Haha, actually I enjoy reading The Diplomat. It focuses on the policies and foreign relations of nations in the Asia-Pacific region:
http://thediplomat.com/
There's a wide variety of nations covered, news reporters with various angles, interviews with a large array of individuals, speculation and debates on the ongoing power struggle within the region, reports on military exchanges and training, and so on. And the comment section can be pretty fascinating...when it's not dominated solely by the pro-China crowd.
ZeroAX wrote:Ack wrote:
No, the British news is just as biased(or moreso, according to Adam), but we trust it for its international reporting. Most of our news services don't tend to focus as heavily on the international aspects.
With no offense to Adam, he is too emotional of the subject of Scotland (cause of his problems with his wife's visa). All they did was present the arguments for pro and against, and well the economic arguments did support the Union (though you can't "report" on how future central governments will mismanage the economy, which was the Yes campaigns main argument).
And read this last paragraph:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falklands_ ... ed_Kingdom
I can't imagine that happening in any Greek or American news channel, especially a public one.
No, we definitely tend toward a pro-American bias with certain networks and an anti-American bias with others. Again, it depends heavily on the general slant of the reporting, the actors involved, and so forth.
ZeroAX wrote:Ack wrote:
This is also a point of debate among conservatives. The argument concerns the education of journalists and claims they tend to naturally lean liberal due to having received degrees from generally liberal universities, which colors their reporting. It ties back into perceptions of liberal bias within higher education, which has been a growing major complaint for the last 40-50 years, basically as a repercussion to what was happening with the various civil rights movements.
Yeah this is pretty ugly because it just smells of backlash due to inferiority complex.
Potentially, or it could be a retaliation for a feeling of exclusion as liberal elements have slowly pushed out conservative ones. Either way, having a large political body that controls academia versus a large political body that takes a Luddite view towards academia is a dangerous situation.
ZeroAX wrote:Ack wrote:
And yet MSNBC gets a free pass? Both of those networks have a few decent points, but both are also full of dribble.
It doesn't get made fun of in Europe, so I don't know about it, but since you are moderate and I trust your opinion I'm guessing it's also a party propaganda network but for the Democrats.
Effectively yes, MSNBC is considered the Democrat propaganda channel, just as Fox is the Republican one.
And I haven't been called moderate in a long time, haha! But I imagine political angles as a three-dimensional figure as opposed to the horizontal line most people get put on here or the graph that the Libertarians favor.