Enhance Posted August 3, 2017 Share Posted August 3, 2017 The admins don't know what kind of monster they've unleashed. 2 Link to comment
Danny Bateman Posted August 3, 2017 Share Posted August 3, 2017 Seemed to me Enhance had his mod pants on but wasn't sure what to do with them Anywho, here's where NOT to get your news: Edit: Had wrong tweet embedded. 1 Link to comment
knapplc Posted August 3, 2017 Author Share Posted August 3, 2017 Here's why it's important to be discerning when it comes to your news sources. There was a dispute between CNN's Jim Acosta and White House advisor Stephen Miller the other day. It was covered very, very differently by slanted news sources. Note - I don't follow or get news from any of these sources, and a person interested in facts shouldn't either. How the Right and Left reacted to Acosta-MillerCNN's Jim Acosta and top White House advisor Stephen Miller got into a shouting match at the daily press briefing on Wednesday, and partisan media quickly took sides.Why it matters: This fight is just one more vivid example of the ongoing war between the Trump administration and main stream media as well as the vicious partisanship surrounding the Trump presidency. As usual, left-leaning media sites rushed to praise Jim Acosta as a hero and criticize Stephen Miller, while right-leaning media companies ran headlines mocking Acosta or cheering on Miller.Headlines 151 wordsHere are some headlines from right-leaning and left-leaning news sites on the Acosta-Miller brawl. Link to comment
TGHusker Posted August 3, 2017 Share Posted August 3, 2017 Zoogs posted this in the MEDIA BIAS- FACT CHECKING THREAD BY IA STATE HUSKER. MODS - MAYBE YOU CAN MERGE THAT THREAD INTO THIS ONE?? It looks that way, but it's not. Ultimately this is one guy who came up with a system and made a website for it. I have reservations about someone willing to look that scientific, throwing up numbers and references and graphs, and ending with the admission that this is just his own non-scientific methodology. It has to be inadequate if CNN and Drudge Report are just two sides of the same coin. Their methodology page seems like more of a marketing speech than anything else. For something that's so comprehensive-looking, it clearly is not ("For each source a minimum of 10 headlines are reviewed and a minimum of 5 news stories reviewed"). There's no accountability here very few outlets have bothered to cover him (Dave Van Zandt, who is...who, exactly?) The ones who have that I've found fall into two categories: 1) mainstream sources carelessly listing "Here's some factcheck websites, go check them out" and 2) fringe websites loudly complaining about their review (while potentially making a fair point). By any reasonable metric I think this source itself would be categorized as unreliable. For other stuff in the same category: Here's one chart (source: patent attorney Vanessa Otero) Here's another one, from some guy on Twitter who evidently sees Vox and Breitbart as mirror images, and RT as basically The Hill: Here's one on science reporting from some official-sounding sources that I haven't vetted at all (just take it as a blogger writing for that site making a graphic): Just for fun, here's one from Infowars because anybody can play this game: I think all of these are quite flawed in their own way. I think I found the patent attorney one more fair than most; it seems mostly fair about analytical depth and puts the crazy where it belongs. But more than anything I think it's important to avoid taking any of these chart-makers as gospel. --- AllSides looks far more legitimate as an organization, although to be fair, that also doesn't say too much about the quality of their methodology. It is (or was) a startup. THIS IS FROM IA STATE HUSKER FROM HIS MEDIA BIAS THREAD Posted 26 June 2017 - 10:47 AM https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/ I stumbled accross this site, and wanted to share it with the community. It appears to be a community-reviewed or public-reviewed site that provides ratings for media sources. It looks pretty legitimate, but anything open to internet polling can be manipulated. What do you all think of the accuracy of it? Here is a quick breakdown of some of the more major news outlets (there are numerous outlets in their ratings. I'm just listing those I consider major because I have heard of them) Red = Mixed Record on factual reporting Black = High rating on factual reporting Green = Very High rating on factual reporting Left Bias CNN* Daily Beast Huffington Post MSNBC* New Yorker Left-Center ABC News Al Jazeera AOL The Atlantic BBC Bloomberg CBS News CNBC NBC News Newsweek NPR New York Times Politico The Guardian The Hill* Time Mag US News World Report Washington Post Yahoo News* Least Biased Associated Press C-Span Gallup Pew Research Politifact Reuters The Economist USA Today Wikipedia Right-Center Des Moines Register Forbes* New York Post* Omaha World Herald Wall Street Journal Right Bias Breitbart* Daily Mail* Drudge Report* Fox News* Link to comment
knapplc Posted August 3, 2017 Author Share Posted August 3, 2017 mediabiasfactcheck.com is about as accurate as me posting my opinions on various news sites. The guy running it uses no scientific methodology and has been accused of biasing his "ratings" based on criticism of his site. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-02-20/exposing-9-fakest-fake-news-checkers EDIT - I also noticed something on the InfoWars graphic: Look who's missing from their chart (because they would be at the bottom left) Just for fun, here's one from Infowars because anybody can play this game: Link to comment
zoogs Posted August 3, 2017 Share Posted August 3, 2017 Ironically, that's from ZeroHedge, which is as conspiratorial a a site as they come. It's not even from ZeroHedge, actually -- it's from WND. Which if anything is even more low-grade. But then, here's the thing: of course they would protest, but they're not wrong about this. Link to comment
knapplc Posted August 3, 2017 Author Share Posted August 3, 2017 Yeah, I saw the irony in posting from those two sources. But there are several sites questioning the legitimacy of mediabiasfactcheck - zerohedge just happened to be the first one I grabbed a link from. Link to comment
TGHusker Posted August 3, 2017 Share Posted August 3, 2017 Yeah, I saw the irony in posting from those two sources. But there are several sites questioning the legitimacy of mediabiasfactcheck - zerohedge just happened to be the first one I grabbed a link from. Knapp - I'm disappointed in you - that is something I use to always do!! Just joking wt you. Good info on the above. Link to comment
zoogs Posted August 8, 2017 Share Posted August 8, 2017 http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/08/the-alt-right-and-glenn-greenwald-versus-h-r-mcmaster.html NYMag with a great review of The Intercept's Glenn Greenwald's curious alliance with the alt-right and Russia. Greenwald and his outlet do and have done valuable work, but on this particular topic their posture has always been mystifying to me. This closing paragraph is a succinct summary, and one with which I agree. This closely tracks the Trump legal team’s own defense of the Russia scandal, a fact that is probably coincidental. (There are only so many arguments to make.) Greenwald is not a racist, and is the opposite of a nationalist, and yet his worldview has brought him into close alignment with that of the alt-right. A Greenwaldian paranoid would see this quasi-alliance as a conspiracy. The reality of his warped defenses of Trump is merely that of a monomaniac unable to relinquish his obsessions. Posting in this thread because it seems as good a place as any to exchange our views on different outlets, journalists, etc. I still think Greenwald is a valuable voice and his criticism is worthy. Yet I find this alignment of his impossible to deny, hard to accept, and well-deserving of this kind of rebuke. Link to comment
RedDenver Posted August 8, 2017 Share Posted August 8, 2017 http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/08/the-alt-right-and-glenn-greenwald-versus-h-r-mcmaster.html NYMag with a great review of The Intercept's Glenn Greenwald's curious alliance with the alt-right and Russia. Greenwald and his outlet do and have done valuable work, but on this particular topic their posture has always been mystifying to me. This closing paragraph is a succinct summary, and one with which I agree. This closely tracks the Trump legal team’s own defense of the Russia scandal, a fact that is probably coincidental. (There are only so many arguments to make.) Greenwald is not a racist, and is the opposite of a nationalist, and yet his worldview has brought him into close alignment with that of the alt-right. A Greenwaldian paranoid would see this quasi-alliance as a conspiracy. The reality of his warped defenses of Trump is merely that of a monomaniac unable to relinquish his obsessions. Posting in this thread because it seems as good a place as any to exchange our views on different outlets, journalists, etc. I still think Greenwald is a valuable voice and his criticism is worthy. Yet I find this alignment of his impossible to deny, hard to accept, and well-deserving of this kind of rebuke. That NYMag article misconstrues (or at least misunderstands) Greenwald's article as he's not supporting Trump but rather attacking the establishment. Greenwald's closing paragraphs sum up his argument (emphasis mine): No matter how much of a threat one regards Trump as being, there really are other major threats to U.S. democracy and important political values. It’s hard, for instance, to imagine any group that has done more harm, and ushered in more evil, than the Bush-era neocons with whom Democrats are now openly aligning. And who has brought more death, and suffering, and tyranny to the world over the last six decades than the U.S. national security state? In terms of some of the popular terms that are often thrown around these days — such as “authoritarianism” and “democratic norms” and “U.S. traditions” — it’s hard to imagine many things that would pose a greater threat to all of that than empowering the national security state (what, before Trump, has long been called the Deep State) to exert precisely the power that is supposed to be reserved exclusively for elected officials. In sum, Trump opponents should be careful of what they wish for, as it might come true. Link to comment
zoogs Posted August 8, 2017 Share Posted August 8, 2017 I don't think it was saying that Greenwald is supporting Trump -- it goes to lengths to repeatedly point out that he doesn't. It's spotlighting the extent to which Greenwald buys into the same sort of arguments in a critique of his rigidly America-critical worldview. That worldview in itself is not necessarily a wrong thing, but IMO it's led to some truly bizarre stances from him. Most stark among these examples is his defense of the Trump Jr. meeting. There are resolute critics of the national security apparatus and the Obama administration's record in this area who don't share what looks to me like Greenwald's barely believable blind spot. If the NY Mag author shared in Greenwald's extremely suspicious nature, only regarding Russophiles instead of neocons, he would condemn him as an incontrovertible co-conspirator -- and yet he does not. In short: I share the "question the establishment" sympathies, but there's a long bridge between that and where Greenwald and The Intercept are on Russia, and I'm loathe to join them there. Link to comment
RedDenver Posted August 8, 2017 Share Posted August 8, 2017 I don't think it was saying that Greenwald is supporting Trump -- it goes to lengths to repeatedly point out that he doesn't. It's spotlighting the extent to which Greenwald buys into the same sort of arguments in a critique of his rigidly America-critical worldview. That worldview in itself is not necessarily a wrong thing, but IMO it's led to some truly bizarre stances from him. Most stark among these examples is his defense of the Trump Jr. meeting. There are resolute critics of the national security apparatus and the Obama administration's record in this area who don't share what looks to me like Greenwald's barely believable blind spot. If the NY Mag author shared in Greenwald's extremely suspicious nature, only regarding Russophiles instead of neocons, he would condemn him as an incontrovertible co-conspirator -- and yet he does not. In short: I share the "question the establishment" sympathies, but there's a long bridge between that and where Greenwald and The Intercept are on Russia, and I'm loathe to join them there. When you say "NYMag with a great review of The Intercept's Glenn Greenwald's curious alliance with the alt-right and Russia" and the article says "the episode has revealed a left-winger’s idiosyncratic sympathy for the most odious characters on the right" that sounds an awful lot like claiming Greenwald supports Trump or at least supports the alt-right. If you're going to disagree with Greenwald and debunk his claims, then that's fine. But to suggest that his claims are debunked simply because alt-right people similar claims isn't true. (FYI, I don't quite buy Greenwald's claims, but I think they are worth keeping in mind.) Link to comment
zoogs Posted August 8, 2017 Share Posted August 8, 2017 I think we're saying exactly what we're saying, which is that he has these inexplicable sympathies and alignments, *not* that he supports Trump or the alt-right. I also don't think "the alt-right said this, therefore it's invalid" was the argument. I wonder how you got to either of these conclusions. Instead, I think it's an attempt to highlight the flaws in Greenwald's broadsides. The argument is that he's so virulently anti-establishment that it will lead him to some really unfortunate places. Like the one where he buys Trump's "no cuts to entitlement" promise at face value, and more than that, bizzarely infers that the Democratic platform was therefore the opposite. This is a stunning lack of discernment being peddled by someone of Greenwald's caliber. Most worthy of reprobation I think is his utter blindness to Russia's behavior. The thing is, I think a lot of Greenwald's conclusions are simply axiomatic consequences of the way he views the world, particularly the U.S. establishment. He himself is not himself a bigoted white nationalist cheering Putin as a "champion ... against Islam", but "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" leads you down the sort of strange rabbitholes where you wind up calling Russian interference claims "elaborate conspiracy theories" and DJT Jr's meeting "sort of the way politics works." This is, I think, a necessary context for understanding and digesting Greenwald and what he puts out. He's a passionate and important voice and one among many that I think are nonetheless worth listening to. I share this for the context that I feel is needed, and not as a suggestion to dismiss him out of hand or stop reading what he writes. Link to comment
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