- Good question. Michelle Malkin has selected what she considers the top five of the Obamedia’s most shameful biases and notorious blunders. My personal guess is that she had an extraordinarily difficult time limiting herself so drastically.
-Columnist Michael S. Malone has perhaps penned the definitive lament over journalism's sabotaging of its own professed ethics. It's a long read, but well worthwhile. Some excerpts:
. . . For the last couple weeks, I've begun -- for the first time in my adult
life -- to be embarrassed to admit what I do for a living. A few days
ago, when asked by a new acquaintance what I did for a living, I
replied that I was "a writer," because I couldn't bring myself to admit
to a stranger that I'm a journalist.
Meanwhile, I watched with disbelief as the nation's leading newspapers, many of whom I'd written for in the past, slowly let opinion pieces creep into the news section, and from there onto the front page. Personal opinions and comments that, had they appeared in my stories in 1979, would have gotten my butt kicked by the nearest copy editor, were now standard operating procedure at the New York Times, the Washington Post, and soon after in almost every small town paper in the U.S.
But what really shattered my faith -- and I know the day and place where it happened -- was the war in Lebanon three summers ago. The hotel I was staying at in Windhoek, Namibia, only carried CNN, a network I'd already learned to approach with skepticism. But this was CNN International, which is even worse.
I sat there, first with my jaw hanging down, then actually
shouting at the TV, as one field reporter after another reported the
carnage of the Israeli attacks on Beirut, with almost no corresponding
coverage of the Hezbollah missiles raining down on northern Israel. The
reporting was so utterly and shamelessly biased that I sat there for
hours watching, assuming that eventually CNNi would get around to
telling the rest of the story … but it never happened.
The Presidential Campaign
But nothing, nothing I've seen has matched the media bias on display in the current presidential campaign.
Republicans are justifiably foaming at the mouth over the sheer one-sidedness of the press coverage of the two candidates and their running mates. But in the last few days, even Democrats, who have been gloating over the pass -- no, make that shameless support -- they've gotten from the press, are starting to get uncomfortable as they realize that no one wins in the long run when we don't have a free and fair press. (Continue reading for much more...)