You can always tell what a newspaper finds important by what it puts on the front page. It’s also a good way to learn about the paper’s biases. You may recall that the New York Times wrote very little on page one, or anyplace else in the paper, about the relationship – whatever it was – between presidential candidate Barack Obama and his old left-wing pal Bill Ayers, the one who along with other radical leftists tried to blow up the Pentagon and the U.S. Capitol during the heyday of the anti-Vietnam war movement.
All the News that Fits Our Biases
All the News that Fits Our Biases
All the News that Fits Our Biases
You can always tell what a newspaper finds important by what it puts on the front page. It’s also a good way to learn about the paper’s biases. You may recall that the New York Times wrote very little on page one, or anyplace else in the paper, about the relationship – whatever it was – between presidential candidate Barack Obama and his old left-wing pal Bill Ayers, the one who along with other radical leftists tried to blow up the Pentagon and the U.S. Capitol during the heyday of the anti-Vietnam war movement.
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