at Republican puke funnel Fox were covered with roughly the same frequency at the "liberal" Times. Both mirrored coverage on the major networks:  
From the beginning of 2016 to late October, the three major networks — CBS, ABC, and NBC — spent 100 combined minutes of their newscasts covering Clinton’s emails. They spent 32 minutes on every other policy issue, and no time on climate change, health care, poverty, and trade. This focus on her emails made it relevant throughout the election, peaking right before Election Day. Often, it was a small development that provided little new information, like FBI Director James Comey sending a letter to Congress saying the bureau had more emails to look at — and then saying it didn’t change the original decision that she hadn’t done anything criminal. 
Let’s rehash what this “scandal” actually was: It started from allegations that she mishandled the Benghazi attacks in 2012. An investigation found no wrongdoing. It did find a private email server — which was also investigated — and at the end of it, her mistake was sending classified information on systems that weren’t approved for it. But the investigation found she wasn’t criminally responsible. As Vox’s Matt Yglesias writes, this is a bullshit scandal. 
So it’s absurd for Clinton’s emails and Trump’s racist proposals to be put on the same scale of morality. But it’s even more absurd that Clinton’s emails were somehow a better indicator of how she would change people’s lives compared with Trump’s actual plans. It was absurd that at only a single point in this election was the Muslim ban Googled more than Clinton’s emails, and media is responsible for some, if not most, of this. We were more interested in what Clinton was doing on her BlackBerry than in how Trump was going to ban people from this country based on their religion.  (our emphasis)
For progressives who want to point fingers at those responsible for delivering us to Trump, rather than the destructive impulse of blaming each other or parts of our coalition, a real villain leading is our amoral, horse race driven media. That they show no signs of shouldering a major responsibility for the debacle should not be surprising;  what would be surprising is if, knowing the destructive role they played, we continue to let them get away with their "bullshit scandals," false equivalencies and normalizing the neo- fascist shitgibbon and his administration.

UPDATE: The "liberal" New York Effing Times is at it again.

UPDATE II:  Mike Luckovich muses on how the media will "normalize" even the worst:

BERJAYA


(Image:  this is one dead horse that needs continual beating.)

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Word Clouds - How The Media Influenced The Election


'Nuff said:


Remember this.

(You remember the media's Bush narrative:  the guy you'd want to have a beer with.  Gore's narrative was =snicker= he's a liar =mumble mumble= "invented the Internet"=snicker= "Love Story" =mumble mumble= and he sighed, too!  F*ckers.)

Friday, November 4, 2016

The "Damn E-Mails" And The Damn Media


BERJAYA
Matthew Yglesias delves into the media's coverage of the Clinton e-mail SCANDAL! nothingburger and how the media has badly served our country (again).  He concludes that the media has promoted "a bullshit scandal amidst a serious election":
Network newscasts have, remarkably, dedicated more airtime to coverage of Clinton’s emails than to all policy issues combined. 
Cable news has been, if anything, worse, and many prestige outlets have joined the pileup. One malign result of obsessive email coverage is that the public is left totally unaware of the policy stakes in the election. Another is that the constant vague recitations of the phrase ‘‘Clinton email scandal’’ have firmly implanted the notion that there is something scandalous about anything involving Hillary Clinton and email, including her campaign manager getting hacked or the revelation that one of her aides sometimes checked mail on her husband’s computer. 
But none of this is true. Clinton broke no laws according to the FBI itself. Her setup gave her no power to evade federal transparency laws beyond what anyone who has a personal email account of any kind has. Her stated explanation for her conduct is entirely believable, fits the facts perfectly, and is entirely plausible to anyone who doesn't simply start with the assumption that she's guilty of something. 
Given [former Secretary Colin] Powell’s conduct, Clinton wasn't even breaking with an informal precedent. The very worst you can say is that, faced with an annoying government IT policy, she used her stature to find a personal workaround rather than a systemic fix that would work for everyone. To spend so much time on such a trivial matter would be absurd in a city council race, much less a presidential election. To do so in circumstances when it advances the electoral prospects of a rival who has shattered all precedents in terms of lacking transparency or basic honesty is infinitely more scandalous than anything related to the server itself.  (our emphasis)
Of all the malign elements in this election year (neo- fascist Donald "Rump" Trump, white supremacists, misogyny and sexual assault, xenophobia, etc., etc.), the role of the corporate media in enabling the rise and (perhaps) succession to power of the most unfit, unqualified, compromised, plainly evil candidate ever to be nominated by a major party ranks near the very top of the list.  That they often knew better and yet allowed their mercenary desire for ratings and revenue to subsume any sense of duty to their alleged profession, their country or the truth, makes this among the worst betrayals of this or any other political season.  Damn them all.

BONUS:

BERJAYA

(h/t Washington Monthly)

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

The Role Of Our Broken Media In Russia's Propaganda Campaign For Trump


Eric Chenoweth, co-director of the Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe, has a must- read op- ed today excoriating the media for its role in catapulting propaganda into politics:
Donald Trump’s presidential candidacy has posed many challenges to U.S. media. In at least one frightening respect, it has failed: News outlets are actively abetting an authoritarian and imperialist foreign power’s attempt to manipulate a U.S. presidential election to aid its favored candidate, Trump, and sanctioning an assault on the individual and civil liberties of all American citizens.
Chenoweth goes through examples of the media abetting Russia in its campaign to undercut destabilize the American political system through its agent, WikiLeaks' Julian Assange,  neo- fascist useful idiot Donald "Rump" Trump, and his network of advisors (past and present) with direct and indirect ties to the Russian government.  This is accomplished through the time- tested approach of floating a story in Republican media outlets, which is then "out there" and fodder for "mainstream" media:
The full fruits of this effort can be seen daily on Fox News and Breitbart, the leading propaganda organs of the Trump campaign. Every offhand remark is turned into an offense by the DNC, Clinton, her husband or her aides. Nothing needs to be proven. It is sufficient for the emails to be published and accepted by other media. 
What we are being introduced to — and what the free media is not defending itself against — is the confabulation of state propaganda and intelligence organs of the Russian government. Russian state television and other state-directed media frequently report actual and fake information all blended together with the intent of promoting fear of the West and of the civilizational collapse that Western democracy supposedly brings. As Post columnist Anne Applebaum has warned, such propaganda is being channeled even through Trump himself (for example, doubting that a Russian missile took down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 and asserting that the election of Clinton would mean the start of World War III).
Added to this, of course, is an intelligence agency of the United States Government -- the Federal Bureau of Innuendo Investigation -- which is populated (at least in the New York field office) with Republican partisans and headed by a Director who (at the very least) is subject to political pressure from within and outside the agency to damage Democratic prospects next Tuesday.

History will judge these players harshly, but only if we get a win at the ballot box.  The bigger the better.

Monday, October 31, 2016

The Media Fails Again


(click on image to enlarge)

BERJAYA
(Tom Toles, Washington Post)

Here's an excerpt from Variety's Sonia Saraiya's article on media organizations' (notably cable news) eagerness to turn the c.y.a. Comey letter into the "game changer" of this election, and how it reflects on them:
That has not stopped media organizations, in the full flush of pre-election coverage, to make this some kind of “October surprise” for the Clinton campaign, seizing on it as a turning point in the narrative of election 2016. And due to the confluence of Comey’s inept attempt at transparency and the media’s appetite for inflated controversy, Comey’s letter has had the effect of lighter fluid on the finally cooling embers of a house fire.  [snip] 
In lieu of actual reportage, cable news — which always needs material to fill its 24-hour mandate — has had to fall back on hours on end of pure speculation. Comey said, in his internal memo, that he was trying to be careful in how he disseminated this information on the eve of an acrimonious election. But he does not seem to have understood that in this era of constant news he created a perfect storm for confusion, misinformation, and — in some sectors — unhinged conspiracy. There is an appalling disconnect on cable news between what has actually been said and what is being implied or perceived, and it is doubling back on itself and expanding. As CNN airs an entire Trump rally in which he conflates Clinton’s corruption, Weiner’s sexting, and aide Huma Abedin’s religion as part of the same web of purported lies — adding, wildly, that he hopes Abedin was not promised immunity — MSNBC features panicked comments from DNC chair Donna Brazile and handwringing speculation over how the campaign is coping. It’s difficult to even isolate individual instances from the major networks that are indicative of how distorted cable news’ perspective is, because it is as much about tone and coverage time as it is about content. How many multi-head panels can the major networks field, most of whom are circling the same two or three questions of trustworthiness and judgment, before it begins to feel like freaking out has become the primary pastime of the news media? [snip] 
... But 10 days away from the resolution of this election, one way or another, the news media is demonstrating serious weakness with reporting uncertainty and ambiguity. At the risk of sounding too naïve about the role of truth in journalism, it would be appreciated if clarity were prized over controversy. But then again, this election has been defined by the breakdown of our best intentions in the Byzantine political-media complex, where time must be filled, takes must be filed, and we as a nation have struggled to wholly apprehend what we have become.
We've noted many, many times how our amoral corporate news media operates.  It traffics in gossip. It peddles lies and disinformation in the guise of "balance" and "impartiality." It creates narratives and then finds whatever nonsense it can to feed those narratives.  It places profit and audience share over its responsibilities to not do further damage to an increasingly fragile democracy.  Seven days to go to an election with existential implications for our country, and the corporate media is once again choosing "inflated controversy" over truth and clarity. We won't forget.

BONUS:  Even the "liberal" New York Effing Times is engaging in this distortion.

BONUS II:  Charles Pierce on our elite media twisting history into a pretzel.

Monday, September 5, 2016

Morning Reading - Our Broken Media (And Maybe How To Begin Fixing It)


Lots of articles coming out recently about the many failures of the media in this existential election. Here's a longish sampling of some good reads (as always, please take time to read the entire articles):

Nancy LeTourneau
Do you remember that time when Jim Inhofe brought a snowball onto the Senate floor in February as “proof” that climate change is a hoax? He was being what we might call a “merchant of doubt.” Never mind that the scientific community has been studying the rise in global temperatures for quite a while. One snowfall in Washington raises doubts about what they’ve found.  [snip] 
Can I suggest that, much as the “question” about Benghazi continues in the fevered minds of some (after even multiple Republican Congressional inquiries have produced nothing), “the question that arises yet again” is as dispositive as Inhofe’s snowball in February. We are, at this point, dealing with nothing more than merchants of doubt.
Jeff Jarvis
If journalism had informed and educated the American electorate, I am confident there would have been no room for Trump to spread his virus of ignorance, lies, and bigotry. It is patently clear that journalism is doing a terrible job informing the public. Judge the results. 
This is what depresses me most and makes me realize more than ever that we must rethink and reinvent the very core of journalism, its relationship with the public, its forms, and its business models. For it’s the business model that makes Les Moonves at CBS and Jeff Zucker at CNN rub their greedy little hands in glee at the audience and revenue the Trump Circus brings them. It’s the business model that has newsrooms chasing rabid squirrels and outrageous Trumpisms to get more volume, less value. It’s the form of journalism — the scoop, the exclu, the provocative TV yelling match, the savvy political roundtable— that brings out our worst in political opportunism and sensationalism, leaving no room for substance. And because we in journalism separate ourselves from the public we serve — sitting above them, in judgment — we try to argue that it’s not our fault if they’re not informed. Because of that separation, we cannot credibly contend that we know what the public’s concerns are; we’re not good at listening. And because of that separation, we still expect people to come to us for the news, when we should be going to them wherever they are.
Paul Glastris
Another way of looking at it is that the press is beginning to treat the Clinton Foundation story the way the Republican still treat Benghazi. The legitimate questions surrounding that incident—What were the precipitating events that lead to the deaths of four diplomats? What might the federal government have done differently to prevent it?—were basically answered when the first after-action press investigations and the 2012 Accountability Review Board Report were published. Keeping the controversy alive with half a dozen more congressional investigations was just a way for Republicans to rough up Clinton. 
The GOP at least had an obvious political motive for refusing to admit the obvious on Benghazi. Why the mainstream press is refusing to concede the facts of its own investigations on Hillary and the Clinton Foundation is not so clear. But unless it stops that behavior and starts speaking honestly, and soon, there’s a very real chance it could throw the election to Donald Trump. 
Paul Krugman
So I would urge journalists to ask whether they are reporting facts or simply engaging in innuendo, and urge the public to read with a critical eye. If reports about a candidate talk about how something “raises questions,” creates “shadows,” or anything similar, be aware that these are all too often weasel words used to create the impression of wrongdoing out of thin air. 
And here’s a pro tip: the best ways to judge a candidate’s character are to look at what he or she has actually done, and what policies he or she is proposing. Mr. Trump’s record of bilking students, stiffing contractors and more is a good indicator of how he’d act as president; Mrs. Clinton’s speaking style and body language aren’t. George W. Bush’s policy lies gave me a much better handle on who he was than all the up-close-and-personal reporting of 2000, and the contrast between Mr. Trump’s policy incoherence and Mrs. Clinton’s carefulness speaks volumes today. 
In other words, focus on the facts. America and the world can’t afford another election tipped by innuendo. 
Josh Marshall (linked to previously, but worth repeating)
The [New York] Times uniquely, though only as a leading example for the rest of the national press, has a decades' long history of being lead around by rightwing opposition researchers into dead ends which amount to journalistic comedy - especially when it comes to the Clintons. But here, while all this is happening we have a real live specimen example of direct political and prosecutorial corruption, misuse of a 501c3 nonprofit and various efforts to conceal this corruption and the underlying corruption of Trump's 'Trump University' real estate seminar scam. It's all there - lightly reported here and there - but largely ignored.  [snip] 
So here you have straight-up bad acts, political corruption to enable prosecutorial corruption to escape the consequences of fraud perpetrated on vulnerable consumers. And yet the page space gets dedicated to Clinton Foundation stories which raise 'questions' that could 'create appearances' and all other journalistic workarounds reporters use when they haven't found what they were looking for.  [snip] 
I should be clear here that while the Times is possibly the worst offender because of the scale of the failure and the influence the Times exerts far beyond its own pages, it's far from alone. They're just the tip of the spear of the generalized failure to apply even a small fraction of the scrutiny to Trump that they have to the Clintons or to make an honest evaluation of the fact that the story they were sold by various right wing groups - critical ones funded by none other than Breitbart's Steve Bannon (now Trump's campaign manager) - simply didn't pan out. 
In the simplest sense, they were just suckered and used and got played. It's a failure of great proportions, not at all unlike back when they were played by similar forces in the 'whitewater' era. As Trump might say, Sad!
Sad, indeed.  But also dangerous.

We'd also like to reiterate our support for Tengrain's appeal to actively push back when you see media malfeasance and false equivalence rearing its ugly head.  (At the same time, as commenter wjbill suggests, we must support alternative sources of information.)  It's important that they know we're not fools and we're not going to take their dangerous game- playing anymore.

Monday, February 15, 2016

Today's Tomorrow Cartoon - The Inherently Political Appointment


(click on image to enlarge)

BERJAYA
(Tom Tomorrow, via Daily Kos)

See posts below.

BONUS:  If there's any doubt how the "mainstream" corporate media is framing the narrative of this outrage, check this out.   It would seem that the President, by exercising his responsibility under the Constitution, is provoking a "partisan battle."  What gutless, clueless, corrupt assholes, especially this d- bag.

Friday, December 4, 2015

Today's Empty Platitude Shaming Tweet



As we noted in the aftermath of the San Bernardino shootings,  N.R.A.- paid- for right- wing pols were getting push back on their rote "thoughts and prayers" reaction to the frequent manifestations of gun violence in America, the same pols who continue to block even the most modest gun control measures, even after San Bernardino. The usual Republican hacks have tried to turn this into "prayer shaming," occasionally joined by embedded Republicans and "both siderists" in the "mainstream media."  Fugelsang's tweet is the most direct and accurate response to their false public piety and to those who would try to make this an issue of "prayer shaming."

BONUS:  Nice long read at Disaffected And It Feels So Good.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Trump, Carson, Cruz And A Media In Denial


BERJAYA
David Atkins at Washington Monthly says, contrary to pundits who've been looking for the Republican crackpots charlatans "outsiders" like "Rump" Trump, Dr. "Mental Ben" Carson (a.k.a., Bennie the Blade), and Sen. "Tailgunner Ted" Cruz to succumb to the "establishment" candidate (current contender Sen. Marco "Glug Glug" Rubio), it's looking less and less likely that it's going to turn out that way:
Journalists need to acknowledge this reality. Trumpism is not a passing fad in an otherwise responsible GOP electorate. It’s all that’s left of a Republican Party that long since gave up any pretense at serious governance and instead became the unapologetic, Koch-owned plutocratic political arm of the resentment-fueled outrage machine created by talk radio, Fox News, and Breitbart.  [snip]
Good journalism shouldn’t continue to pretend that both partisan sides of American politics are equally extreme, and that the best public policy lies in middle-of-the-road compromise between the two. Good journalism should analyze and expose the fact that we now have a unilateral problem centered in the Republican Party, and try to figure out how to keep Americans adequately informed of that so that we can right the ship before it’s too late.
Unfortunately, in our humble opinion, "good journalism" in America hasn't existed for years, nor will it reappear.  It's been superseded by a scramble for the sensational, for eyeballs on screens and page hits, and a necessity not to be seen as "favoring" one side of a political argument over another.  If journalism "is the activity of gathering, assessing, creating, and presenting news and information," what passes for a news media in this country has long since largely abandoned the "assessing... information" element in favor of regurgitating "he said, she said" talking points.  

There will always be charlatans and demagogues in political life;  it's just a sad, and potentially tragic, commentary that the one institution that can help "right the ship"  has been helping to steer the ship into the rocks.

BONUSHere's a sample of the treacherous filth these demagogues are putting out, with no pushback.

Sunday, November 1, 2015

The Grifter And The Griftee


BERJAYA
New Speaker of the House and master grifter Paul "Lyin'" Ryan (R- Galt's Gulch) has made an impression on the easily- grifted Dana Milbank, who breathlessly reports on Ryan's inaugural speech to the House last Thursday:
There was rapt silence when, a moment later, Ryan said: “Let’s be frank. The House is broken. . . . And I am not interested in laying blame. We are not settling scores. We are wiping the slate clean.”  [snip]
I felt goose bumps watching from the gallery, for a most unfamiliar sense of hope had admitted itself to the bitterly divided chamber. In this dark hour for the House, there was a tantalizing glimpse that the institution, which has strayed so far from what the Founders created, could heal itself. Only an ingénue would believe all will be different now. But only the most hardened cynic would dismiss the possibility of what Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), in her speech nominating Ryan, called a “fresh start.” [our emphasis]
Hope!  Goose bumps for "hope!"  Hope the goose bumps last for 3... 2... 1:
U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan said on Sunday it would be ridiculous to work with President Barack Obama on immigration reform, saying he cannot trust the president on the issue.
"I think it would be a ridiculous notion to try and work on an issue like this with a president we simply cannot trust on this issue," Ryan said in an interview aired on the CBS program "Face the Nation."  (our emphasis)
We have some land in Florida we'd like to sell you, if you're interested Mr. Milbank.

(Image:  Pump up that hope!)

Thursday, October 15, 2015

How The Media Is Or Isn't Coming To Terms With Republican Extremism


As a companion piece to the post below, please take time to read long- time journalist James Fallows' article in The Atlantic on the traditional practices of the "mainstream media" and how Republicans have played it for decades. 

Hardly anyone still working in today’s media can remember an era in which “mainstream media” practices, as we now think of them, actually prevailed. By which I mean: a few dominant, sober-sided media outlets; a news cycle punctuated by evening network-news shows, morning (and sometimes afternoon) newspapers, weekend newsmaker talk shows, and weekly news magazines; and political discourse that shared enough assumptions about facts and logic that journalists felt they could do their jobs by saying, “We’ve heard from one side. Now let’s hear from the other."

I can barely remember any of that, and I got my first magazine job (with The Washington Monthly) around the time of the Watergate break-in and subsequent Woodward-and-Bernstein scoops, when all parts of the old-style journalistic ecosystem were still functioning.

Although that era is long gone, and had its share of problems even at its best, its mental habits persist, as we’ve often discussed in the “false equivalence” chronicles. The recurring theme here is the discomfort of reporters, old and young alike, with recognizing that the United States doesn’t currently have two structurally similar political parties approaching issues on roughly comparable terms. We have one historically familiar-looking party, and another converting itself into something else.
The article takes off from there to illustrate how the "mainstream media" has been slow to pick up on the increasingly nihilistic extremism of the Republican Party, it's obstructionism, and the use of the Benghazi!!! tragedy to score political points against Hillary Clinton.  The question is, are we seeing a longer- term adjustment to the way the media covers politics, or is it just a temporary, belated clarity in some media quarters =cough= David Brooks =cough=.  (Our guess is below.)

And how has the "mainstream media," with its traditional practice of "he said, she said" journalism, and its reliance on and commitment to unnamed (i.e., Republican) sources enabled Republicans in catapulting "perceptions" of a Clinton "email scandal?" 
Thanks to the endless leak-driven reports, “everyone knows” that there’s a problem with Hillary Clinton and her emails. It’s not a one-day story, like Colin Powell’s also having used personal email when he was secretary of state, or Mitt Romney’s having erased all email records at the end of his time as governor of Massachusetts. Instead it “feeds the perception” of Hillary Clinton’s shady evasiveness. It “raises questions” and “has a drip-drip-drip” effect, to quote things I’ve heard on the news in the past day. Count how many times you hear the phrase “Clinton email scandal” in the next news report you listen to, and wait to see if anyone explains exactly what the scandal (as opposed to misjudgment, bad decision, etc.) was. 
Of course, it's long past time for this charade of treating the Republican Party as a responsible political entity to end.  But, as we and others have said, it's not likely you'll see that happen in the "mainstream media."

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

"Republicans Gone Wild"


There's a timely interview at Bloomberg View with political scientists Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein, whose 2012 book "It's Even Worse Than It Looks," laid the blame for political dysfunction at the doorstep of the Republican/ New Confederate/ Stupid Party.  Since their thesis was contrary to the media's "both sides do it" narrative, it was largely ignored.  Now, with the meltdown of the House crackpot caucus, it's more difficult than ever for the media to ignore the obvious (but, trust us, they will).  Here's an excerpt from the interview:
Mann: This is a Republican Party problem, which has serious implications for Congress as an institution and for American governance more broadly. Republicans are paying the price for having encouraged government-hating candidates to seek office with the expectation that they could undo Obama's 2009-2010 achievements. Their constitutional ignorance and political naiveté was breathtaking. But Republican establishment leaders, who had few policy differences with the new radicals, soon became victims of the forces they helped unleash. Their party reminds us of the nullification forces in the antebellum South. The champions of "The New Nullification," as we refer to it in our book, have left damage and chaos in their wake. More is likely to follow.
In the course of the interview, Mann and Ornstein discuss the "asymmetric polarization" that has resulted in Republicans tacking far to the right, and are asked if the mainstream media would acknowledge that Republicans are "engaged in a unique form of politics that undermines the system itself."
Mann: ... If the coverage of this presidential election campaign is any indicator, the mainstream media is nowhere near accepting the reality of asymmetric polarization.
Well, corporate media will always be more interested in generating dramatic story lines, readership/ viewership and, therefore, revenue, than it is in serving the public interest.  This has produced an asymmetry in the media that has greatly favored Republicans, who have their own Fox "News," print outlets, and networks of hate radio stations to constantly peddle their right- wing talking points, plus an enabling, venal "mainstream media" unwilling to counterbalance Republican lies with the objective truth.