I personally refuse to buy any newspapers of any kind and I do not watch any lettered television or subscribe to any news magazines that I feel is managing the news for a certain agenda, that is, lying to advance an agenda that is harmful to America.
Glenn has several good things for all of us to do to try and stop this rise of distortion of the truth. As he and others have stated, it's up to us, people that love freedom and Democracy, to stand up and be counted. We must do it today and then tomorrow and the next day. The battle goes on.
As Superman says " the battle is for truth, justice and the American way". Keep the faith.
What Conservatives Can Do About Media Bias*
EARLIER,
So various readers have been asking what I think people should do. For example, reader Steven Murray writes: Do you subscribe to Newsweek magazine? I do and my sister told me that I should cancel the subscription. She says that since that magazine is so deep in the tank for Obama, I am just subsidizing his campaign and the Democratic party. You know, I think she has a point. If more conservatives, libertarians, and Republicans canceled their subscriptions to these types of publications, maybe then they would take notice.I doubt it.
Most of these general-circulation magazines are in fact niche products serving their version of the NPR demographic (and, in /Newsweek'/s case, doctor's offices). By all means, if you don't like them, cancel your subscription. People have been doing that for years, and it does have an effect -- look at the plummeting viewership of network news programs.You can also write them, and their advertisers, and complain. This does some good, but it's usually temporary. As soon as the heat's off, they go back to their old ways. It's the only thing that's likely to do much good between now and the election, though.
But if you really want improvement over the longer term, you need to support competition that /isn't/ an arm of the Democratic Party. The /New York Sun/ folded yesterday. It was a serious, right-leaning newspaper in New York City. It was undercapitalized, and its shutdown is probably symptomatic of what's going to happen to a lot of bigger newspapers soon, but if even a fraction of the people who are unhappy with the /Times/ had subscribed it would still be in business. And, still, while the /New York Times/ gets in deeper trouble, the /New York Post/ seems to be doing fine.
If you want to have a media environment that isn't dominated by the Gwen Ifills and Keith Olbermanns of the world, you need to ensure that other kinds of voices flourish. That means supporting the alternatives with your eyeballs, your subscriptions, your advertiser-patronage (and you could write /those/ advertisers and tell them you're /happy/ that they're supporting that kind of programming, too -- they probably don't get many letters like that, so they'll be noticed) -- basically, your money.
Businesses need money to flourish. There's a vast underserved population out there, for news, entertainment, movies, etc., and if people start serving it, the current "mainstream" media won't be so mainstream anymore. So if you're unhappy with current offerings, put your money where your mouth is.
And if you're one of the people with creative interests, start /making/ alternative stuff. Not just news and punditry, but entertainment, documentaries, etc. If /An American Carol/ does well this weekend, it'll make it a lot easier for the next film of its type to be made. If Evan Coyne Maloney's documentary work does well, it'll encourage a lot more of that kind of work. Think of it like cultivating a garden: Starve the weeds, feed the flowers. Like gardening, it's work. But like gardening, if you do the work you'll see results.
posted at 08:21 PM by *Glenn Reynolds*
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