TheBigA said:TVradioguru said:It will be interesting now to see if FOX will hire Mr. Williams. Come to think of it, maybe that was his plan all along!
He already works for Fox. He works for both.
TVradioguru said:He already works for Fox. He works for both.
TVradioguru said:TheBigA said:TVradioguru said:It will be interesting now to see if FOX will hire Mr. Williams. Come to think of it, maybe that was his plan all along!
He already works for Fox. He works for both.
Not really, he's a paid guest (contractor) He doesn't work under contract for FOX.
Silkie said:NPR should immediately be defunded from being given one red cent of American taxpayer money. Let them get their funding from the unAmerican non American who gave them money and then told them what to say and do, who is also a wanted man in more than one European country for destroying their economies and cultures.
For shame!
BRNout said:The problem that I have with this is that it is another example of the lefties trying to use alternate means to control speech and to squelch opinions that they do not like.
TheBigA said:If the goal was to squelch opinions, they obviously failed. Because this story has gotten more coverage than anything NPR has reported in years.
TheBigA said:This is not political. Saying something about Muslims isn't political. Saying something about Obama is, or Obama's wife, and he wasn't fired for that. In any case, no one is controlling or squelching speech.
BRNout said:I'd still say that it is political in that it has to do with the ideology of those who run NPR and the 'culture wars' -
TheBigA said:BRNout said:I'd still say that it is political in that it has to do with the ideology of those who run NPR and the 'culture wars' -
Journalists should not become part of the story. How he feels isn't journalism. That's a personal opinion for private conversation, not professional analysis to be aired on national TV.
BRNout said:TheBigA said:If the goal was to squelch opinions, they obviously failed. Because this story has gotten more coverage than anything NPR has reported in years.
Merely the law of unintended consequences rearing its ugly head. Once this fades away from the front page and talkers lost interest, the original intent will have succeeded because an example was made.
TheBigA said:This is not political. Saying something about Muslims isn't political. Saying something about Obama is, or Obama's wife, and he wasn't fired for that. In any case, no one is controlling or squelching speech.
I'd still say that it is political in that it has to do with the ideology of those who run NPR and the 'culture wars' - but we would be arguing semantics. That people like this try to squelch opinion through fear (in this case fear of the loss of livelihood) makes it political in my mind.
The_X_Man_Cometh said:Count the number of times political commentators say: " I think that..." and tell me that's NOT personal feelings?