so you don't really give a shit if they're not terribly credible when it comes to targets of US hostility. OK. Is it sentimentality because they're based in England? Managing to look good in comparison to BBC or Sky? Strange.On a side-note, some of those FAIR criticisms are downright pathetic.
I do, in fact, believe that one should consider the function and not just the form, source and contents of a news story when deciding how skeptical to be. I hold accusations against governments that are targets of US hostility to a higher standard because it makes every sense in the world to do so: there is a demonstrable historical pattern of lies, fabrications, and speculations presented as fact being used to achieve support for a belligerent foreign policy. This will have only gotten worse as media ownership has concentrated, and worse still we're living through it so we're the primary targets of any deception. Neither of us were born yesterday; you know this as well as I do.So, the same standard you're happy to accept for atrocities committed by powers you already dislike, like the coup government in Bolivia. You post on-the-ground accounts or direct testimony all the time, but now it's suddenly specious and worth dismissing out of hand.
See this: https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2011/12/leadup-iraq-war-timeline/
Look at how often there is an event that occurs before the invasion with a "date the public knew" that occurs after it. By that time, they'd gotten what they wanted. And our media has not changed its behavior since then. If anything, it's gotten worse.