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GEM Presents: NY Times Liberal Bias Challenge

The Green Eyed MonsterThe Green Eyed Monster i blame hip hopRegistered User regular
edited October 2008 in Debate and/or Discourse
I often hear it repeated, as if it's so obvious as to warrant no further questioning whatsoever, that the NY Times is a hotbed of liberalism and leftist propoganda. Just as turning on Fox News Channel tilts your whole house to the right, carrying a copy of the NY Times should give you a distinct limp in your left leg.

BUT THEN

I actualy started reading the New York Times pretty regularly, and all I see is "journalism." Granted, there are many left-leaning op-ed contributors (Friedman, Krugman come to mind), but there's also William "Stinking" Kristol, and in the end editorials are meant to be biased, can one really lampoon a paper on its editorials alone? Surely, in such a rag of such reputed one-sided reporting, I should, in my daily reading, encounter plenty of howlers in its articles, right?

Well I haven't found it, but maybe I'm just lost so far down the socialist rabbit hole that these things are outside of my reach, so I thought I'd enlist your help.

IF YOU BELIEVE

the NY Times is a left-leaning paper, please, by all means, show me an article and point out where the bias is rearing its ugly, latte-drinking, Prius-driving, yoga-mat-owning head. Shoot, even if you don't believe the NY Times is a left-leaning paper, maybe you could still take a closer look and find the evidence for both of us to be convinced. There should be absolutely no shortage of material to work from if you visit nytimes.com and click on just about any of those propoganda pieces linked on the front page there.

If your argument w/r/t the political leanings of the media simply has to do with what percentage of journalists are registered with what party, well that's just not good enough for this challenge. I want actual articles. I want actual critique of actual content. And if after all your searching, you still can't find any bias ... well ... at least you'll be more informed than when you began.

Maybe if this goes well, we can have a Fox News challenge next, and believe you me that will be shooting fish in a barrel.

The Green Eyed Monster on
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    StericaSterica Yes Registered User, Moderator mod
    edited October 2008
    We actually had/have a thread on the whole "liberal media" deal. I think most agreed that the media swings certain ways in regards to the issues and sometimes tend to be be easier on the party in power. The myth of a serious bias in the media is to scare people away from alternate sources of information and keep them listening to Rush Limbaugh or whichever blowhard claims to be peddling "truth".

    Fox has been my main source of news lately, but I say "news" lightly because their prime time lineup is all op-ed commentary.

    Sterica on
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    ScalfinScalfin __BANNED USERS regular
    edited October 2008
    I remember reading an article pointing out that McCain cited the NY Times more than any other candidate or source.

    Scalfin on
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    The rest of you, I fucking hate you for the fact that I now have a blue dot on this god awful thread.
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    DerrickDerrick Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Reality has a well known liberal bias.

    Remember that whole "Global Warming" thing the republicans were chuckling about several years ago. Yeah. Yeah. Turns out it was true.

    Derrick on
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    DukiDuki Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    I have no idea whether the actual news content is in any way biased, but the editorials always prefer Democrats.

    Duki on
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    DrezDrez Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Scalfin wrote: »
    I remember reading an article pointing out that McCain cited the NY Times more than any other candidate or source.

    Yeah, but McCain is a maverick.

    Drez on
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    MatrijsMatrijs Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Duki wrote: »
    I have no idea whether the actual news content is in any way biased, but the editorials always prefer Democrats.

    They are editorials. Similarly, the Wall Street Journal's editorials are usually a collection of right-wing hackery. But that doesn't impugn the quality of their actual reporting.

    Matrijs on
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    dlinfinitidlinfiniti Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    shortly after his retirement walter cronkite had a very good editorial column why he thought many journalists tended to the left. Let me see if i can dig that up

    dlinfiniti on
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    Dunadan019Dunadan019 Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Dunadan019 on
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    The Green Eyed MonsterThe Green Eyed Monster i blame hip hop Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Rorus Raz wrote: »
    We actually had/have a thread on the whole "liberal media" deal. I think most agreed that the media swings certain ways in regards to the issues and sometimes tend to be be easier on the party in power. The myth of a serious bias in the media is to scare people away from alternate sources of information and keep them listening to Rush Limbaugh or whichever blowhard claims to be peddling "truth".

    Fox has been my main source of news lately, but I say "news" lightly because their prime time lineup is all op-ed commentary.
    I know we just had it, and I know some people were still saying that some news sources had biases. To support that claim, I want hard support for biases.

    You say loosely "they swing certain ways" and they are "easier on the party in power." Well if that's true, you should be able to follow the link listed above, click around, and find support for your claim. Otherwise you're just repeating an unsupported generalization.

    And like I said -- if we want to do this for something like Fox News, I can definitely find articles which betray their bias, but I figured first we'd start with the New York Times, so we can spare ourselves retorts like "every paper has its bias."

    The Green Eyed Monster on
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    The Green Eyed MonsterThe Green Eyed Monster i blame hip hop Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    dlinfiniti wrote: »
    shortly after his retirement walter cronkite had a very good editorial column why he thought many journalists tended to the left. Let me see if i can dig that up
    I think I've read that (and it was good), but the thing is -- party affiliation of the individual doesn't necessarily alter the content of the reporting. I've known about the "registered this or that" nonsense for a long time, but I just don't see how that's relevant to the actual news. If there's a bias, I want textual support. I'm not saying this was your point, I'm just trying to clarify what I'm after here.

    The Green Eyed Monster on
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    LondonBridgeLondonBridge __BANNED USERS regular
    edited October 2008
    What makes someone become liberal or conservative really? My theory is and I'd like to do a study on it if I could is that liberals produce less testosterone than conservatives.

    LondonBridge on
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    Armored GorillaArmored Gorilla Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    There was a study that showed conservative voters were more easily frightened.

    Edit:

    http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2008/918/2
    The researchers found that both of these responses correlated significantly with whether a person was liberal or conservative socially. Subjects who had expressed a high level of support for policies "protecting the social unit" showed a much larger change in skin conductance in response to alarming photos than those who didn't support such policies. Similarly, the mean blink amplitude for the socially protective subjects was significantly higher, the team reports in tomorrow's issue of Science. Co-author Kevin Smith says the results showed that automatic fear responses are better predictors of protective attitudes than sex or age (men and older people tend to be more conservative).

    Armored Gorilla on
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    DevoutlyApatheticDevoutlyApathetic Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    There was a study that showed conservative voters were more easily frightened.

    Edit:

    http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2008/918/2
    It was more that the more stuff of potentially frightening nature you are exposed to the more likely you are to be liberal.

    Not so much "easily frightened" as "broadened horizons".

    DevoutlyApathetic on
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    Armored GorillaArmored Gorilla Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    What you said.

    Armored Gorilla on
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Matrijs wrote: »
    Duki wrote: »
    I have no idea whether the actual news content is in any way biased, but the editorials always prefer Democrats.

    They are editorials. Similarly, the Wall Street Journal's editorials are usually a collection of right-wing hackery. But that doesn't impugn the quality of their actual reporting.

    WSJ is owned by News Corp now, so...

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Actually the New York times has a national as well as metropolitan edition. They could easily take out anything that seemed like it was aimed towards people who specifically live in New York (which is already true for ads appearing in the paper). Honestly, I don't think they really have a leaning, except for the editorials. For a lot of journalists, The New York Times is a shining example of good journalism.

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    Dunadan019Dunadan019 Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Actually the New York times has a national as well as metropolitan edition. They could easily take out anything that seemed like it was aimed towards people who specifically live in New York (which is already true for ads appearing in the paper). Honestly, I don't think they really have a leaning, except for the editorials. For a lot of journalists, The New York Times is a shining example of good journalism.

    Well they could but then you would be talking about extra cost from making extra articles as opposed to making extra ads which gives more money. I doubt they are doing it.

    The fact that you are unlikely to see an article about say the benefits of predator control in western states (unlikely, not impossible) in the times is the only bias you will see.

    Dunadan019 on
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Actually the New York times has a national as well as metropolitan edition. They could easily take out anything that seemed like it was aimed towards people who specifically live in New York (which is already true for ads appearing in the paper). Honestly, I don't think they really have a leaning, except for the editorials. For a lot of journalists, The New York Times is a shining example of good journalism.

    Well they could but then you would be talking about extra cost from making extra articles as opposed to making extra ads which gives more money. I doubt they are doing it.

    The fact that you are unlikely to see an article about say the benefits of predator control in western states (unlikely, not impossible) in the times is the only bias you will see.

    Wait, are you talking about adding in articles for the National edition? Because they are already printing two different daily editions of the NYT, but I don't think they add anything to the National edition. They take out a lot of the NYC-centric stuff from the Metro Edition to make the National Edition, including ads for local delis and other such things.

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    Dunadan019Dunadan019 Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Actually the New York times has a national as well as metropolitan edition. They could easily take out anything that seemed like it was aimed towards people who specifically live in New York (which is already true for ads appearing in the paper). Honestly, I don't think they really have a leaning, except for the editorials. For a lot of journalists, The New York Times is a shining example of good journalism.

    Well they could but then you would be talking about extra cost from making extra articles as opposed to making extra ads which gives more money. I doubt they are doing it.

    The fact that you are unlikely to see an article about say the benefits of predator control in western states (unlikely, not impossible) in the times is the only bias you will see.

    Wait, are you talking about adding in articles for the National edition? Because they are already printing two different daily editions of the NYT, but I don't think they add anything to the National edition. They take out a lot of the NYC-centric stuff in the National Edition, including ads for local delis and other such things.

    yeah but they put in ads to take their place. In order to change the articles they would need to basically say here are some articles that we made which are going to cost us more money that aren't applicable to the "people of NYC but are applicable to everyone else." I don't read the Times but i cant see the business sense in doing that.

    Dunadan019 on
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    Local H JayLocal H Jay Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    the difference between liberal and conservative media outlets:

    subtly

    Local H Jay on
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Actually the New York times has a national as well as metropolitan edition. They could easily take out anything that seemed like it was aimed towards people who specifically live in New York (which is already true for ads appearing in the paper). Honestly, I don't think they really have a leaning, except for the editorials. For a lot of journalists, The New York Times is a shining example of good journalism.

    Well they could but then you would be talking about extra cost from making extra articles as opposed to making extra ads which gives more money. I doubt they are doing it.

    The fact that you are unlikely to see an article about say the benefits of predator control in western states (unlikely, not impossible) in the times is the only bias you will see.

    Wait, are you talking about adding in articles for the National edition? Because they are already printing two different daily editions of the NYT, but I don't think they add anything to the National edition. They take out a lot of the NYC-centric stuff in the National Edition, including ads for local delis and other such things.

    yeah but they put in ads to take their place. In order to change the articles they would need to basically say here are some articles that we made which are going to cost us more money that aren't applicable to the "people of NYC but are applicable to everyone else." I don't read the Times but i cant see the business sense in doing that.

    Yeah, they definitely change the ads around in the different editions.

    But what exactly do you mean by your second statement? That they don't take out articles, or that they don't add them in? Because they take out the entire Metro section for the National paper. But I think everything else is untouched (Living in Indiana, I haven't actually seen a Metro NYT paper, so I don't know).

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Back on GEM's question, a case could actually be made that the Times had a conservative bias at one point. Especially if you take the career of Judith Miller into consideration. Miller basically gave the Bush Administration more cause to go to war in Iraq, even though she admitted that her information was somewhat flawed.

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    Dunadan019Dunadan019 Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Actually the New York times has a national as well as metropolitan edition. They could easily take out anything that seemed like it was aimed towards people who specifically live in New York (which is already true for ads appearing in the paper). Honestly, I don't think they really have a leaning, except for the editorials. For a lot of journalists, The New York Times is a shining example of good journalism.

    Well they could but then you would be talking about extra cost from making extra articles as opposed to making extra ads which gives more money. I doubt they are doing it.

    The fact that you are unlikely to see an article about say the benefits of predator control in western states (unlikely, not impossible) in the times is the only bias you will see.

    Wait, are you talking about adding in articles for the National edition? Because they are already printing two different daily editions of the NYT, but I don't think they add anything to the National edition. They take out a lot of the NYC-centric stuff in the National Edition, including ads for local delis and other such things.

    yeah but they put in ads to take their place. In order to change the articles they would need to basically say here are some articles that we made which are going to cost us more money that aren't applicable to the "people of NYC but are applicable to everyone else." I don't read the Times but i cant see the business sense in doing that.

    Yeah, they definitely change the ads around in the different editions.

    But what exactly do you mean by your second statement? That they don't take out articles, or that they don't add them in? Because they take out the entire Metro section for the National paper. But I think everything else is untouched (Living in Indiana, I haven't actually seen a Metro NYT paper, so I don't know).

    I dont think they add anything in, I think the metro section is just an additional section for NYers and you are getting a slightly smaller version of the paper. The thinking there being "they arent going to read this anyway so lets just not add it in their edition"

    I don't read the Times so i'm just assuming.

    I can't imagine the sports section mentions the greatness of the Red Socks all that much for example.

    Dunadan019 on
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    Dunadan019 wrote: »
    The best you'll probably get is evidence that there is a bias based on what articles are chosen for front and center. Aside from opinion pieces you arent going to really find an article that demonstrates a non journalistic bias towards one political policy or the other. Since the idea is to sell newspapers and it is the "New York" Times (not the "Atlanta" Times, it will have more stories aimed towards the political affiliation of the majority of its readers.

    Actually the New York times has a national as well as metropolitan edition. They could easily take out anything that seemed like it was aimed towards people who specifically live in New York (which is already true for ads appearing in the paper). Honestly, I don't think they really have a leaning, except for the editorials. For a lot of journalists, The New York Times is a shining example of good journalism.

    Well they could but then you would be talking about extra cost from making extra articles as opposed to making extra ads which gives more money. I doubt they are doing it.

    The fact that you are unlikely to see an article about say the benefits of predator control in western states (unlikely, not impossible) in the times is the only bias you will see.

    Wait, are you talking about adding in articles for the National edition? Because they are already printing two different daily editions of the NYT, but I don't think they add anything to the National edition. They take out a lot of the NYC-centric stuff in the National Edition, including ads for local delis and other such things.

    yeah but they put in ads to take their place. In order to change the articles they would need to basically say here are some articles that we made which are going to cost us more money that aren't applicable to the "people of NYC but are applicable to everyone else." I don't read the Times but i cant see the business sense in doing that.

    Yeah, they definitely change the ads around in the different editions.

    But what exactly do you mean by your second statement? That they don't take out articles, or that they don't add them in? Because they take out the entire Metro section for the National paper. But I think everything else is untouched (Living in Indiana, I haven't actually seen a Metro NYT paper, so I don't know).

    I dont think they add anything in, I think the metro section is just an additional section for NYers and you are getting a slightly smaller version of the paper. The thinking there being "they arent going to read this anyway so lets just not add it in their edition"

    I don't read the Times so i'm just assuming.

    I can't imagine the sports section mentions the greatness of the Red Socks all that much for example.

    Yeah. That is basically the difference between the Metro and National editions. Most people outside of NYC don't really care about the Mayor cracking down on illegal parking, or whatever is going on in the city.

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    FeralFeral MEMETICHARIZARD interior crocodile alligator ⇔ ǝɹʇɐǝɥʇ ǝᴉʌoɯ ʇǝloɹʌǝɥɔ ɐ ǝʌᴉɹp ᴉRegistered User regular
    edited October 2008
    I'm pretty sure I could find plenty of examples of liberal bias in NYT. I'm pretty sure I could find plenty of examples of conservative bias, too.

    Cherry-picking articles and going, "See? Bias!" is not a good way to demonstrate bias. That's exactly what the MRC and AIM conservative media watchdogs do, and why their claims are basically unsupported. The way to go about this in a serious fashion is to choose a sample of sources, first, preferably based on some criteria other than "I heard somebody thinks it's biased." Then work out a coding scheme, where [X] language gets 1 bias point, [Y] language gets 1 bias point, [Z] language gets 1 bias point, etc... and then have a panel of people all read the same articles - preferably a couple hundred of them or more - photocopied out of the original sources with by-lines removed (to make the study blind) and pick out instances of X, Y, and Z. This is more or less what FAIR and the studies they cite do, which is why I trust their studies a whole hell of a lot more.

    I know we're not doing a scientific study here. I know this is just an Internet forum. I know that we don't have remotely the same standards of digilence here as a professional researcher or a serious watchdog organization.

    But it still kind of bothers me, just a little, that this thread wants us to do exactly what conservative hack-tanks like AIM and MRC do, which is exactly the wrong way to go about looking at media bias.

    Feral on
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Also NYT is a really huge newspaper with lots of reporters writing for it. They are not all NYT employees either. It's hard to keep a leash on that many people.

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    Dunadan019Dunadan019 Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Feral wrote: »
    I'm pretty sure I could find plenty of examples of liberal bias in NYT. I'm pretty sure I could find plenty of examples of conservative bias, too.

    Cherry-picking articles and going, "See? Bias!" is not a good way to demonstrate bias. That's exactly what the MRC and AIM conservative media watchdogs do, and why their claims are basically unsupported. The way to go about this in a serious fashion is to choose a sample of sources, first, preferably based on some criteria other than "I heard somebody thinks it's biased." Then work out a coding scheme, where [X] language gets 1 bias point, [Y] language gets 1 bias point, [Z] language gets 1 bias point, etc... and then have a panel of people all read the same articles - preferably a couple hundred of them or more - photocopied out of the original sources with by-lines removed (to make the study blind) and pick out instances of X, Y, and Z. This is more or less what FAIR and the studies they cite do, which is why I trust their studies a whole hell of a lot more.

    I know we're not doing a scientific study here. I know this is just an Internet forum. I know that we don't have remotely the same standards of digilence here as a professional researcher or a serious watchdog organization.

    But it still kind of bothers me, just a little, that this thread wants us to do exactly what conservative hack-tanks like AIM and MRC do, which is exactly the wrong way to go about looking at media bias.

    only problem would be that the bylines could also add to bias so you might want to do a separate analysis of those based on initial reaction (interested/noninterested) from a panel of staunch republicans and democrats and middle of the road controls.

    Dunadan019 on
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    MedopineMedopine __BANNED USERS regular
    edited October 2008
    What makes someone become liberal or conservative really? My theory is and I'd like to do a study on it if I could is that liberals produce less testosterone than conservatives.

    Thread over

    The media are all pussies, obviously

    Medopine on
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    AngelHedgieAngelHedgie Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    What makes someone become liberal or conservative really? My theory is and I'd like to do a study on it if I could is that liberals produce less testosterone than conservatives.

    So, are you always misogynist, or is it just a sometimes thing for you?

    AngelHedgie on
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    ScalfinScalfin __BANNED USERS regular
    edited October 2008
    What makes someone become liberal or conservative really? My theory is and I'd like to do a study on it if I could is that liberals produce less testosterone than conservatives.

    In other news, testosterone is negatively associated with forethought, which explains a lot if your claim is true.

    Scalfin on
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    The rest of you, I fucking hate you for the fact that I now have a blue dot on this god awful thread.
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    KrunkMcGrunkKrunkMcGrunk Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    What makes someone become liberal or conservative really? My theory is and I'd like to do a study on it if I could is that liberals produce less testosterone than conservatives.

    So, are you always misogynist, or is it just a sometimes thing for you?

    Uh, he's just kidding dude. Chill.

    KrunkMcGrunk on
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    ThanatosThanatos Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    What makes someone become liberal or conservative really? My theory is and I'd like to do a study on it if I could is that liberals produce less testosterone than conservatives.
    They did a study awhile ago, IIRC, that showed that generally, conservatives are people who can't adapt to changes well, while liberals are people who generally accept and handle change much better.

    One might argue that people who are smarter adapt to change better than people who are stupider. Lord knows the mentally retarded have problems with any sort of variation in their daily schedule.

    Thanatos on
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    PeekingDuckPeekingDuck __BANNED USERS regular
    edited October 2008
    http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/Media-Bias-Is-Real-Finds-UCLA-6664.aspx

    There is one article about a study that found liberal bias. Of note is the debate moderator point. You'll have to search yourself for the quarterly journal to read the study.

    I don't think the NYT is the worst. It certainly is not as obvious as the WSJ now.

    But what does bias in a news outlet mean for you anyway and why do you care? There is no "left" in this country, thank God. The longer we can stave off it's encroachment, the stronger our nation will be.

    You know - I was just thinking about that last sentence and things are so centrist in this country that we've even taken the words liberal and conservative and halved them to create our perceived camps. American media, people, and politicians are incredibly centrist. To say that NYT or Fox News are bias doesn't really mean anything.

    Also, Jack Daniels is disgusting. Stop drinking it.

    PeekingDuck on
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    ThanatosThanatos Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/Media-Bias-Is-Real-Finds-UCLA-6664.aspx

    There is one article about a study that found liberal bias. Of note is the debate moderator point. You'll have to search yourself for the quarterly journal to read the study.

    I don't think the NYT is the worst. It certainly is not as obvious as the WSJ now.

    But what does bias in a news outlet mean for you anyway and why do you care? There is no "left" in this country, thank God. The longer we can stave off it's encroachment, the stronger our nation will be.

    You know - I was just thinking about that last sentence and things are so centrist in this country that we've even taken the words liberal and conservative and halved them to create our perceived camps. American media, people, and politicians are incredibly centrist. To say that NYT or Fox News are bias doesn't really mean anything.

    Also, Jack Daniels is disgusting. Stop drinking it.
    "Centrist" is the stupidest fucking word ever. The "center" in this case is just wherever the person doing the talking wants it to be. We're not "centrist," we're right-wing. That's objectively, from the perception of pretty much every other industrialized democracy in the world. And remind me again where the right has gotten us? Oh, yes, that's right, $700 billion bail-out plan. Well-done.

    Thanatos on
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    The Green Eyed MonsterThe Green Eyed Monster i blame hip hop Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Feral wrote: »
    But it still kind of bothers me, just a little, that this thread wants us to do exactly what conservative hack-tanks like AIM and MRC do, which is exactly the wrong way to go about looking at media bias.
    If you're so sure you could do it, why not take the challenge? I get that this is far from scientific, but it's a pretty straight forward question I've posed. You are alleging the liberal bias exists (albeit, alongside a conservative one as well). If you're alleging that, find an article, and support your point. Should be easy, right?

    It's not "science," it's simply completing a task.

    If this thread dies, and not a single member of the forum finds and article and demonstrates its liberal bias, well ... I guess I'm going to assume this forum wasn't up to the challenge (and everyone should shut the fuck up about bias in reputable news sources).

    The Green Eyed Monster on
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    The Green Eyed MonsterThe Green Eyed Monster i blame hip hop Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/Media-Bias-Is-Real-Finds-UCLA-6664.aspx

    There is one article about a study that found liberal bias. Of note is the debate moderator point. You'll have to search yourself for the quarterly journal to read the study.

    I don't think the NYT is the worst. It certainly is not as obvious as the WSJ now.
    You are absolutely failing at this thread.

    If the bias exists, follow the link in the first post and demonstrate it to me, please. If you want to do the same thing for the Wall Street Journal, make your own Wall Street Journal thread. This thread is for the NY Times.

    You're repeating the same generalizations but offering no support. I'm not asking for science or in-depth studies, I'm asking for one article to help support your claim. I even bolded and increased the size on the link lest you have a hard time finding the NY Times website on your own.

    The Green Eyed Monster on
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    PeekingDuckPeekingDuck __BANNED USERS regular
    edited October 2008
    Thanatos wrote: »
    "Centrist" is the stupidest fucking word ever. The "center" in this case is just wherever the person doing the talking wants it to be. We're not "centrist," we're right-wing. That's objectively, from the perception of pretty much every other industrialized democracy in the world. And remind me again where the right has gotten us? Oh, yes, that's right, $700 billion bail-out plan. Well-done.

    You started out well.

    PeekingDuck on
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    PeekingDuckPeekingDuck __BANNED USERS regular
    edited October 2008
    You are absolutely failing at this thread.

    If the bias exists, follow the link in the first post and demonstrate it to me, please. If you want to do the same thing for the Wall Street Journal, make your own Wall Street Journal thread. This thread is for the NY Times.

    You're repeating the same generalizations but offering no support. I'm not asking for science or in-depth studies, I'm asking for one article to help support your claim. I even bolded and increased the size on the link lest you have a hard time finding the NY Times website on your own.

    Here is one.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/04/business/economy/04bailout.html?hp

    Now let's see if you can put the posts by Thanatos, Feral, and myself together and figure out how dumb your exercise seems.

    PeekingDuck on
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    ThanatosThanatos Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    You are absolutely failing at this thread.

    If the bias exists, follow the link in the first post and demonstrate it to me, please. If you want to do the same thing for the Wall Street Journal, make your own Wall Street Journal thread. This thread is for the NY Times.

    You're repeating the same generalizations but offering no support. I'm not asking for science or in-depth studies, I'm asking for one article to help support your claim. I even bolded and increased the size on the link lest you have a hard time finding the NY Times website on your own.

    Here is one.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/04/business/economy/04bailout.html?hp

    Now let's see if you can put the posts by Thanatos, Feral, and myself together and figure out how dumb your exercise seems.
    Where is the bias in there?

    Thanatos on
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    The Green Eyed MonsterThe Green Eyed Monster i blame hip hop Registered User regular
    edited October 2008
    Here is one.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/04/business/economy/04bailout.html?hp

    Now let's see if you can put the posts by Thanatos, Feral, and myself together and figure out how dumb your exercise seems.
    Ummm ... do you mind, like ... actually showing me where the bias is? I'm reading that article, and it looks an awful lot like "journalism" to me. I mean, with this whole digital medium we're in here, should be pretty easy to copy and paste some sections into a quote box, then below the quote box explain to me what part of the quote you put up betrays a liberal bias. That would be, ummm, the challenge.

    Seems a lot easier to call my exercise "dumb" than to actually do it.

    The Green Eyed Monster on
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