Sources
Recently a commenter was appalled that I hadn't read his link to an op ed in the Guardian. While I'm not required to read anything, I do often read the Guardian. Nonetheless an op ed is not a factual news article, it's an opinion piece, and you know what they say about opinions, everyone has one similar to other things that emit noxious gasses.
Another writer wrote an essay with a link and long quotes from the Asia Times, which I've also heard of and often read links to. The Asia Times scores smack dab in the center via Media Bias Fact Check. Least bias, most factual is it's rating. Many traditional sources worldwide are actually similar. https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/asia-times/
I often read opinion pieces, but I look to them as being opinion, not news. For news I look to any factual source. I don't like propaganda. I used to read the People's Daily, daily, and it was a pain shifting through the slant put on the reporting to discern facts. I learned then to never leave home without a shortwave radio and began tuning in to the BBC and VOA regularly.
Another web site I like even better than Media Bias Fact Check is called Media Bias Chart, and I specifically like their interactive chart which is still free. https://adfontesmedia.com/interactive-media-bias-chart/ The Chart rates sources left/right but also on the up and down axis as to reliability for factual accuracy.
The search function on the left side of the interactive page allows one to pull up specific sources and see which representative articles were evaluated and who that specific article scored left/right up/down. The average of scores determines the source's placement on the chart.
A third rating is used which I'd call boxes, they are dashed line borders around areas. Up top but stretching both left and right are what's called "Most Reliable for News" (green dots) and included are sources that are fairly left or right wing, but also factual.
A wider and partially overlapping box is "Reliable for News but high in opinion analysis content (yellow dots and dashes). In the overlapped portion you find things like Wall Street Journal, NYT, Guardian, Intercept, Fox News Special Report. Very few sources make the top box of "Most Reliable for News" The portion of the box that doesn't overlap is the more extreme. DK, Breitbart, etc.
The other two boxes are mostly right wing CT sources. Glenn Beck, Hannity I recognise. The few left wing sources I don't even recognise except I've heard of Wonkett.
Sputnick scores OK on the media chart It is in the second box, some news, lots of opinion. It is right wing though some articles score left or center, the overwhelming majority score on the right over by the Megyn Kelly Show. On Media Bias Fact Check they score much worse.
The verbal summation is horrid.
Reasoning: Russian Propaganda, Conspiracy, Lack of Transparency, Some Fake News
Bias Rating: RIGHT-CENTER
Factual Reporting: VERY LOW
Country: Russia
Press Freedom Rank: LIMITED FREEDOM
Media Type: News Agency
Traffic/Popularity: Medium Traffic
MBFC Credibility Rating: LOW CREDIBILITY
Comments
And another
message that someone leaves on the internet that is intended to annoy people.
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/troll
Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.
The article in The Guardian was backed up
by extensive documentation. It was more than an "opinion piece".
Take note of highlighted links: It's not Russia that's pushed Ukraine to the brink of war
You consider VOA an unbiased source?
Oh so funny...
I tried to ignore this, but just couldn't.
Do you know how many times I was told by you and others over the last couple of years on those Dose columns that The Guardian was not to be trust in anything related to Covid? Especially if I used it to back the science on vaccines. Those articles also were "extensively backed up".
NOW The Guardian can be trusted because you used it? They are apparently BAD on Covid, but GOOD on Ukraine?
Funny how this all works.
"Without the right to offend, freedom of speech does not exist." Taslima Nasrin
I stand by what I said.
The article I referenced was NOT about COVID. It was from 2014 and pertained to current conditions in Ukraine.
I used to respect The Guardian
as a reliable news source. But that changed when they started to falsely report the wars in Libya and Syria in 2015. Commentators were constantly correcting their lying stories (I was one of them). We were banned. Eventually they had to close down the comment section.
Note: I also did this at DKos at the time to no avail. I finally got the ban hammer when I argued that Russia was no longer a 'gas station masquerading as a country'.
A site called OffGuardian was started by a number of people who were upset that The Guardian had suppressed comments that showed they were publishing propaganda.
I check the references and history before I use the media source. I have been doing this sort of thing for over 50 years - since the early 1970's
Yes it is! I direct you to the following site for an insightful and humorous viewpoint on the COVID pandemic. Enjoy...
Over the years...
c99 has had several users that take advantage of our open discussion format and push the limits to see what they can get away with. Some are clever, some not so much. Some are glowies, some are true believers, some are just malcontents that love to disrupt. The common denominator is disruption of the essay flow and commentary, meant to side track discussions.
They are allowed to post here and are generally given the benefit of the doubt, up to a certain point. Once management deems it obvious that the user is here only to disrupt the community, then said user will be shown the door. Think of the old westerns where the bad actor is thrown out through the swinging saloon doors landing face first into the mud, blood and beer. Kind of like that.
Totally Off Topic
.
That image recalls my very favorite visual rendition of violence in a Western. The pissed off Duke Wayne picks up Strother Martin and throws him out of the saloon. The screen tracks Strother as he flies on an upward trajectory toward the Shinbone Street. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. John Ford's movie about John Ford movies.
Perfect imagery for today, even on your board.
I cried when I wrote this song. Sue me if I play too long.
One of my
And since the topic here is media credibility, let's not forget this famous line from the film, spoken by the Shinbone newspaper publisher: "This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend."
We agree on Liberty Valance!
.
Hardly anybody tries to say it is lousy, but several folks I have known have found fault with the age inappropriateness of Jimmy Steward and John Wayne for their characters. My rejoinder is it ain't their fault that the characters were too young.
A genX friend of mine who was a professional student for quite a long stretch told me about a debunking book that shit all over the myth of the Old West, pointing out that all those westerns from pot boilers through to the best work of John Ford were utter nonsense. Best little complaint was about the holster -- according to this article, nobody in the old west ever wore a holster. You carried your gun in your hand or your pocket if necessary.
Every culture on earth has myths. John Ford was a supreme artist who refused to be overt about anything, but always had some bite in his scripts. That tag from Liberty Valance is greatness. So is the coda to Fort Apache. After Hank Fonda got himself and his command slaughtered, we jump ahead to Duke entertaining some nimrods from Back East who want to celebrate the greatness that was Colonel Thursby (sp?). The look on Wayne's face as he gave politically correct (for the time) lip service to how gallant Fonda was.
As a youth I was like everybody else in my contempt for Wayne. He was pretty dim, to be honest. But as the years went by and I rewatched some of his films, I saw that he was capable of acting. Most of his films were dreck, but what the fuck? The great performances like Liberty Valance and The Shootist deserve to be remembered. I confess to actually liking the two versions of the same potboiler, Rio Bravo and El Dorado.
I agree with you that the vast majority of his films are just too lousy to sit through.
I cried when I wrote this song. Sue me if I play too long.
how does this tie-in?
question everything
Yeah, that's how
Not sure why John Ford didn't use that song in the film. Great Gene Pitney song.
I think i have that movie somewhere...
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981
Marshal Matt Dillon has entered the chat
You been watching Gunsmoke again haven’t you? How are you and Miss Kitty getting along?
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
the mud, blood and beer.
That's a line from a Johnny Cash song.
Preceded by “kicking and a-gouging” if I remember correctly…
Cash didn’t come up with the amusing tale himself — humorist Shel Silverstein, who wrote the song, did.
https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/johnnycash/aboynamedsue.html
Ahh, Shel Silverstein-
the poet laureate for the 70s. His seminal work, "Uncle Shelby's ABZ Book", still stands as one of the finest literary achievements ever in the English language. I lost my dogeared copy in the fire, but the words in it are forever burned into my memory...
Twice bitten, permanently shy.
All the sources you name deserve some skepticism.
The reporting in the Guardian is particularly egregious. Opinion pieces, however, are a different matter. Each must be judged on its own merit, unless they are authored by staff writers or columnists. Good judgement requires personal knowledge and research. There are no internet shortcuts to help you out. In professional opinion pieces, the authors are generally analyzing factual data or real-world events. Newspaper publishers expect the core premise to be 'real.' Otherwise what is the point? The opinion author's responses to a real situation will either be fact-based or delusional. I believe members in this community know the difference, and they readily call out lies and misinformation that come from both Republicans and Democrats. In recent years, the Democrats have been doing most of the conscious lying. The Republicans are mostly verbalizing and exposing their fever dreams.
Speaking of misinformation and trollish behaviors — I notice you have repeatedly overlooked the most important Rule: When trashing the thinking of others, never ever state your own opinions. Believe me, this leaves you wide open:
.
You went right from the frying pan into the fire.
I don't think that the left-right spectrum has anything to do
with accuracy.
In fact, in my experience, the absolute worst sources for accuracy usually comes from the center of the left-right spectrum.
For domestic policy this mostly falls into the category of "what isn't being said".
For instance, the "left", center, and the right in our media agree on several items that I would call The Big Lies. Namely, that we can't do anything about mass shootings, homelessness, destruction of the environment, our health care system, and that there's nothing wrong with spending $1 Trillion a year on war.
When it comes to foreign policy, this becomes even more important.
I almost never like to use American sources when the subject of "America's enemies" are discussed. They are so full of biases and disinformation that they are generally useless.
For the present, that means Putin. I don't like Putin. But I don't like him for reasons that the news media and politicians never talk about (i.e. Chechnya). The reasons that they don't like him I generally think comes from propaganda and lies.
"what isn't being said"
Sources
I was blessed by spending over a decade living overseas. Traveling around many countries and seeing how people live really changes how you think about things. Case in point, I missed the entire '80s TV programs. Never watched a Friends episode.
But let me digress. When I was young, I believed that our society was built t people with integrity. I delivered newspapers as a kid and thought this was an important job. I would deliver the papers in snow 2 feet deep in winter. That was my job. Northern Illinois winters can be either be mild or a pain. My early pre-teen years they were a pain. But I delivered the papers. I did my job.
So then I spent the '80s overseas. Ate real bread. Real vegetables. Fresh food that tasted out of this world. And I could do it without driving. My bakery was across the street. A Teverna was just down the street. And when we ate dinner...it was an event. We would sit down and have appitizers for hours. Then eat a small meal. No rush.
I paid no attention to the news at this time. Why would I?
So I come back to the States. All of the things I loved are gone. If you go out to dinner you are rushed. Money is made by how quickly they feed you, then get you out to feed someone else. I never go out to eat anymore. I learned to cook foods from all over the world. That is when I noticed that most of things that are supposedly there to make your life better aren't really to make your life better, but just give enough pleasure that you don't complain. While they make money. Two exceptions: High end places that I can't afford. Dives that I love. But in general, the American dining experience is both unhealthy and not that great.
Not unlike our media. Which is the topic of this discussion. In the early 2000's, I was able to see first hand the difference between a real media organization and what we call the media in the US. Picture this: A US helicopter goes down near Kabul circa 2002. The Pentagon spokesman says we are looking into the cause (like Blinken...which I'll get to later). Meanwhile, Al Jazeera Arabic has video of the missile launch, explosion, and the helicopter going down. The entire Western media quotes the Pentagon. Then. days later. when they finally admit it was shot down, the news is buried. Did they lie? Nope. Did this meet western journalist standards? Yes. Did people get a real time assessment of what was really going on in Afghanstian? Not on your life. Western media in a nutshell.
Maqr Al Dhib. This was quite gross. There was a wedding in the mid 2000's in Iraq along the Syrian/Iraqi border. As is typical of Americans whenever they hear 'Marriage' they know something bad is going on. They sent in C-130 gunship and commandos and took out the 'wedding'. They killed the wedding singer in the bathroom. 40 dead. Western media all puppetted the Pentagon and refused to believe the basic facts staring them in the eyes that we killed an innocent wedding party.
But before this was the whole Iraq debacle. Remember when Clear Channel banned the Dixie Chicks? Anyone that doubted the Iraq war was fired. This media is to be defended? It is all rot. We were led to believe that a museum piece of an airplane, an L-29, was a threat to the U.S. by our 'journalists'. Seriously. I had to turn CNN off over that.
So an IDF soldier shot an American citizen. Sec of State Blinken, knowing full well an IDF soldier shot an American citizen because every investigation points to that, stated "we must wait for a full investigation."
That is totally acceptable in every Western media. That is why your media scale is laughable.
I have experienced your food and meals patterns and content
I gave up radio in the 80s, tv mid-90s, wish I could go back to my youth when my family and environment was much like I experienced abroad as an adult.
We were lied to decades ago, but not all day, every day, by everybody.
Seems the CIIA gives an assist to tv scriptwriters, and to movie productions and screenwriters.
I won't fall for it, good to see you won't, either.
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981
A New Era begins
Sergey Lavrov speaks at the Arab League - Cairo, Egypt - July 24, 2022.
He discusses the history of the Ukrainian crisis that has led up to the SMO (Special Military Operation) by Russia. Lavrov has the ability to speak precisely and succinctly.
You MUST listen to his talk if you want to really understand the Russian viewpoint.
Here’s what your beloved AP missed
Guess they are blind to that Nazi symbol on the casket? This is what you are supporting in Ukraine. Hopefully others who believe that Russia had no right to defend themselves from the Ukraine Nazis see this tweet.
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
The Associated Press knows all about NAZIS
Here's an article about their historical collusion with the NAZIS by The Guardian. Take note that the 'truth' in media is subjective and variable.
I don't need
I don't need no stinkin' sources! I have the MSM!
I have Philip Cross' Wikipedia and AP!
AP for those that don't recall is Rothschilds. AP called the Reagan election (landslide edition) nationally hours before the polls closed in Pacific Time areas. This was subverting democracy and fascism, IMHO trying to throw an election. That is AP. They promised they would never do it again. In the 2016 primaries when Hellabitch was running against Bernie, THEY DID IT AGAIN! Proving neither case was an accident, they were both on purpose, and AP is fascists. Real trustworthy.
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Hellabitch
You have such colorful comments. I think Hellabitch beats out HerHeinous. Well said!
AP is where most of the mainstream media gets their news. Remember when someone posted that video of the Sinclair news from anchors across the country saying the same damn thing? Spliced them all finishing their statement about their news coverage.
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
thanks SD
Imagine how it must be for poor Mrs. dysto...
That Sinclair vid was great, there are a couple versions
I have seen, I presume findable on utub
thanks again...
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein