Tuesday, July 3, 2018

How to Read the News: A Guide for Truth-Seekers

Because my home page is the website lucianne.com, I am able to access news sources from around the world.

Since President Trump's election, it has become quite predictable to glean whether an article will be positive or negative simply by learning the news source.

No matter what the actual news does report, certain sources will spin it with extreme bias.

No matter how successful the recent summit between President Trump and Kim Jong Un turns out, these publications will report it with a "Yes, but" analysis: The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, the New York Daily News, Newsweek, Time, the Daily Mail and the Miami Herald.

The New York Post may be the only local New York City print publication that has maintained a bipartisan editorial status.

The detention center used by the Trump administration was a far cry from Obama's if one viewed them on one of the more credible news sites like Breitbart.com.

The truth is out there, but without the Internet and some cable news channels, it's very hard to find.

If CNN and other leftwing news sources ever lose their access to airports and medical and social service offices, then perhaps there is a chance that the fake news they promote will have lost their captive audience.

When I wrote for the New York Sun, my editor made sure that any charges I made about an individual had to include their response to the issue.

Although snopes.com is a popular fact checking site, it is not free of liberal bias and their analysis is sometimes skewered to excuse unfavorable left wing news.

There are a growing number of new cable networks that promise to deliver unbiased straight news so there is some hope out there.

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2018/07/how_to_read_the_news_a_guide_for_truthseekers.html

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