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by ejb999 992 days ago
>>It's pretty easy to see that the photo is a hoax, but many news outlets didn't notice and ran the story anyway.

More likely: many news outlets didn't CARE and ran the story anyway.

2 comments

This is the problem with for-profit news outlets, they can't afford not to run the story that others are. State-run news outlets is also not good.
NPR seems to be one of the most reliable sources in America.
Reliably left wing? Yes. Reliably truthful? No.
NPR is high in factual accuracy (they very rarely lie) while being extremely selective in the stories they tell and the facts they omit to push their bias. They seem to be worse in that respect than they used to be.

I think that's still much better than a news source that just outright lies to your face whenever it's convenient. As long as you remember that the bias is there, you can at least trust what they say is the truth. When a news org tells a mix of truths and lies you don't even have a foundation of trustworthy fact to start from.

Please link me a single story you think NPR was untruthful about.
NPR dutifully ran the "Saddam Weapons of Mass Destruction" *fake* 100s of times with utter sincerity.

ps- also the "dumping babies on the ground" fake too IIR, but maybe only a few times on that one. Congressional testimony on camera by a daughter of a State Department official IIR to justify the Kuwait invasion by Bush I

True, but not evidence of the left wing bias originally claimed at the top of this thread
Almost every issue on the 2A they discuss is untruthful. The Rittenhouse case comes to mind immediately where they lied about all the encounters that were proven wrong in court. They avoid anything that makes the left look bad. Lying by omission is still lying. They continuously link stories to racism, lgqbtq, "people of color" that have nothing to do with any of that as well.

Keep listening to them if you want. I used to be an avid listener, just realize that they've lost a TON of loyal listeners due to their heavily biased reporting in the last few years.

Here's a fun one for ya. They backtracked on it after not getting away with it but there are many many more where no one notices and they just get away with it.

https://news.yahoo.com/npr-claims-limited-scientific-evidenc...

I can't say I agree with the person you're replying to, but i distinctly remember being quite shocked by this https://edition.cnn.com/2012/03/16/tech/mobile/npr-american-...
to be fair, that article is about PRI, not NPR. They are not related.
not really possible since the people that planned and staged the thing the story was about were pretending to actually do something when they hired people and rented things to fake an origin story that was then covered by the news while another team that the first team wasn't aware of went a bit overboard and brought in surface-to-air missiles and shot down a passenger plane full of dying people.

you see, the issue is not NPR being untruthful. the issue is NPR not even having a chance to check. member how "logic"/"rationality" works on faked premises? so smooth and yummy.

Truth does have a left-wing bias.
that'll be a great line for the next struggle session
Sounds like something a totalitarian would say.
I think it just implies that there are a lot of right wings lies in the media.
What's the solution? A powerful enough regulatory framework to fine (or otherwise punish) proven misinformation?

Even then it's probably hard to prove that insufficient checking was performed at publication time

Perhaps ban them from receiving advertising revenue. Force them to go subscription only. Advertising revenue comes from clicks, not reads, we want people to actually read and contemplate. This is closer to what old-school newspapers did.

In theory, subscribers will leave outlets that lie to them for outlets that are more honest and fact-based. Or, if I'm pessimistic, subscribers will give money to whoever does rage-bait the best...

Ban advertising supported information sources. If people want information they need to pay for it in order that the information serves them not the people with a budget for manipulation.

You could I suppose allow adverts where the information is strictly for entertainment, but given that was Fox News defence... I think it probably wouldn't work.

That is not really more likely. Most news outlets don't actually want to have a horrible reputation.
News operations live and die by eyeballs and clicks - they will say or report anything if it will give them more traffic, or if it appeals to their audience; don't kid yourself, getting you to click on a news story - true or not - IS the goal.
Yes and if other news outlets were already tricked, they could run an even better news story about that.