Media Loves Big Government
Source: reason.com
Reporter Sharyl Attkisson’s story sounds familiar to me: A major network got tired of her reports criticizing government. She no longer works there.The CBS correspondent reported on Fast and Furious, the shifting explanation for the Benghazi, Libya, attacks, and the bungled rollout of the Obamacare website. "But as time went on, it was harder to get stories on," she says."There are people who simply would rather just avoid the headache of going after powers that be because of the pushback that comes with it, which has become very organized and well-financed," she says on my TV show this week.I left ABC for similar reasons. When I began consumer reporting, I assumed advertisers would censor me, since sponsors who paid my bosses wouldn’t want criticism. But never in 30 years was a story killed because of advertiser pressure. Not once. (I hear that’s changed since, and big advertisers, such as car dealers, do persuade news directors to kill stories.)"I do a lot of reporting on corporate interests and so on, so there’s pressure from that end," says Attkisson, but "there’s a competing pressure on the ideological end." Right. Ideology affects more stories than "corporate interests."My ABC bosses leaned left. They liked stories about weird external threats from which government can swoop in to rescue you.They are much less fond of complex stories in which problems are solved subtly by the dynamism of the free market. The invisible hand, after all, is invisible. It works its magic in a million places and makes adjustments every minute. That’s hard for reporters to see—especially when they’re not looking for it.[...]Read the full article at: reason.comDan Johnson - Hour 1 - People Against the National Defense Authorization Act
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