Will O’Reilly Blame Washington Times Fall On Its Right Wing Slant?
(Full disclosure: I have been published in The Washington Times, New York Times, Philadelphia Inquirer and the Los Angeles Times)
In April of this year, Bill O’Reilly wrote that “The New York Times is most definitely a committed left-wing concern that is openly contemptuous of the conservative, traditional point-of-view. That is the primary reason the paper may soon dissolve.” He’s laid the same wood to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Los Angeles Times and pretty much any newspaper or mainstream media outlet who wrote or said something Bill disagreed with.
Different than any of the newspapers who Bill has blamed left-wing leanings for their losses, the Times pretty much admitted its long time bias saying that it will cease any presumed semblance of being a bona fide full-coverage daily, factual coverage of the news and instead offer “cultural coverage based on traditional values” - right wing code for right wing.
Obviously, Bill will spend this week’s column and any number of his Factor’s Talking Points explaining how The Washington Time’s collapse is the result of it being a committed right wing concern that is openly contemptuous of the middle of the road, traditional point of view.
And clearly Bill will go over the background of the Washington Times never being a real newspaper, but only the Unification Church’s Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s influence peddler that has lost billions since it went to press in 1982.
As Bill’s written before, “The truth is that most Americans are traditional-minded folks; they believe their country is noble, they want respectful discourse.”
Obviously The Washington Times did not provide that.
Tune into The Factor tonight for Bill’s rundown of how once again the conservative media has failed the fair-minded American and respectful discourse.
Steve
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Slevin would not confirm that the metro and sports sections will be dropped, saying no final decisions have been made. But with the Times pursuing a national audience, he said, coverage of the Washington Nationals or suburban governments would “be of less interest, if any, to someone in Spokane.”
Asked about plans to focus cultural coverage on traditional values, Slevin said that meant “freedom, faith and family,” with religion being particularly important “to our faith-based readership.”
i agree with this part right here
As Bill’s written before, “The truth is that most Americans are traditional-minded folks; they believe their country is noble, they want respectful discourse.”
american people are like sheeps i think…following whoever leads them… im from europe