I think the term "immigrant" over "alien" is fine, since most people think of "alien" as from another world. "Illegal" is the part that I stick with, because there's no doubt about that word, and it's accurate.
I think the term "immigrant" over "alien" is fine, since most people think of "alien" as from another world. "Illegal" is the part that I stick with, because there's no doubt about that word, and it's accurate.
The story was reported by the Washington Times, and repeated by GOPUSA. The original reporting, by the Washington Times, was biased. Rerunning it as it was originally written, wasn't as biased, but it did repeat the original bias.
It sounds like you're making judgments of bias based on the source, and not the actual reporting.
One of the bias tests I've seen done at journalism schools is to hear or see a story without knowing the source. Because you actually insert your own bias once you know the source.
If an article about the Roman Catholic Church referred to the Catholics as "the Papists", that's anti-Catholic bias. On the other hand, if the article said, "So-and-so referred to the Bishop as a 'Papist'", that use of the term would not be an example of the author of the article demonstrating anti-Catholic bias. Can you grasps that difference?
This example may be a lame choice when trying to demonstrate that use of certain words are something of a "dog-whistle" proving a given broadcaster has bias.
That is not only a good point, it's an illustration of how in the post-Star Trek world, an alien is a Klingon or something else extraterrestrial. And it shows how language changes over time and we have to adapt to new meanings and nuances.
A half-century ago, someone who was "gay" was simply happy. The new meaning has so overpowered the old definition that it has made the prior usage impossible.
These guys understand that shifting the language DOES change opinions and they're not afraid of being bullies about it.
http://1210amblog.wordpress.com/ feel free to post replies to my posts on my blog.
These guys understand that shifting the language DOES change opinions and they're not afraid of being bullies about it.
The fact that the faction that public radio displays bias towards includes the majority of supporters of public radio doesn't make their bias any less so, though it does indicate that as operators of a business, the people showing the bias know what they're doing.
But once again, the fact is that they don't.
You can repeat this until you're blue in the face, and it won't be any more true.
There it is. That's the whole truth of the matter. What you said bears repeating, "shifting the language DOES change opinions".
I don't have to...the facts speak for themselves. You just refuse to accept them.
Can you show me that conservatives and moderates don't listen?
The "moderates" listen/watch/read to pretty much everything equally.
Except they really don't. 39% of moderates listen to NPR. That number is bigger than the 36% of the liberals who listen. And it's among the largest groups for all media. Certainly larger than the percentage of moderates who choose conservative media.
So using your numbers, the majority of NPR listeners are neither liberal nor conservative, but moderate. Using your numbers, even MSNBC looks fairly balanced. Certainly more balanced than Rush, O'Reilly, or Fox. If we go back to the previous Forbes poll you posted, it was fairly similar. So to say NPR is biased in order to appeal to a liberal audience ignores the 60% of their audience that ISN'T liberal.