“I think what you’re reacting to is that, at the moment, Biden is an unpopular president seeking a second term while Trump is a popular figure inside his party who is winning primary races. I wouldn’t necessarily compare the two.”

Credit to @JoshuaHolland

  • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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    10 months ago

    Why do you guys consistently frame things as bad for Biden but never bad for Trump?

    And your reply was to frame things that exact way. You’re acting as though you’re just reporting the “view from nowhere” or something but you’re not. You’re talking about two unpopular politicians, and yet when Trump came up you only spoke about his popularity within his own base.

    The old “let me disprove your point by proving your point” technique.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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      10 months ago

      Yeah.

      I mean, the one point towards fairness: It’s clear that that’s actually how he sees it. If he were trying to engineer some boost for Trump by cleverly slanting his coverage, then he would have obfuscated it with how he answered this question. His answer shows that he clearly just believes that’s how the world is: Trump is popular, Biden is unpopular, and they need to accurately reflect that in their political coverage and there are no other relevant objective facts that should impact that decision.

      Which is not like I’m trying to insult him personally for that being how he sees it, but it does mean he has no business being a journalist. If you tend to freeze up under stress, then no shame about it, but it means you can’t fly an airplane for a living.

      • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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        10 months ago

        I think you’re misunderstanding his point. Biden is facing the difficult task of governing a divided country. Trump is looking to consolidate power within his own party. One of these tasks is a historic, perhaps insurmountable challenge, and the other is routine. Even from a completely neutral perspective, this means you will report on more failures by Biden and more successes for Trump.

        I personally don’t find this “the media is so mean to Biden!” narrative any more compelling than when Trump was claiming the same thing as president. The media has always been critical of those in power and this is a healthy part of our democratic system.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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          10 months ago

          I mean, if they were reporting on Biden’s progress in governing through that lens, and Trump’s progress in the election, then I could see validity to what you’re saying as the reason why. But that’s not the case – they’re reporting the election in those unequal terms.

          One great example is the little nugget contained in his answer, where Trump is “winning primary races” and that’s a notable point about his popularity. Biden’s won 86% of the primary popular vote. Trump’s won 72% of the primary popular vote. Every single person who follows political news knows that there’s a little revolt of uncommitted voters because of Biden’s support for Israel. How many people know about 30+% of voters in Republican primaries saying that they won’t necessarily support the eventual nominee in November? That’s very unusual, and clearly a bigger story on exactly the same subject, and it’d be worth diving into the reasons behind it because they would uncover some objective things underlying their decisions that would be great to report on. Yet somehow it gets less press than the uncommitted voters making problems for Biden (which, obviously, are also an important story to report on.)

          I personally don’t find this “the media is so mean to Biden!” narrative any more compelling than when Trump was claiming the same thing as president. The media has always been critical of those in power and this is a healthy part of our democratic system.

          I mean, every president in modern history has whined about how the press is being mean to them (usually with some validity). It’s part of the job. But it doesn’t mean that careful analysis of “is the press coverage actually slanted” suddenly turns into an automatically wrong thing.

          • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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            10 months ago

            A lot of media coverage, especially in elections has to do with expectations. Biden is an incumbent facing no real opposition in the primary. Trump had real opposition, and there was a chance he would lose. You could argue he’s a semi-incumbent but I don’t think the media views him that way. Reporting on his overcoming this obstacle is naturally going to look a little more positive. In contrast, Biden has little to no chance of losing but has somehow managed to create major opposition to his candidacy anyway. This is noteworthy.

            The non-committed vote is an unusual event and it ties into an important issue: the US government’s ongoing material support for ethnic cleansing in Gaza. I think it would be quite bizarre if this did not get coverage.

            I am not saying that arguments of bias are automatically wrong, but as you say they have been (falsely, I think) repeated by every president. It’s going to take some compelling evidence and argumentation to overcome my natural skepticism of this idea. So far, I haven’t seen any real case be made. Not to mention that I think there is generally a greater danger in coverage of the powerful that is too positive as compared to too negative. See right-wing media’s fawning Trump coverage for an example.

        • Neato@ttrpg.network
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          10 months ago

          It’s equally routine for Biden to be campaigning as an incumbent and due to his competition is age is also routine at this point. While Trump is actively currying favor with fascists (Orban, Putin) and trying to overthrow democracy. Which is objectively a massive new development in the history of America. The fact they aren’t covering it like this shows inherent bias.

          • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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            10 months ago

            Being the oldest president in history is by definition not routine. I know people like to point out that Trump is almost as old, but 4 years is significant at these ages.

            I think there has been coverage of Trump’s autocratic tendencies so I’m not sure what you mean by that part.

        • Kbin_space_program@kbin.social
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          10 months ago

          Except Trump isnt overwhelmingly popular within his own party. Yes it’s a strong majority within the GOP but its not a stranglehold. Nicki Haley was getting a consistent 40-45% of the GOP voters.

              • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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                10 months ago

                Only two states where she won over 40% so far, Vermont and Utah. Those two are definitely not representative of the Republican electorate as a whole. In national poll averages she has never broken 20%. That is a significant faction but her defeat was never in doubt to careful observers.

                How it will affect the general election is a more interesting question.

      • OpenStars@startrek.website
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        10 months ago

        Your own wording softens the blow too much, imho. How is it “fairness” to point out that he may or may not have been lying (you seem to think not but… how can you tell, really? after all: his answers were prepared in advance, thus the fact that they were not inconsistent is not a surprise?)

        Also, even if like you say he is massive unintelligent, he still collects a paycheck to do the job - how then is he not a liar, either way? When people get into a plane, it is with the expectation that the “pilot” knows how to fly the plane. Then, if someone passes themselves off as one, how is that not a lie?

        There are so many more ways than one to be incorrect. For example, just b/c they don’t slant the coverage as much overtly towards Trump does not mean that it is unbiased for it to have been slanted away from Biden.

        The job of a newspaper is to tell the unvarnished Truth. Whether it fails to do so for reasons of profit, or b/c of Russian interference, or they are merely unintelligent, or whatever - does it matter? Whether it is a “lie” (and that fact demonstrable in a court of law) or not, it is not the Truth, and thus fails the criteria of being “news”, and remains mere opinion instead.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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          10 months ago

          Yeah, I mostly agree. I wasn’t trying to give the guy a free pass – just saying that really the fault lies with whoever gave him the job in the first place or told him that’s an ok way for a journalist to behave.

          But yes, the way he describes looking at political coverage is gross journalistic malpractice and people should be telling him that (or giving him a different role in society if he really insists that how he’s doing it is the way.)

          • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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            10 months ago

            The problem here is with his editor. They shouldn’t let that kind of latent bias slip through.

            • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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              10 months ago

              The editorial job has likely shifted, as so many other things, from being the best and holding up a moral code intrinsic to the position, to making money for the shareholders.

              The Jack Welch style of enshitification is getting stronger everyday.

          • OpenStars@startrek.website
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            10 months ago

            I mean, we do hold leadership to a different, higher standard, that much is true. But is this man not the foremost world-class expert authority aka leader of his own life at least? And if not him, irt to that super narrow niche, then who else would be considered the leader of his own life?

            Imagine if you will a scenario of a Doctor on television, let us call him Oz, who gives patently false advice that literally gets people actually killed. It is not okay for the TV station to air whatever film was handed to them, but how does that absolve the responsibility of this Doctor Oz from his own measure of responsibility, one may even say culpability (or perhaps criminal liability?) in this whole affair?

            Again, there is more than one way to be incorrect, and by extension they both were partners in this crime against journalistic integrity.

    • P1r4nha@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      Dude, the other day I was reading some rag because there was nothing else to do in the train… One article was just Trump’s agenda without any commentary. How is that news if you don’t put it in perspective and with the context that Trump barely reached any of his goals in the first term. Unbelievable.

      • t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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        10 months ago

        There was someone here who posted an RNC press release, and was like, “it’s news that they said that”, and was all upset that we told them it was just propaganda, and that an article about it might be news if it contextualized and fact-checked it. A lot of people don’t understand the difference between ‘news’ as a colloquialism meaning, “new information”, and ‘news’ as journalistic reporting that has certain standards and requirements.

    • DogPeePoo@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      The media should be laser focused on highlighting the complete corruption of The Supreme Court

      Ginni Thomas is an insurrectionist

      Her husband takes bribes

      Amerikkka is screwed

    • Melkath@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      Post Citizens United/Hilary democrats are just as bad in that rite.

      The media sounds neutral on Trump because noone is surprised. The media is mostly silent on Biden because there is nothing to say other than ‘experts say he is slightly better than Trump’.

      • katy ✨@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 months ago

        to be fair you’re talking to a hillary democrat and id vote for her again if i could. she would have been a great president.

          • hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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            10 months ago

            While I think what she did was wrong, you can do the right thing and get the wrong outcome. You can also do the wrong thing and get a good outcome.

            My point is we should judge all politicians on the totality of their actions. Hilary would have been a good president, if flawed, just like any other good president. Trump was and would be a terrible president. He brings shame to the role and minimises the plight of those that suffer with his childish and petty nature.

            • bumphot@lemy.lol
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              9 months ago

              How can a politician that manipulates free elections and risking so much the lives of the many, for her own benefit, be a good president. She is obviously selfish and manipulative. She Got the worst possible candidate to be a Republican nominie just so she doesn’t have to let someone else more popular in her party be candidate.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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                9 months ago

                Agreed, Clinton was terrible. I knew a few people who came from Honduras during the years after she engineered the coup there if that gives you some idea what I think of her.

                I have low hopes in general for the Democrats; that’s why it was so surprising when Biden actually turned out to be quite good.

              • hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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                9 months ago

                If Hilary was president rather than Trump, millions of people would not have died of Covid. That’s good in my book. She may not be a good person, but she would have been a good and effective president.

                Manipulation implies what she did was nefarious. Like her opposition, that actively manipulated, conspired with the enemy, against the law, and then started a coup.

                • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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                  9 months ago

                  If that’s your bar for what qualifies as a ‘good president’, then your opinion is worthless

                • bumphot@lemy.lol
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                  9 months ago

                  Hilary, just like Trump, is a rich person shill and would do anything to get corporations that are losing money from lockdown to get what they want. She is no better, she got Trump as a primary Republican candidate in her pied piper strategy just because she knew she would certainly lose if someone more reasonable would have been a Republican candidate.

        • Melkath@kbin.social
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          10 months ago

          Yup, great for lobbyists, wall street, and the military industrial complex.

          Like Biden.

          Progressives have killed the democrat party.

          • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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            10 months ago

            You are left-wing, correct? Good leftist who’s just upset with Biden for not being left enough?

            I ask because I have literally never heard a left wing person say “Democrat party”.

            • Melkath@kbin.social
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              10 months ago

              Well, in the better times, Democrats called themselves liberals.

              They stopped genocides, they didn’t enable them.

              Hilary refused to call herself a liberal (because she is a conservative) and lost to Obama bringing the word “Progressive” back to to the party and killing the term “Liberal”.

              I was a liberal democrat. Now I am a disenfranchised fuck you all, don’t commit genocide, don’t subsidize billionaires, shelter and feed the homeless, make housing affordable again guy.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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                10 months ago

                Ah yes, all those OG Democrats with their humane and sensible Israel policy. As an old-school left wing person like you, I remember them well. Which ones were your favorites?

                • P03 Locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  10 months ago

                  Y’all remember Kennedy and how he called for the end of the Vietnam War? Yeah, me neither.

                  Both parties have always had pretty shitty international policy, but at least one of those parties actually wants to govern and participate in democracy.

          • katy ✨@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            10 months ago

            but when you look at actions in his control (outside of congress), biden has been one of the most progressive, pro union democrats in recent history

            • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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              10 months ago

              I’m trying not to bring it up because I don’t want just a sprawling argument about everything, but after Biden “union busted” the rail workers, his labor department kept working the issue and got the workers their sick days anyway. Like a lot of the quippy little criticisms, “union busting” has a lot more to do with cherry-picking one event people are familiar with and trying to create a Biden-is-bad picture out of it, than it does with reality.

              Or to put another way every year Biden’s been in office, union membership has risen by a tiny amount, after having fallen by a tiny amount every single year that the last guy was in office. If he’s trying to do union busting he’s doing a pretty shitty job at it.

            • Melkath@kbin.social
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              10 months ago

              Passing legislation that prevents railway workers from protesting and in turn working out a private deal where they get a one time raise that isnt codified in law is pro union?

              Yes, that is progressivism. Its being crony conservative, but Democrat.

              Damn… I am just taken aback by your take. Eat up their lies, keep your eyes as tightly shut as possible.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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                10 months ago

                Which were your favorite pro-Palestinian establishment Democrats from back in the day, again?

                I’m sure the story you told about how you used to support them but now they’ve turned into Israel-enablers and so you can’t anymore was just you relaying the truth of what had happened. Not just sneakily plausible-sounding messaging that doesn’t correspond to your actual political history. So which ones?

                • Melkath@kbin.social
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                  10 months ago

                  Well, Bill Clinton bombed the fuck out of Serbia to end the Croatian genocide, and a ton of people supported that.

                  That sounded right.

                  Now Biden is sending massive amounts of the public trust to Israel so they can spend that money to buy the ammunition that is committing genocide on Palestine, and the Democrats CENSURED a Democrat who dissented.

                  My viewpoint isn’t pro-Palestine. My viewpoint is con-genocide. And the 2 party system rang true when Reds wanted slaughter and Blues wanted peace.

                  Now that Dems want genocide, I have no party. We need something else.

                • Melkath@kbin.social
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                  10 months ago

                  … but no form of annual or cost of living wage increases went through congress.

                  Give a starving man a fish and he will call you a god. Ban him from ever fishing again and wait 3 days… reap what you sow.

            • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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              10 months ago

              Being pro-worker for a tepid neoliberal is like being woke for a member of the GOP. While better than outright fascism, of course, liberalism is inherently anti-worker and pro-Capitalist. Biden has been giving band-aids to gaping stab wounds and running victory laps, without attempting to meaningfully address the root cause.

  • Melkath@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Trump is the dumpster fire the Republican party has been working towards since Reagan. He is exactly what is expected on the Red side.

    Biden is a union busting right leaning genocidal sociopath, which is the exact opposite of what you would expect from the Blue side.

    America has been lost.

      • Melkath@kbin.social
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        10 months ago

        And then she still lost. Why? Because she was a conservative running as a Democrat because her husband gave her an in with the party.

        We do not currently have a liberal party in America. We have a bunch of dunce christian conservatives on the red side and we have a bunch of brainwashed not-christian conservatives on the blue side.

        We have VERY few that are anti-war, anti-genocide, anti-cash-in-politics, pro-working-class politicians because Hilary and her circle murdered the moral compass of the Democrat party.

        • P03 Locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          10 months ago

          Look, you have two choices:

          • You stay home and wake up in a nightmare where Trump uses his power to usurp the presidency and end democracy, because that’s exactly what he and his followers want.
          • You get your ass to the polls and vote for Biden.
          • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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            10 months ago

            Agree

            I actually don’t even agree that Biden is a “lesser evil” in the first place, I’ve talked about it

            But even accepting for a second the premise that there’s nothing to support about Biden, I like how to these guys the lesson of 2016 and Hilary Clinton is “let’s refuse to support the establishment candidate against someone who’s clearly worse, what harm could come of it?”

              • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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                10 months ago

                I very much believe – I’m being completely serious about this – that 4chan making good memes about Trump becoming president, because it really is just inherently a funny idea, had a lot to do with elevating him from 0 support to a little kernel of popularity that could start to grow into something.

                • P03 Locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  10 months ago

                  Boomers don’t pay attention to 4Chan. It’s such a small segment of the population.

                  Gen X and Millennials pay attention to South Park, though. They see that “douche vs. turd sandwich” bit and think “Hey, that applies to our situation now!” Then they stay home in protest, because they don’t like certain aspects of Hillary’s campaign and ideals, as opposed to hating every aspect that Trump does or represents.

                  It’s not about picking the “lesser evil”. It’s about having realistic expectations and analyzing the situation as a whole. During the primaries, you pick the candidate you want. During the general election, you pick the party you want, even if your primary pick didn’t win. That’s it.

            • revelrous@sopuli.xyz
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              10 months ago

              So you will support it with inaction? There is no magic third door here. Both sides are pro-genocide, one can be worked on, one cannot. Vote blue to stop the worst, keep protesting to change the discussion. Sword and shield.

              My Republican family members are 100% behind the murder of all Palestinians. No aid. No ceasefire talks. Inaction will allow those people to call the shots. What use are morals if they don’t save anyone?

                • revelrous@sopuli.xyz
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                  10 months ago

                  I need you to understand this first—the slate is never clean. No one makes better decisions under increased chaos and uncertainty. Ever. They don’t learn. They don’t find their better selves. They use the hardship to justify atrocity. Why do you think rural communities are the way they are? People won’t suddenly open their eyes and say golly gee those leftists were right, we are all in this together and let us all put our best foot forward. Tomorrow is always yoked to yesterday. No matter how unfair, no matter how unjust, you can never raze enough of what came before to start again fresh. There is nothing that works but gradual change.

                  Do not take my word for this. Start reading. You are ready for pain and death and to drink the hot blood of our enemies for the glorious revolution. But what the revolution really needs from you, is for you to suffer through some boring ass books. No shortcuts. No meme politics. No youtube activism. If this is not a thing you are willing to do, if this feels like throwing damp sand on the fire, I need you to think critically about that.

                  Do you want equitable change or is it more important to keep that rage burning? If so how does that make you any different from a drunk on outrage MAGA fuckwit?

                  Use all the tools at hand to save as many as you can. This means not letting the orange fucker back into power. You can vote blue and put a brick through the AIPAC’s office window if you so choose. All good lefties learn to walk and chew gum at the same time.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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      10 months ago

      If you went here and had a substantive rebuttal to the reasons Biden’s actually been way above average for a US president, you’d be the first.

      • t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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        10 months ago

        spent several months engaged in absolutely war-criminal support for Israel’s genocide in Gaza

        I feel like you laid out why ^ in your own post where you think you’re supporting Biden. You’re also is incorrect about the US putting military personnel in Gaza (they’re not, but that wouldn’t be good anyways). They’re explicitly building the pier without actually landing any personnel. You’re also overstating the ‘sanctions’ Biden is putting on settlers; they applied to like 7 (sorry, after double-checking that I wasn’t understating it, it turns out I was overstating it; it only applies to) 4 nobodies who the sanctions in no way actually harm.

        But he’s showing some little stumbling signs of humanity as regards our Israel policy, which is un heard of for a US politician.

        Might-actually-be-the-Devil-Ronald-Reagan was harsher on Israel than Biden is being, and it wasn’t even over a genocide. Reagan cut off weapons sales to Israel after they bombed Iran’s nuclear materials program at Osirak. He allowed 21 UN resolutions condemning Israel to pass without vetoing them, and even backed the resolution (UNSC 248) condemning the attack on Osirak. He also slowed down aid to Israel to pressure them to withdraw troops from Lebanon, and publicly condemned them on multiple occasions.

        Meanwhile, Biden is still calling for more weapons for Israel.

        Reagan is a literal evil gremlin, and Biden doesn’t even come close to matching his response to Israel’s evil bullshit.

        Every time you downplay or misrepresent Biden’s actions on Gaza, you normalize them.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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          10 months ago

          You’re also is incorrect about the US putting military personnel in Gaza

          You think they’re gonna build the port and then extend aid packages on long poles so their feet don’t have to touch the soil?

          (they’re not, but that wouldn’t be good anyways)

          Compared to the IDF being there unsupervised? Yes it would.

          You’re also overstating the ‘sanctions’ Biden is putting on settlers; they applied to like 7 nobodies who the sanctions in no way actually harm.

          Correct. It’s crap. But, it’s more than anyone else has done.

          Might-actually-be-the-Devil-Ronald-Reagan was harsher on Israel than Biden is being, and it wasn’t even over a genocide. Reagan cut off weapons sales to Israel after they bombed Iran’s nuclear materials program at Osirak. He allowed 21 UN resolutions condemning Israel to pass without vetoing them, and even backed the resolution (UNSC 248) condemning the attack on Osirak. He also slowed down aid to Israel to pressure them to withdraw troops from Lebanon, and publicly condemned them on multiple occasions.

          Iraq, not Iran (unless I missed something big about Reagan’s geopolitical alignments).

          And you have to go back 42 years to find a US president who did more than what Biden’s doing, and the reason he did it was nothing to do with the Palestinians but just because the IDF was attacking our ally.

          But yeah, if you want to tell me bad about what Biden’s doing with Israel, you honestly won’t get a lot of argument from me.

          My point is (a) what the fuck, it’s way more than any other US president has done actually on behalf of the Palestinians that I’m aware of, for whatever fucking weak sauce that is (b) Trump is way worse; Trump wants to “finish the problem” in Gaza © I’m a lot more open to criticism of him from people who seem like they are reality based as far as politics and world events overall. If he suddenly starts doing everything right in Gaza, and becomes the president who reverses 75 years of genocide enablement (4 fucking blood-soaked months too late) – are you gonna start saying hey this guy seems like he’s produced a genuine permanent improvement in the US’s policy which pretty badly needs the help, and as a person who wants to see it get better I’m behind that? Or are you gonna pivot to some other talking point to use to criticize him, if the ones that have some validity are no longer available? And if it’s (b)… why?

          • t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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            10 months ago

            You think they’re gonna build the port and then extend aid packages on long poles so their feet don’t have to touch the soil?

            No, I don’t think that, because I actually read about what the plan is: they’re having third-party organizations do the delivery of the aid.

            Compared to the IDF being there unsupervised? Yes it would.

            You think the US military would do shit if the IDF stepped in?

            Correct. It’s crap. But, it’s more than anyone else has done.

            Except it’s… not? Sanctioning 4 nobodies is somehow more than cutting off weapons sales? What?

            Iraq, not Iran

            Correct, my mistake.

            And you have to go back 42 years to find a US president who did more than what Biden’s doing, and the reason he did it was nothing to do with the Palestinians but just because the IDF was attacking our ally. And if your argument is that Biden would have much more quickly condemned Israel over bombing a military site in say, Germany, than over conducting a literal genocide, I’m not sure that supports Biden.

            Yes, you claimed that no US president has been harsher on Israel than Biden. That’s complete bunk, and I laid out the evidence. Now you’re moving the goalposts.

            Trump is way worse; Trump wants to “finish the problem” in Gaza

            No one else here is talking about Trump. Your apparent need to make everything a comparison of the 2 in no way lessens the actual actions Biden has taken.

            If he suddenly starts doing everything right in Gaza, and becomes the president who reverses 75 years of genocide enablement (4 fucking blood-soaked months too late) – are you gonna start saying hey this guy seems like he’s produced a genuine permanent improvement in the US’s policy which pretty badly needs the help, and as a person who wants to see it get better I’m behind that?

            Sure, I can commit to a fantasy scenario: If Biden makes the US no longer support Israel materially, politically, or ideologically, YES, I will absolutely say he deserves credit for it.

            But he’s not going to.

            • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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              10 months ago

              Yes, you claimed that no US president has been harsher on Israel than Biden. That’s complete bunk, and I laid out the evidence. Now you’re moving the goalposts.

              That’s not what I said. The two main things I said initially were:

              After having spent several months engaged in absolutely war-criminal support for Israel’s genocide in Gaza, he’s now put sanctions on Israeli settlers for the first time in history, is putting the US military on the ground in Gaza after having publicly clashed with Netanyahu about the war, and is directly feeding starving Gazans.

              and

              showing some little stumbling signs of humanity as regards our Israel policy, which is un heard of for a US politician

              I don’t feel that having a tactical disagreement with Israel over something unrelated, while fully supporting their ongoing program to kill Palestinians whenever they feel like and arming them the entire time, represents any humanity in Reagan’s Israel policy. I feel like giving food aid to the Gazans and telling Netanyahu there are particular cities he’s not allowed to bomb does. Not enough, by any means. But some. You might disagree, and point to the recent past as an argument for why. And fair enough if you do. Most especially fair enough if we do actually follow through on giving them $14 billion worth of weapons and money to keep killing with, which we seem poised to do at any moment.

              I feel like you’re trying to make a disagreement here, like I’m for Biden and you’re against Biden and we’re each trying to make the best argument because one of us has to win. I am not operating that way. There’s actually not a whole lot of difference between how we see what he’s been doing and saying on Israel. Maybe I have a little more hope that he’ll start to do better things soon. But go back and read what I actually said. I’m just a person trying to make sense of the world and explain how I see it; for as much as I say good things about Biden, I’m not really on anybody’s “side.”

    • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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      10 months ago

      union busting

      Biden is arguably the most pro-union president in recent history, hands down.

      https://www.americanprogressaction.org/article/8-ways-the-biden-administration-has-fought-for-working-people-by-strengthening-unions/

      If you’re talking about the one time he signed a bill to force the rail workers to work … while we were in the middle of already very very serious supply chain issues right before the holiday season… We got through the season and the rail unions ultimately ended up winning https://www.ibew.org/media-center/Articles/23Daily/2306/230620_IBEWandPaid

      right leaning

      How?

      genocidal sociopath

      If he didn’t help Isreal he’d be thrown under the bus for weakening the US’s only ally in the middle east. He’d also likely be opening up a power vacuum (and potentially larger war) that would backfire very badly for the US.

      The real issue is the Isreal people elected their own version of Trump so Biden is dealing with a “Trump of Isreal” that’s more than happy to run down civilians.

      It’s not like he hasn’t been trying to go behind Isreal’s back and help Palestine. It’s just not a “press a button to stop sending them weapons and all the problems go away” situation.

  • Neato@ttrpg.network
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    10 months ago

    Most likely main news outlets want to gain favor with the impending fascist takeover so if Trump wins and the takeover does happen, they aren’t seized or gone after or imprisoned. While they KNOW a Biden or other sane president would never dare attack a newspaper or news channel without clear felonious activity. It’s an effort to play both sides that WILL end with fascists attacking them regardless of how much of Trump’s chode they suck.

  • arquebus_x@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Before we get out the flaming pitchforks, let us not forget that pretty much no one reads or cares about the New York Times. Their readership (print and web) is minuscule compared to entities like CNN, NBC News, ABC News, CBS News, MSNBC (and Fox, OANN, Breitbart, Joe Rogan…).

    Sure, it sucks that the NYT is sucking Trump cock, but in the end, that won’t move the needle.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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      I won’t necessarily disagree wrt the small readership – but The New York Times is notable because it is at this point the only big outlet which is both still doing actual journalism (as in researching big stories from scratch and determining the truth of them from primary sources) and also making a profit at it. There are lots of examples of each one in isolation (although, tragically, less and less of the first one year by year), but they are the only one left that is doing both.

      If they’re starting to turn over to the “truth doesn’t matter gimme that bag” side (which it seems like to some degree they are), then it’s a significant loss.

      • Hypx@fedia.io
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        10 months ago

        I haven’t read anything from the NYT that would constitute “actual journalism” in what seems like many years now. It’s not much different than the NY Post, just with less bombast.

        • BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social
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          This is just exposing that you don’t actually read the New York Times.

          Here’s an article on the plight of Gazans in Rafah in the face of a potential Israeli invasion.

          Here’s an overview on the gang situation in Haiti as the government is functionally collapsing.

          And here’s an article discussing the increasingly common practice of restaurants charging significant cancellation fees.

          Meanwhile, the NY Post has such great stories as:

          • Kate Middleton officially hits rock bottom
          • Rudy Giuliani’s ex engaged to Palm Beach energy exec after six months of dating in ‘whirlwind romance’ (Exclusive!)
          • Unions want full control of schools and our kids — we can’t let Albany allow it
          • Activists lobbying to ‘morally’ allow trans kids to change their bodies are only doing more harm
          • Hypx@fedia.io
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            The formal news section of the NY Post is not that different than the NY Times. It’s just not the focus of the NYP. And the NYT isn’t reporting anything beyond the most basic of news events. It’s pretty much the same thing as reading the AP. I can’t remember the last time they got a real scoop or any inside sources on anything.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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          10 months ago

          So most of my assertion that the Times is the only profitable one comes from this article.

          But places like the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times now face similar crises: How does a newspaper make money in 2024? People looking to answer that question invariably turn toward the New York Times. At the end of last year, as scores of journalists were getting their pink slips, the paper announced that it had passed ten million total subscribers.

          “There is like one place you can work right now with any kind of job security and it is The New York Times and that’s only because they have a shitload of recipes on a nicely coded little cooking app that you can subscribe to and also because your parents are hooked on Wordle.”


          NYT not the only big outlet doing “actual journalism” — not sure about WSJ’s profitability quarter to quarter, but I don’t think they are actively sinking.

          The Facebook Files story is not exactly the victory for journalism you’re saying though… my immediately takeaway from that is that the journalistic impact of the (surely accurate) information in it will probably be exceeded by the propaganda impact of adding weight to the “Twitter Files” mythology by simply running the story and calling it that. Maybe I am wrong in that but that’s my immediate takeaway.

          So doomsaying stories about how all their readers are dying notwithstanding, I guess I should admit that WSJ is consistently making money (even during recent quarters when NewsCorp has dipped into the red overall). My own internal compass categorizes them not quite in the journalism category because they have such a right-wing-friendly perspective but I’ll admit that’s 100% based on ideology. They are journalism I guess, yes; it’s not like they print lies or made up stuff or anything.

  • circularfish@beehaw.orgM
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    10 months ago

    A viable Trump candidacy courts controversy and sells subscriptions. End of democracy? We will worry about that later.

  • runiq@feddit.de
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    9 months ago

    Man, this is just maddening. The comment OP highlighted is terrible, but the reply to another just drips condescension.

    I used to respect the NYT. But between the Trump coverage and their viewpoint on the war in Ukraine, they can go kiss me where the sun don’t shine. (What I’m trying to say is, both are ass.)

    • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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      Holy shit man

      “Opinion X”
      “Here’s why I don’t agree with opinion X”.
      “Awww buddy, nice try, but I actually said opinion X, not what you said. Try again.”

      Jesus Christ what a self-absorbed wanker