Recent dishonesty demonstrates why the mainstream media is largely
no longer worthy of the trust of the American people.
Following the massacre of movie-goers in an Aurora, Colorado
theater early last Friday morning, ABC’s Brian Ross twisted himself into knots
to connect the violence with the Tea Party on “Good Morning America” with
George Stephanopoulos. Here is the text.
Stephanopoulos: I’m going to go to
Brian Ross. You’ve been investigating the background of Jim Holmes here. You
found something that might be significant.
Ross: There’s a Jim Holmes of
Aurora, Colorado, page on the Colorado Tea Party site as well, talking about
him joining the Tea Party last year. Now, we don’t know if this is the same Jim
Holmes. But it’s Jim Holmes of Aurora,
Colorado.
So, Mr. Ross, if you don’t know “if this is the same Jim
Holmes,” why even mention this? It’s not like “Jim Holmes” is so unusual a name
that it couldn’t be shared by multiple individuals. Is wild speculation your
idea of responsible journalism? Or, are you just taking advantage of a horrible
crime and the pain it caused to score cheap political points for your own
ideology?
Even if it was the same Jim Holmes, there was no indication
that the shooting had any connection whatsoever with the Tea Party. Like the shooting
of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords last year, this is another pitiful and
failed media attempt to tie the Tea Party to violent acts.
ABC issued a correction, and then an apology, and that likely
will be the extent of its efforts at contrition. However, the family of the man
Mr. Ross falsely connected to the shooting was still getting death threats days
later.
Question: How can anyone trust Brian Ross’ reporting
hereafter, or that of ABC?
The cable network MSNBC got caught manipulating a comment by
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, totally changing the context of
a statement he made in order to ridicule and demean him.
The fraud that MSNBC anchor Andrea Mitchell palmed off on her
viewers painted Mr. Romney as an out-of-touch elitist who doesn’t understand how
retail commerce works.
Ms. Mitchell introduced a video clip, saying “I get the
feeling – take a look at this – that Mitt Romney has not been to too many Wawa’s
[convenience stores] along the roadside in Pennsylvania.” In the clip, Mr.
Romney comments: “I was at Wawa’s, I wanted to order a sandwich. You
press the little touch tone keypad, alright, you just touch that, and you know,
the sandwich comes at you, touch this, touch this, touch this, go pay the cashier,
there’s your sandwich. It’s amazing.”
Ms. Mitchell and her accomplice yuck it up at the
candidate’s obvious ignorance of this common method of selling food: “It’s
amazing,” she smirks.
But she pulled a fast one on viewers who trust her to honestly
tell them what is going on the in the world. What actually happened was that
Mr. Romney, prior to relating the Wawa’s anecdote, commented on how a friend
had a simple procedure badly mangled by incompetent government bureaucracy that
required him to fill out a 33-page form to notify the government of his change
of address. Twice.
He was contrasting government inefficiency with the
efficiency and innovative nature of the private sector. But that’s not the
message Ms. Mitchell wanted her viewers to get, apparently.
Question: Is Andrea Mitchell’s reporting trustworthy?
After the shooting death of 17 year-old Trayvon Martin by
George Zimmerman in Florida, a large number of people, aided by media reports,
rushed to judgment accusing Mr. Zimmerman of a racially motivated killing of the
young man we all came to know from the photo of an angelic-looking youngster taken
when he was 12 years-old.
Whether Mr. Zimmerman committed a crime, or merely defended
himself will be determined at trial, which every American – even those knee-jerks
who jumped to the conclusion that the shooting was racially motivated – needs
to understand is the proper setting for such determinations.
News organizations are expected to accurately report to the
public what is known about events. A well-informed public is less likely to
react emotionally and inappropriately, as so many did in the Trayvon Martin
shooting. These days it seems the mainstream media frequently ignores ethical
standards.
Supporting that point is the way NBC News edited the
recording of Mr. Zimmerman talking with a police dispatcher, and creating the
impression that Mr. Zimmerman had a racial prejudice against Trayvon Martin. It
then broadcast this deception on the “Today Show”: “This guy looks like he’s up
to no good. He looks black,” George Zimmerman tells police in NBC’s edited
version.
Here, however, is original text of the call:
Zimmerman: This guy looks like he’s
up to no good. Or he’s on drugs or something. It’s raining and he’s just
walking around, looking about.
Dispatcher: OK, and this guy — is
he black, white or Hispanic?
Zimmerman: He looks black.
In these examples, people were deliberately trying to manipulate
you with fraudulent reporting, or they are incompetent. When news organizations
slant the news, or manufacture the news, whatever the cause, it is unethical, underhanded
and unforgiveable.
Comments are welcome
Comments are welcome
4 comments:
The media is the most powerful agent for the left that exists.. It's just that simple...
And it is a powerful tool.
Totally corrupt no doubt! Great article.
Thanks, Barb.
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