CBC newscast this morning features an item by Hannah Thibedeau, condescendingly dismissing a Jack Layton campaign event because it didn't feature anything new.
Everything he said, the report goes, has been part of NDP campaigns before. The clear implication is that no one really needs to take it too seriously - it's old, it hasn't caught on, nothing to see here, move along.
Uh-huh. Um ... folks? Just because an idea's been floated on previous occasions doesn't mean it's a bad idea. The fact that it doesn't fit into a lazy, ideologically circumscribed "two-way race" narrative is something else entirely.
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Showing posts with label bias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bias. Show all posts
Monday, April 4, 2011
CBC and its 'left-wing bias'
Labels:
#elxn41,
bias,
CBC,
Jack Layton
Friday, January 21, 2011
Keith Olbermann out at MSNBC
And here I was thinking that broadcasting in the United States couldn't get any dumber.
Friday, August 27, 2010
Read this post from Alex Himelfarb
Not going to try and summarize it here. Can't possibly do it justice. Here's a taste:
I know I've gone on about the cultivation of stupidity and the celebration of ignorance, but this takes the analysis that much deeper. It's long, but it's worth it. Go. Read.
The new anti-elitism is, I believe, profoundly misplaced, strangely focused on politicians, public servants, experts, and knowledge workers rather than on those who have all the money and power. That’s certainly good news for those who have all the money and power.Read it here.
I know I've gone on about the cultivation of stupidity and the celebration of ignorance, but this takes the analysis that much deeper. It's long, but it's worth it. Go. Read.
Labels:
bias,
elites,
evidence,
faux populism,
manufactured narrative,
phony authenticity,
stupidity
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