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The fact that CK appears in the Post in no way zeros out his conservative take on things. His shocking figures outline a whopping two week sample, during which Bush was stumbling over himself during the debates and deaths were mounting in Iraq. Bad media coverage isnt necessarily a sign of bias; it could be a sign of bad leadership. (I couldnt find this study by the way - have a link?)
When asked, this is how journalists describe themselves:
Q#22. On social issues, how would you characterize your political orientation? Q#23. On economic issues, how would you characterize your political orientation?
22 23
Left 30% Left 11%
Center 57% Center 64%
Right 9% Right 19%
Other 5% Other 5%
So strongly center and leaning right on economic issues.
see http://www.fair.org/reports/journalist-survey.html
what about the pundits who really frame the way people think about things. Hmm:
Conservative pundits: Pat Buchanan, Fred Barnes, John McLaughlin, David Gergen, Robert Novak, William F. Buckley, Jr., George Will, William Safire, Cal Thomas, Jonathon Alter, Joe Klein, Robert J. Samuelson, James Kilpatrick, Rush Limbaugh, and hundreds of other conservative radio talk-show hosts.
Centrists (self-described): Sam Donaldson, Mark Shields, Michael Kinsley, Morton Kondrake, Al Hunt, Jack Germond, Hodding Carter.
Progressive pundits: Jim Hightower (cancelled), Barbara Eirenreich, Molly Ivins.
see http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/L-liberalmedia.htm
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I'm not really interested in this right-left discussion. To me its a power-grassroots discussion. Disenfranchisement comes in many forms. To me blogs represent a nonpartisan method of the grassroots being able to hold those in power to speak the truth and to be deeply transparent. That is a fundamental shift.If you fail to understand why the vast majority of blogs, and the accompanying success of the blogsphere, came into being then you'll never understand why liberal media will fight the blog movement, even when they harm their liberal friends like DailyKos or TalkingPointsMemo. The blogosphere is all about politics, no one can claim to be a fence-sitter. In fact, most blogs to the left and to the right enjoy vivid exchange with other blogs on matters of politics.
Believe me, you can't talk away liberal bias in old media by ignoring it, and you can't cure it by ignoring it. The benefit of the 'sphere is that it makes visible bias on both sides, and that both sides still have the feeling that they get their fair share of public representation.