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Thursday, May 21, 2015

"... right-wing bias, including inaccurate reporting, became commonplace on Fox ..." You don't say?!

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COMMENTS:
*  Actually, Fox "News" is even worse for America. Their opinion pieces, which spice up every program on their schedule, are patently biased and unforgiving in its attack on the primary institutions of our government. Looking for evidence to develop hatred for the President or people who don't subscribe to their frenzied partisanship, just take a few moments of your time to tune in.
    *  Fox News helped me realize that the Republican Party was too extreme for me. Fox is essential a the Propaganda Ministry for the Republican Party; they tell their viewers the lies they want to hear, while keeping them angry and agitated 24/7.
*  SHHhhhhhhhhhh. Quit telling them how to fix things. Let 'em keep watchin' FAUX Noise for ALL their information (can't really call it news). ;-)
    *  Misinformed voters do not help the nation in any way. If all you want is for your side to win, how are you any better than them?
    *  ... There isn't another station on TV that spews the hatred and lies that Fox does. That's how we are better than Fox. Many stations tell both sides of the story.
    *  ... I agree. It isn't patriotic to spew incorrect information. We can't progress and solve problems with inaccurate information. We need straight up factual reporting so we can make decisions.
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Fox News Is Hurting Republicans, Former Bush Official Says
By Alana Horowitz, May 19, 2015

Fox News is hurting the Republican Party, according to a study conducted by a top official in the first Bush administration.

The study, authored by Bruce Bartlett, who worked in the Treasury Department under George H. W. Bush and was also a domestic policy adviser to Ronald Reagan, found that Fox viewers tended to be less informed about current affairs than people who watch mainstream news -- and even people who don't watch the news at all.

"Republican voters get so much of their news from Fox, which cheerleads whatever their candidates are doing or saying, that they suffer from wishful thinking and fail to see that they may not be doing as well as they imagine, or that their ideas are not connecting outside the narrow party base," Bartlett said.

Citing a host of other studies, Bartlett found that Fox News viewers tended to have misguided beliefs about the Iraq War, the Affordable Care Act and other major issues. He also noted that Fox's audience tended to hold a bias against Muslims.

"It appears that right-wing bias, including inaccurate reporting, became commonplace on Fox," Bartlett said.

This is especially problematic, he said, because "many conservatives now refuse to even listen to any news or opinion not vetted through Fox, and to believe whatever appears on it as the gospel truth."

The Daily Show recently put together a compilation of some of the network's most egregious inaccuracies. Among them: NASA scientists fabricated data to prove climate change exists, Obama sent more forces to fight Ebola than ISIS, and the Affordable Care Act will eventually lead to single-payer health care.

Many within the Republican Party have expressed concern with Fox News in recent years.

In 2012, then-presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich said that he found other networks to be less partial. “I think Fox has been for Romney all the way through," Gingrich said. "In our experience, Callista and I both believe CNN is less biased than Fox this year. We are more likely to get neutral coverage out of CNN than we are of Fox, and we’re more likely to get distortion out of Fox. That’s just a fact."

Then-Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma said last year that some Fox shows are "totally not fair and totally not balanced." Even Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.), who often appears on the network, has said that its immigration coverage "makes it harder for me to get people on my side."
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