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+19 +1
Bern after reading: Why the beltway press wrote off the possibility of Bernie Sanders
Writer Thomas Frank examines the DC media's coverage of the Sanders campaign, and finds an antagonism driven by the same elitist politics and beltway solipsism that power both the Clinton campaign and Democratic Party leadership, and a shared ideological blindspot towards the possibilities of politics and the worth of stale (often disastrous) Beltway consensus. [Podcast]
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+20 +1
Four Wars
“More than most armed struggles, the conflicts have been propaganda wars in which newspaper, television and radio journalists played a central role.” By Patrick Cockburn.
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+33 +1
Why won’t anyone admit that America is fighting 5 wars?
The shameful conspiracy of silence around America’s many wars. By Damon Linker.
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+8 +1
Cable News Charnel
To the cable news camera, structural oppression is harder to capture than a burning cop car. Spectacle still rules cable news. By Alex Pareene.
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+23 +1
How Arianna Huffington Lost Her Newsroom
The Huffington Post’s namesake founder, who stepped down as editor in chief last month, built an iconic media company in record time. Then, after a decade at the helm, she left suddenly. By William D. Cohan.
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+19 +1
How a Tragic Child Murder Case Became a Fight About Press Freedom
On July 23 1991, construction workers near the Henry Hudson Parkway in Manhattan found an Igloo cooler with the partially decomposed remains of a toddler-aged girl inside. According to the chief NYC medical examiner, the cause of death was asphyxia, and further testing revealed that the young girl had semen in her rectum when she died. No one reported the girl missing, and for over two decades, police had no real leads.
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+19 +1
Fueled by Republicans, Americans' trust in media hits all-time low
In a climate of bitter political partisanship, anti-media rhetoric and diversified media options, just 32% of Americans now say they trust the media "to report the news fully, accurately and fairly" -- the lowest level since 1972, when Gallup began polling. "Now, only about a third of the U.S. has any trust in the Fourth Estate, a stunning development for an institution designed to inform the public," Gallup said in its press release.
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+14 +1
Stoking Russia Panic for Partisan Gain Will Have a Long-Term Price for Peace
According to leading pro-Democratic media, the US cannot possibly work with Russia. By Adam Johnson. (Aug. 24, 2016)
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+37 +1
The media vs. Donald Trump: why the press feels so free to criticize the Republican nominee
There is a case to be made that the media created Donald Trump. It was, reportedly, his anger at being dismissed by political pundits that led him to run for president in the first place. And it was, arguably, the media’s wall-to-wall coverage of his every utterance that powered his victory in the Republican primary. But slowly, surely, the media has turned on Trump. He still gets wall-to-wall coverage, but that coverage is overwhelmingly negative. Increasingly, the press doesn’t even pretend to treat Trump like a normal candidate...
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+17 +1
Study Reveals the Post’s Desire to Dismiss Economic Explanations of Trump’s Rise
The Washington Post suggests that a new study of Trump voters proves “economic anxiety” is irrelevant to his success. The study suggests otherwise. By Eric Levitz.
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+2 +1
The Necessity of Political Vulgarity
To deny the importance of vulgarity is to reject the revolutionary tradition… By Amber A’Lee Frost. (May 17, 2016)
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+1 +1
The Scandalous Zines of Renaissance England
Broadsides were the Facebook posts and tweets of their day. By Natalie Zarrelli.
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+7 +1
Barbarians at the Gates
A key weapon of the neo-liberal establishment in delegitimising the emergence of popular organisation to the left, is to portray all thinkers outside the Overton window as dangerous; actively violent, misogynist and racist... By Craig Murray.
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+42 +1
The Silencing of Japan’s Free Press
As the leaders of the G-7 liberal democracies convened in the Japanese shrine town of Ise-Shima this week, host Prime Minister Shinzo Abe used the event to showcase his nation as a regional beacon of democratic values and a counterweight to authoritarian China. However, recent events have raised doubts about his commitment to at least one of those values — freedom of the press.
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+5 +1
To Break the Story, You Must Break the Status Quo
Rebecca Solnit on Why Journalists Need to Cause Trouble. Adapted from the 2016 commencement address for the Graduate School of Journalism at UC Berkeley, Solnit’s alma mater.
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+34 +1
Lying Press? Germans Lose Faith in the Fourth Estate
Germans are losing faith in their media. Nowhere is this more apparent than in mistrust of refugee crisis media coverage. Where did journalists go wrong? And how much of this skepticism reflects a preference for rumors over facts?
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G’day USA: Beardspo shop launches with products direct from down under
The world’s first bearding zine has launched an online store catering to United States customers seeking Australian made grooming products.
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