[Vision2020] Bush Says He Won't Be Swayed To Withdraw
Tony
tonytime at clearwire.net
Wed Nov 29 11:33:01 PST 2006
Andreas, for a bright guy, you pay very poor attention. I never suggested
that official pronouncements should be regurgitated wholesale. What I said
was it is NOT THE JOB of the reporter to analyze and argue with those
pronouncements. If the journalist feels that more than the official version
would lend to a more fair and accurate reporting, then she should seek out
and quote someone with an opposing view. Readers have a right to expect
reporters to REPORT the news of the day, not interpret, shade, argue with or
manipulate it in ANY WAY with their own "analysis." There is no question to
which the ONLY fair-minded and fully informative answer can be said to be
STRICTLY yes or no. Folks who demand to ask a question and then insist what
the proper answer is, should be ignored out of hand.
The only thing "idiotic" about this war is the hysterical and shrill carping
from the left on behalf of our sworn enemies.
Goodnight and have a pleasant tomorrow. -T
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andreas Schou" <ophite at gmail.com>
To: "Tony" <tonytime at clearwire.net>
Cc: <vision2020 at moscow.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 29, 2006 10:56 AM
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Bush Says He Won't Be Swayed To Withdraw
> On 11/29/06, Tony <tonytime at clearwire.net> wrote:
>> Actually Andreas, the only legitimate way to transmit someone's words is
>> through a verbatim quote. ANY "analysis" WHATSOEVER steps over the
>> bounds
>> unless on the opinion page. You loose credibility Andreas when you flak
>> for
>> those who would shape public opinion in the name of reporting the news.
>
> This is idiotic. News is not the blind transmission of official pap
> from policy organs to the listening public. If Dick Cheney says that
> the insurgency is in its last throes, and it is clear that that is not
> the case, then the fact that the facts contradict him should be made
> clear. If someone is asked a yes or no question and doesn't answer it,
> it should be made clear that they didn't answer it -- because that is
> self-evidently the case.
>
> People often lie, and there is often a certain amount of ambiguity
> about the facts -- like, for instance, whether claims about Iraq's
> nuclear weapons programs were malicious lies or simply delusional
> fantasies. Because the news media acted as a funnel to deliver the
> "official story" to the people, we ended up with too many people
> supporting an idiotic and unnecessary war.
>
> -- ACS
>
>
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