Tuesday, August 21, 2018

The Media Explains Bias : Be A Hero - Hate Your Brother!

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The media driven by the ideology of hate and destruction.

In other words, the media are rent seekers and opportunist, explaining their personal bias and intentions for political activism. The power to control.

With the election of Donald Trump, the main stream media of all kinds has decided it was time to come out of the closet, proclaiming their real beliefs and ideologies of hate that they have suppressed for decades.

The audacity of no-bodies living in no-mans land of hard work and responsibility could elect a man that has no connection to the real power that was designed to keep guys like him out of control, is unacceptable and therefore must be destroyed.

This is who they are and always have been. It's just now they are released from their self imposed prison of journalist ethics, to now tell the world of their total and all consuming hate for everything and everybody that has opposed their need for absolute power.

Never vote democrat as the media explains how they and  their friends will bring only misery and conflict to our nation. They intend to do us harm.

The Media’s Double Standard on Taking Relatives’ Views Seriously
Michelle Malkin / /

It’s quite simple: Some political relatives are more equal than others.

Agenda-driven journalists love to exploit familial dysfunction when a prominent politician is conservative and his or her kinfolk espouse liberal views. When a vengeful offspring, sibling, cousin, or distant relation wants to wreak havoc, instant fame and adoration are just a tweet or call away. The media schadenfreude over such bloody bloodline battles is thicker than California wildfire smoke.

By contrast, relatives who openly challenge powerful Democrats are dismissed as gadflies and publicity hounds. Remember when Barack Obama’s half-brother Malik criticized his younger sibling over his coddling of corrupt Hillary Clinton, support for gay marriage, and inattention to Kenya and his family overseas?

Left-wing Vox responded by calling Malik a “somewhat scammy opportunist.” A GQ writer decried “the inherent seediness of on-screen family dysfunction,” declared that “Malik has nothing to do with anything,” and condemned the “nonsensical stunt.” The Huffington Post was befuddled that Donald Trump invited Malik to the third presidential debate “for no reason at all.”

And Slate wrote: “Ugh.”

By contrast, the anti-Trump media’s favorite political family feuder this week was Dr. David Glosser, a retired neuropsychologist and outspoken liberal. On Monday, he penned a seething attack for Politico on his staunch conservative nephew, White House senior adviser Stephen Miller. An emotion-laden Glosser vented:

“I have watched with dismay and increasing horror as my nephew, who is an educated man and well aware of his heritage, has become the architect of immigration policies that repudiate the very foundation of our family’s life in this country.”

Immediately after publication and full-tilt Politico hype across social media, Glosser made the rounds on CNN and MSNBC. The latter network’s resident mouth-foamer Lawrence O’Donnell praised the “eloquent” uncle and dubbed him a new “leader of the resistance.” New York Times contributor Wajahat Ali called Glosser “brilliant.” CNN’s Kyung Lah, magazine magnate Bonnie Fuller, and identity politics journalist Maria Hinojosa all raved that Glosser’s hit piece against his sister’s son was “must-read.”

But why?

Beyond his own personal history and volunteer work, Glosser has no expertise in immigration law or analytical understanding of the systemic impact of our immigration failures on American sovereignty, well-being, and economic determination.

Miller, by contrast, spent a dozen years on Capitol Hill mastering every aspect of immigration policy—border security, sanctuary cities, deportation, asylum and refugee programs, and the impact of foreign guest worker visas on wages, for starters—before taking on a senior policy adviser role for the Trump transition team and White House. He is a longtime vocal proponent of serious, comprehensive immigration enforcement reform from top to bottom—including a long overdue rethinking of our chain migration system, which rewards familial ties over merit and skills.

Glosser thinks that by pointing out that their family entered America through chain migration, Miller is somehow an “immigration hypocrite.” This is one of the most inane arguments of the open borders lobby. And there’s a lot of inanity to choose from, my friends.

Just because you benefit from a certain government policy, it doesn’t mean you should be obligated to support that policy in perpetuity. The nation’s modern chain migration system was formally created in 1952 and expanded radically by Congress in 1965 and 1990. New immigrants can now sponsor their entire extended families: parents, spouses, adult children and their children, and siblings and their children. The unrelenting influx has undermined the federal government’s ability to properly vet new immigrants, police fraud, prioritize skilled labor, and assimilate chain beneficiaries.

Good-faith disagreement is one thing. But Glosser’s diatribes are so filled with rage that I get the sense his animosity is rooted in something far deeper than ideological dissent. Families are like that, whether they include famous public figures in them or not. So why is it that the high and mighty arbiters of “news” bestow some relatives with absolute moral authority while others are summarily dismissed as attention-seekers?

That’s the theory of political relative relativity in action, proving the irrefutable existence of media bias, operating under the insufferable pretense of neutrality.

To quote the Slate snobs right back at them: Ugh.

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