PartyOf5 wrote:BjornP wrote:PartyOf5 wrote:
Neither is a media that only criticizes one party, while aiding the other.
Disagree. That it sucks, is incompetent, biased and sensationalist and is more about validating beliefs than challenging them, isn't an argument for not having it. It's an argument for having, or creating, something better as an alternative.
They can serve as examples not to follow.
I disagree with your disagreement. It's propaganda. CNN is not worth having.
If none of the media criticizes the government (your statement), then no, it is not worth having. If none of the media criticizes one party of the government (which was my point), they are not worth having either. I feel like you moved the goalposts with the reason for your disagreement.
I disagree with your disagreement on my disagreement.
Media does not equal "
trutstworthy news site". When I wrote "A media that does not criticize the government is not worth having" that isn't
just meant to apply to trustworthy, professional journalists and the news sites they work for. It's a matter of principle. That principle being called a free press and freedom of speech. The
professionalism of the press, and the
quality of someone's speech is a seperate issue.
CNN is not worth having... in your cable package if you value professional news standards, sure. Breitbart's an even more shitty news source than CNN, and clearly aided the Trump camp while criticizing anyone else, but they're worth having in the same sense that a bus full of passengers get a learning experience out of one passenger acting rude to all the other passengers. The rude passenger may
legally be rude, but all the other passengers learn or are reinforced in the notion that the rude passenger overstepped the unspoken social boundaries.
People learn best about what is bad journalism, by actually seeing and reading it AND being able to compare it to
quality journalism.
And yes, I realize that requires someone tells them what they're reading is bad journalism. And that can be a nearly unsurmountable challenge if they simply trust a news source on its word because it affirms some pre-existing beliefs of theirs. To that end, De o posted a useful list of "characterics of historical thinking" some time ago, that is also useful for reading modern news and sources. T
http://www.envisionthepast.com/historical-thinking/
Fame is not flattery. Respect is not agreement.