There's a Travis joke in there somewhere but it wouldn't be particularly good and I can't be bothered to try.And that Houseman is why no one takes you seriously or believes what you say, because you truly believe that the weather is partisan.
There's a Travis joke in there somewhere but it wouldn't be particularly good and I can't be bothered to try.And that Houseman is why no one takes you seriously or believes what you say, because you truly believe that the weather is partisan.
Which they did. That's Trump's entire problem with them.It is not the media's job to hate. It is their job to be unbiased and report facts.
You're welcome to find a politician with more scandals to their name, more court cases, more documented lies and more anti democratic sentiments. Perhaps there are politicians every bit as bad as Trump on some of these matters, but likely not all at once and they likely do a far better job of disguising that.I'd put forth that Trump isn't, the media just uniquely hates him
Well that explains a lot.Yeah, what if? I haven't see him prove that to me, though, like I said, I only just started to pay attention.
I doubt I would fall for such crass propaganda, because Obama wasn't a compulsive liar with decades of cheating, lying, sexual assault, racism, etc. against his name before he even stepped up into office, and didn't conduct himself in that matter whilst in office either. It's not that I claim to be immune to influence by the media. But I do not believe it has the ability to turn lead into gold or gold into lead in terms of opinion. Particularly in my case, as I am healthily skeptical about the media, and secondly that I consume quite a range of media from left to right, both mainstream and alternative, and have done for thirty years.I think you have fallen for that hate. You have fallen for the propaganda. It is not genuine, but manufactured elsewhere. If Obama had been the target of a 5 year propaganda campaign and attacked by the mainstream media, you would likely be saying the same things about him as you are about Trump.
Let's just assume that they did. Choosing to only report certain facts that damage a person's reputation, while choosing not to report other facts that elevate a person's reputation is obviously unethical, right?Which they did.
Be unbiased as possible.What's the media supposed to do?
I have only seen one view of Trump from the media, and it is always negative. That's primarily why I don't trust it. Nobody can be that bad.The torrent of animosity towards Trump reflects several things, but some of them are simply that he was always unfit for office. He was unfit before he started and never bothered making himself fit. Trump's support reflects a real problem the USA faces: that people are fed up with the cosy, business- and special interest-orientated neoliberal consensus offered by the two main parties, and he effectively tapped into that frustration. He is going to be followed, almost certainly by someone who has seen the "gap in the market" he exploited, but will probably have the work ethic, political savvy, coherent vision and lack of derangement to effectively turn some of it into policy. That person will be a Republican, partly because the breakthrough has already been made there, and partly because the Republicans need to realign what their party represents anyway: they've won the popular vote in a presidential election only once since 1988, so they really need to change tack and Trump has offered them a direction.
This study provides measures of vote fraud in the 2020 presidential election. It first compares Fulton county’s precincts that are adjacent to similar precincts in neighboring counties that had no allegations of fraud to isolate the impact of Fulton county’s vote-counting process (including potential fraud). In measuring the difference in President Trump’s vote share of the absentee ballots for these adjacent precincts, we account for the difference in his vote share of the in-person voting and the difference in registered voters’ demographics. The best estimate shows an unusual 7.81% drop in Trump’s percentage of the absentee ballots for Fulton County alone of 11,350 votes, or over 80% of Biden’s vote lead in Georgia. The same approach is applied to Allegheny County in Pennsylvania for both absentee and provisional ballots. The estimated number of fraudulent votes from those two sources is about 55,270 votes.
Second, vote fraud can increase voter turnout rate. Increased fraud can take many forms: higher rates of filling out absentee ballots for people who hadn’t voted, dead people voting, ineligible people voting, or even payments to legally registered people for their votes. However, the increase might not be as large as the fraud if votes for opposing candidates are either lost, destroyed, or replaced with ballots filled out for the other candidate. The estimates here indicate that there were 70,000 to 79,000 “excess” votes in Georgia and Pennsylvania. Adding Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin, the total increases to up to 289,000 excess votes.
IvankaCan you name 2 good things that Trump has done?
One could eat a pile of shit and likely come across an undigested ort or two with some nutritional value, that doesn't make the pile of shit any less a bad meal.Can you name 2 good things that Trump has done?
Which means that if a candidate lies demonstratively more then any others, has a long history of corruption and generally behaves incompetently they should report on that and not try to sugar coat it and assure everyone he's a valid choice. Unbiased does not mean claiming every politician is equally viable.Be unbiased as possible.
Is there anything to elevate someone's reputation when they set up a fraudulent charity though? Is there a way to to elevate someone's reputation when it comes to light when he's not been paying his workers, enriches himself on tax payer money and acts as if he's above the law? Its not like Trump ever gave any indication that he's seen the light and has grown ashamed at his past conduct.Let's just assume that they did. Choosing to only report certain facts that damage a person's reputation, while choosing not to report other facts that elevate a person's reputation is obviously unethical, right?
Its not exactly the media's fault that Trump's keep doing negative things. If you keep lying, cheating, behaving like an undemocratic authoritarian and fostering extreme corruption then your press simply is going to be negative. The solution to that problem would be to stop doing all those negative things.I have only seen one view of Trump from the media, and it is always negative. That's primarily why I don't trust it. Nobody can be that bad.
Yes. Well, it's more complex than that.Can you name 2 good things that Trump has done?
Whether or not a candidate lies demonstratively more than any others is for the media to decide, because they are the one who count the lies.Which means that if a candidate lies demonstratively more then any others
I dunno, was Obama's reputation turned to mud after this?Is there anything to elevate someone's reputation when they set up a fraudulent charity though?
This is circular logic.Its not exactly the media's fault that Trump's keep doing negative things.
Weird how I get an articles about how Trump eats his steak wrong and how he offered NBA champions McDonald's due to the government shutdown shoved in my face, but I don't hear about these two things unless I deliberately search for them.Helping push through the criminal justice reform was almost certainly the big highlight. His other really big achievement was the tax cuts
Do you not understand the difference between a charity and a political campaign?Whether or not a candidate lies demonstratively more than any others is for the media to decide, because they are the one who count the lies.
I dunno, was Obama's reputation turned to mud after this?
If that were the logic being used, sure. It's not though.This is circular logic.
> Trump is bad
>Why do you think so?
> Because the media says Trump is bad?
>Why do they think so?
> Because Trump keeps doing bad things.
>Says who?
> The media
Not really. I mean Trump university wasn't bad because the media said it was bad. It was a real scandal that actually happened and there's only one way that makes Trump look: bad.This is circular logic.
> Trump is bad
>Why do you think so?
> Because the media says Trump is bad?
>Why do they think so?
> Because Trump keeps doing bad things.
>Says who?
> The media
"Scandal" is a word for when the media attacks something.Not really. I mean Trump university wasn't bad because the media said it was bad. It was a real scandal that actually happened
Oh, because no other president ever golfed. Golfing = corruption, got it.Same with Trump golfing on his own properties
So we should just uncritically believe every smear campaign done by every candidate ever?When the media reports on Trump doing things that make him bad, its generally in response to things he actually did.
No, it's probably more a combination of you not using the right search terms, and that what search engines send your way reflects both general social trends and what your personal search history suggests you are interested in (plus a dash of whatever the latest iteration of their bloody algorithm has screwed up). I recommend you read a more specialist, heavyweight news organ to avoid the worst tittle-tattle. I quite like The Economist, for instance - although a substantial of it is (unsurprisingly) economics that I have limited interest in, and it's pay to read.Weird how I get an articles about how Trump eats his steak wrong and how he offered NBA champions McDonald's due to the government shutdown shoved in my face, but I don't hear about these two things unless I deliberately search for them.
Almost as if there's some kind of media bias??!!?!
That's the thing, you have to go hunt and search for it. It's not front page news. It's not the headlines that are, like I said, shoved in your face. The articles about how Trump eats his steak, and how he ordered McDonalds, are.No, it's probably more a combination of you not using the right search terms, and that what search engines send your way
Then we are in total agreement.Media are thus inherently biased, because they represent the niches in the market for various demographic groups, and so want to tell them what they want to hear.
I think a president that has spent over a fifth of the days of his presidency - more than one a week - going on golf trips can, at minimum, be suspected of possibly not working that hard. To put it in context, Trump golfed one and a half times a week. Obama, about one a half times per fortnight. GWB played frequently (about fortnightly?) in his early years, but stopped because he was concerned about how it was making him look.Oh, because no other president ever golfed. Golfing = corruption, got it.
No indeed. Corruption is things like pressuring a foreign leader to investigate your political rivals, engaging in obstruction of justice, and directing government activities and foreign government payments to your private businesses, which were not been safely firewalled from government business by handing over to sufficiently independent administration in the first place.If you want to say that he's a worse president because he spends more time on leisure activities compared to other presidents, fine, but we should keep it in perspective. That alone doesn't that he's corrupt, as Hades put it. Nobody is perfect. Not everyone can be #1 in all things.