THE ERA OF TRUMP
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
Except the press didn't completely lie. They stated correctly that his crowd size was smaller than Obama's. True story.
They posted a picture that created a visual lie, but what they said was true.
So.... they shot themselves in the foot. The crowd WAS smaller...why they felt the need to exaggerate is a very valid critique and they should have been called out on it. It was a great moment to say, "See? Gotcha media.... "
Instead, they showed themselves to be liars by countering a half truth with a lie.
Now peeps go fishing for more data and realize he's just a lying liar who lies.
They posted a picture that created a visual lie, but what they said was true.
So.... they shot themselves in the foot. The crowd WAS smaller...why they felt the need to exaggerate is a very valid critique and they should have been called out on it. It was a great moment to say, "See? Gotcha media.... "
Instead, they showed themselves to be liars by countering a half truth with a lie.
Now peeps go fishing for more data and realize he's just a lying liar who lies.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
Come on, Kath. They totally lied. They presented a photo of a mostly empty Mall as if that was the crowd at the ceremony. It was total propaganda.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
Who cares if they didn't completely lie and mixed a tiny amount of truth to help sell the lie? They deliberately mislead with visual trickery. That needed to be countered and the fact that some people figure out their ruse isn't enough because that story is nowhere as compelling or entertaining as the media lie was, therefore the truth will lose and you need to combine the truth with a lie, to take down the media's lie. The truth and only the truth isn't always the most compelling and entertaining story, and when it isn't it will lose out to the story that fits that bill. Regardless of what that stories truth content is.Kath wrote:Except the press didn't completely lie. They stated correctly that his crowd size was smaller than Obama's. True story.
They posted a picture that created a visual lie, but what they said was true.
So.... they shot themselves in the foot. The crowd WAS smaller...why they felt the need to exaggerate is a very valid critique and they should have been called out on it. It was a great moment to say, "See? Gotcha media.... "
Instead, they showed themselves to be liars by countering a half truth with a lie.
Now peeps go fishing for more data and realize he's just a lying liar who lies.
Last edited by StCapps on Mon Jan 23, 2017 5:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
Funny how "The Press" apparantly is this one thing, this one, single entity. It's a bit like arguing against "The Government"'s Obamacare, or "The Government"'s building of The Wall. Sure, it's "the government" enacting those things, but... Trump is not Obama because both are "the government". One ought to mentally consider that the same applies even less to the "The Press".
Fame is not flattery. Respect is not agreement.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
The press isn't a monolith, they just live a bubble that leads to a large chunk of them holding the same views. I don't see anyone fronting like "The Press" is some monolith, you are misinterpreting people's posts.BjornP wrote:Funny how "The Press" apparantly is this one thing, this one, single entity. It's a bit like arguing against "The Government"'s Obamacare, or "The Government"'s building of The Wall. Sure, it's "the government" enacting those things, but... Trump is not Obama because both are "the government". One ought to mentally consider that the same applies even less to the "The Press".
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
StCapps wrote:The press isn't a monolith, they just live a bubble that leads to a large chunk of them holding the same views. I don't see anyone fronting like "The Press" is some monolith, you are misinterpreting people's posts.BjornP wrote:Funny how "The Press" apparantly is this one thing, this one, single entity. It's a bit like arguing against "The Government"'s Obamacare, or "The Government"'s building of The Wall. Sure, it's "the government" enacting those things, but... Trump is not Obama because both are "the government". One ought to mentally consider that the same applies even less to the "The Press".
"The media" = "the press"....they deliberately mislead with visual trickery. That needed to be countered and the fact that people know it isn't true isn't enough because story is nowhere as compelling or entertaining as the media lie was, therefore the truth will lose and you need to combine the truth with a lie, to take down the media's lie. The truth and only the truth isn't always the most compelling and entertaining story, and when it isn't it will lose out to the story that fits that bill. Regardless of what that stories truth content is.
But I'm glad that you say that the press is not a monolith...but then immedietly get confused when you say "they" live in a bubble. "The media" is huge, consists of thousands of news outlets from the huge MSM, to smalltown print newspapers, to bloggers and YT'ers who do enough investigative reporting to be (or who should be) considered investigative journalists. Do those WH correspondents who have cultivated quid pro quo relationships with WH staffers for decades in return for positive reporting here and there fit your description of a bubble? Definilotely! Do all journalists have the same relationship with the people in power? Of course not.
And we agree that the truth isn't neccesarily considered the best story. Think you're vastly overselling that point, though. I have no problem detecting spin, when a journalist clearly didn't dig hard enough for background info, when they clearly have no idea what they're writing about, when they're trying to say something between the lines, etc. But sometimes, the news are just: "Interest rates went up today by X points" or "Two cars collided on X street today". Could that be lies...? Uhmm... Would be pretty dumb to set that precedent if one was the government, and if you're in finance you generally want to be able to trust your newspaper. In fact, that's the point of those I know who subscribe to a newspaper. Do newspapers have bias? Of course. But it would be bad business, and still gives a bad rep for them to be caught in an outright lie.
Fame is not flattery. Respect is not agreement.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
I never said all journalists have the same relationships, but a large group of well known journalists do.BjornP wrote:"The media" = "the press".
But I'm glad that you say that the press is not a monolith...but then immedietly get confused when you say "they" live in a bubble. "The media" is huge, consists of thousands of news outlets from the huge MSM, to smalltown print newspapers, to bloggers and YT'ers who do enough investigative reporting to be (or who should be) considered investigative journalists. Do those WH correspondents who have cultivated quid pro quo relationships with WH staffers for decades in return for positive reporting here and there fit your description of a bubble? Definilotely! Do all journalists have the same relationship with the people in power? Of course not.
Just because you can detect spin easily doesn't mean the general public is as skilled at doing so. You over-estimate the American electorate's ability to discover the truth, sometimes they catch on but that's only when the media is being too obvious.BjornP wrote:And we agree that the truth isn't neccesarily considered the best story. Think you're vastly overselling that point, though. I have no problem detecting spin, when a journalist clearly didn't dig hard enough for background info, when they clearly have no idea what they're writing about, when they're trying to say something between the lines, etc. But sometimes, the news are just: "Interest rates went up today by X points" or "Two cars collided on X street today". Could that be lies...? Uhmm... Would be pretty dumb to set that precedent if one was the government, and if you're in finance you generally want to be able to trust your newspaper. In fact, that's the point of those I know who subscribe to a newspaper. Do newspapers have bias? Of course. But it would be bad business, and still gives a bad rep for them to be caught in an outright lie.
Last edited by StCapps on Mon Jan 23, 2017 5:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
Agree 100%. I posted this in another thread...BjornP wrote:"The media" = "the press".
But I'm glad that you say that the press is not a monolith...but then immedietly get confused when you say "they" live in a bubble. "The media" is huge, consists of thousands of news outlets from the huge MSM, to smalltown print newspapers, to bloggers and YT'ers who do enough investigative reporting to be (or who should be) considered investigative journalists. Do those WH correspondents who have cultivated quid pro quo relationships with WH staffers for decades in return for positive reporting here and there fit your description of a bubble? Definilotely! Do all journalists have the same relationship with the people in power? Of course not.
And we agree that the truth isn't neccesarily considered the best story. Think you're vastly overselling that point, though. I have no problem detecting spin, when a journalist clearly didn't dig hard enough for background info, when they clearly have no idea what they're writing about, when they're trying to say something between the lines, etc. But sometimes, the news are just: "Interest rates went up today by X points" or "Two cars collided on X street today". Could that be lies...? Uhmm... Would be pretty dumb to set that precedent if one was the government, and if you're in finance you generally want to be able to trust your newspaper. In fact, that's the point of those I know who subscribe to a newspaper. Do newspapers have bias? Of course. But it would be bad business, and still gives a bad rep for them to be caught in an outright lie.
Is one reporter equivalent to the whole news outlet they work for? Is one reporter, or one outlet, equivalent to all reporters and outlets that make up "the press"? Is the credibility of AP and Reuters in doubt if a story some other outlets article contains falsehoods? Is Breitbart part of the press, and is their history of reporting also under review as part of "the press"?
If the discussion is about reporters, or news outlets and their editors, there is a discussion that can take place in regards to journalism and ethics.
If the discussion is about "the press", there's really nothing that can be said of any value, besides reinforcing the "us vs. them" narrative.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
No.adwinistrator wrote:Is one reporter equivalent to the whole news outlet they work for?
No.adwinistrator wrote:Is one reporter, or one outlet, equivalent to all reporters and outlets that make up "the press"?
Yes.adwinistrator wrote:Is the credibility of AP and Reuters in doubt if a story some other outlets article contains falsehoods?
Yes.adwinistrator wrote:Is Breitbart part of the press, and is their history of reporting also under review as part of "the press"?
Indeed.adwinistrator wrote:If the discussion is about reporters, or news outlets and their editors, there is a discussion that can take place in regards to journalism and ethics.
No, discussing "the press" can add value by comparing the similarities in how reporters and media outlets report the news, instead of pretending that there are none of these similarities shared by a rather large and prominent group of journalists.adwinistrator wrote:If the discussion is about "the press", there's really nothing that can be said of any value, besides reinforcing the "us vs. them" narrative.
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Re: THE ERA OF TRUMP
Yes.Speaker to Animals wrote:Come on, Kath. They totally lied. They presented a photo of a mostly empty Mall as if that was the crowd at the ceremony. It was total propaganda.
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