So are you disputing the newspapers being a terrible source of information? You seem to think they're better then blogs and tv just by virtue of being a little more reliant on the public's money (even newspapers get a lot of money from advertising), but that really doesn't show in the quality of their reporting. The OP is all about how poor their reporting is, and I can link to more examples if you need them. If the ultimate goal is an informed public, then the status quo (which you're supporting) isn't going to work.Darth Wong wrote:So you cheer the only form of news which draws anything but corporate advertising revenue?Dominus Atheos wrote:Unfortunately real journalism is dead and probably isn't coming back. As you explained above, most news sources are subservient to corporate interests, and have a huge stake in keeping the status quo. Plural of hearsay is probably the best we're going to get.
Clearly, you do not know how to read. Either that, or you do not know how to think. My solution is the exact opposite of yours: ideally, we would reject Internet and TV news for the shit that it is, and go back to newspapers. Of the three types, they're the best one, and if their revenue from readership went up, they might be able to resume their once-dominant role. Your idea (cheering their demise in favour of demonstrably worse alternatives) is sheer stupidity.So then there's nothing we can do, and we should just give up? You clearly realize there's a problem, so what's your solution to fixing it?
Will this happen? Probably not. But that doesn't mean I have to adopt your idiotic notion of saying that it's a good thing if the only major news format that actually derives revenue from the public is sent down the shitter.
Of course, it's possible there is no way we can get an informed public, in which case I just want to see as many of the people preventing it begging for food on a street corner as possible. If it's all the same anyway.