| You haven't made any kind of case that The Guardian is "undermining the free flow of information" > it seems they would impose This is your opinion, freely expressed. It's neither evidence nor was it undermined by The Guardian. > Isn't Guardian a "news" outlet "strawman framing" with "a side of airquotes". Even so, can you point to any regulations in the UK or US that define what a "news" outlet is and how they are even required to have a comment section? > which being "neutral" and "accommodating to a plurality of ideas" is a inherent virtue? Core news reporting is about "just the facts", editorial stances are another thing that good organisations have and identify when in play - there is no requirement to be neutral about, say, Hitlers poltics (as evidenced by The Daily Mail at the time). > I think they would have, Again that's literally just your opinion. |
I view it as an attempt by a group of left-leaning media/news outlets hoping to de-crown X out of its popularity as a neutral forum for expressing political views.
Yes, these are my opinions or ... "comment replies". People can post their comments or fact-checks, the things Guardian people don't like to engage with.