| 'lean' lol. the wsj opinion section has gone wildly off the rails. love their journalism. can't read half the crap they allow to be published in opeds. at a minimum, is it too much to not publish outright provable lies? it actually feels like a similar persecution complex vibe to these lawsuits and congressional hearings to me that somehow if we aren't forced to listen to them, or that their megaphone isn't as loud as it once was, that they are being persecuted and censored with the most orwellian oppression in the history of our country! (i can think of a lot of truly terrible things our govt has done... literal internment camps and more! but that is besides the point) no one has silenced them. we continue to hear it constantly. i hear more anti gay slurs now - on traditional media and online - than i ever remember growing up as a very obviously gay boy ;0 if anything, whenever someone crows about being 'cancelled' their message is spread even farther. there isn't a right to amplification. the next door kook was never promised a full page column in the local paper. with a guaranteed readership of thousands or millions. any truth filter or higher bar for discourse that might have existed in legacy news media has been smashed news corp is the leader and biggest offender the democratization of the megaphone (internet gives any random conspiracist opportunity to reach more than cronkite did), has given many the impression that they are owed this power to yell and be guaranteed a listening and receptive audience. and anything less is cancelation or "censorship." |
I'd love to hear some examples. From what I can tell, they don't lie, but they will leave out details that may provide additional context (much like the NYT and WP opinion pages tend to do).
There is a careful line between opinions and facts. From what I can tell, the editorial board doesn't allow outright facts that can be disputed from being published. But things where there may be a disagreement on a given topic, they will allow it to be published.