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:: Thursday, August 17, 2006 ::
"It's also true that much regular text reporting is often faux, as we know (naux?). And we have learned that the vast percentage of war video footage comes from the same source and is therefore tilted it the same direction. What are we to make of all this? Are we all living in a false reality? Pretty much, apparently, and it's not just the normal solipsism we discover as adolescents. One of the few good things to come out of the Israel-Hezbollah War was further acknowledgment of this deception. The nature of news is changing. Few people believe in news organizations as "authorities" any more. The New York Times, as we knew it, is dead. So, to a greater or lesser degree, are its cohorts. We may be moving toward an era in which the most respected news sources are the ones that most honestly admit their biases and make no pretense whatsoever of complete objectivity."
Roger L. Simon
Simon is right but there is good news too. So long as the blogosphere exists the likes of CBS, NYT and Reuters will be outed as the fauxnies they are. The truth will out not by simply embarrasing MSM [they're shameless] but by default. MSM is undergoing an extinction event as notable and meaningful as that of the Stegosauras and it couldn't happen to a more worthy culture of dinosaurs.
:: Max 11:56 PM [+] ::
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