Patranus
Diamond Member
- Apr 15, 2007
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And 60 some % of them think Iraq was involved in 9-11. Whats your point?
Link?
And 60 some % of them think Iraq was involved in 9-11. Whats your point?
Actually, more like 60%. Let's see:Only about half of them.JohnOfSheffield said:View Post
If i had been an American, i'd try to hide this info as best as i could.
It generally means that people trust opinions more than facts.
I'd see that coming in Yemen or Darfur but in the US? Are people really that fucked up in he US?
This thread is /facepalm
Actually, more like 60%. Let's see:
Only 39% of the American public believe in the theory of Evolution:
http://www.gallup.com/poll/114544/Darwin-Birthday-Believe-Evolution.aspx
But a full 95% of Americans believe either in God or a higher power:
http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/go...od-gap-between-scientists-and-other-americans
So am I surprised that the public puts their faith in Fox news? Yawn.
You might want to take another look at that gallup poll.
Doesn't surprise me, probably the same 49% who voted for Bush twice.
Link?
Link?
Well, I'm not sure of the 60% statistic but when you get an almost potential President saying crap like this on shows like O'Reilly, is it any wonder?
http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal...r-fox-says-iraq-was-behind-911_100303085.html
Then you get idiots like Glenn Beck who says he's now angry at families of victims of 9/11 because all they do is "whine and cry" despite all the country has done for them. Seriously?
What he should have said is that people who trust O'Rielly and Beck are idiots.So you lied about the statistic and we're supposed to believe you when you say people like OReilly and Beck are idiots? I guess it doesn't matter if you post lies because the ends of discrediting conservatives justifies the means.
An in-depth analysis of a series of polls conducted June through September found 48% incorrectly believed that evidence of links between Iraq and al Qaeda have been found, 22% that weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq, and 25% that world public opinion favored the US going to war with Iraq. Overall 60% had at least one of these three misperceptions.
Such misperceptions are highly related to support for the war. Among those with none of the misperceptions listed above, only 23% support the war. Among those with one of these misperceptions, 53% support the war, rising to 78% for those who have two of the misperceptions, and to 86% for those with all 3 misperceptions. Steven Kull, director of PIPA, comments, "While we cannot assert that these misperceptions created the support for going to war with Iraq, it does appear likely that support for the war would be substantially lower if fewer members of the public had these misperceptions."
Looking just at Republicans, the average rate for the three key misperceptions was 43%. For Republican Fox viewers, however the average rate was 54% while for Republicans who get their news from PBS-NPR the average rate is 32% ....
Among those with a bachelors degree or more, the average rate of misperceptions was 27%. However among those who get their news from print media the average rate was 20%, while among those who get their news from PBS-NPR the average rate was 10%.
What he should have said is that people who trust O'Rielly and Beck are idiots.
Well most News Commentators do suck, whether it be Beck, Insanity and ORielly from FOX or Oblabberman and Maddow from MSNBC . I even think Rick Sanchez from CNN is crappy as he has an agenda like the rest of the assholes I mentioned and that agenda is not being objective.So who do YOU trust? Let me guess, nobody.. They all suck right?![]()
So who do YOU trust? Let me guess, nobody.. They all suck right?![]()
The problem is that you think news personalities are to be trusted in the first place. Every one of them has a bias. Seeing them for what they are, getting your info from multiple sources and applying a BS detector is the way to go. The problem is that people - conservatives especially it seems - put all their faith in one or two individuals who tell them what they want to hear.
Well most News Commentators do suck, whether it be Beck, Insanity and ORielly from FOX or Oblabberman and Maddow from MSNBC . I even think Rick Sanchez from CNN is crappy as he has an agenda like the rest of the assholes I mentioned and that agenda is not being objective.
So you're right, I don't trust them and those that do are fools IMO.
This may make some heads explode. A Public Policy Polling poll of 1,151 voters finds Fox News is the most trusted (49%) and least distrusted (37%) television news channel. CNN scored second a full ten points behind, while ABC fared worst with only 31% trusting them and 46% not trusting them. http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0110/32039.html
Dean Debnam, president of the Democrat PPP polling institute, added his own spin, saying "A generation ago you would have expected Americans to place their trust in the most neutral and unbiased conveyors of news. But the media landscape has really changed, and now theyre turning more toward the outlets that tell them what they want to hear. Hey, sometimes you do a poll and the results embarrass you, pal.
You didn't answer my question. Who do YOU trust for your news?
Every one of them has a bias.
That's funny, I read about it on CNN's News site.CNN didn't even report on the Climate Research Unit hacking, proof that global warming is a scam and religious cult.
Yeah, I can't imagine why people trust Fox more.
CNN didn't even report on the Climate Research Unit hacking, proof that global warming is a scam and religious cult.
Yeah, I can't imagine why people trust Fox more.
The main Online News sites like CNN, BBC, Reuters, Associated Press.
That's funny, I read about it on CNN's News site.
I'd say the major problem here is that people just want to explain Faux away as having the same kind of bias any other outlet has. It's a cop out.
And it's entirely false. CNN, ABC, MSNBC, etc may all share a certain level of bias, but Faux is a fundamentally different critter in how it operates and thus, not the same at all.
While other outlets obviously operate with a corporatist agenda, they at least make an attempt at journalism. Politics are more important to Faux than money or journalistic principles, and they have shown this time and time again in spades.
MSNBC may be obsessed with the four men arrested for trying to tamper with Sen. Mary Landrieu’s telephones, but the network says reporter David Shuster crossed the line when he attacked one of them via Twitter.
Just before leaving for New Orleans to cover the story, Shuster used a Twitter message to tell conservative filmmaker James O’Keefe — one of the four men arrested by the FBI — that he’s “not a journalist,” that he “intended to tap phones” and that he “will go to prison.”
“The comments were inappropriate,” an MSNBC spokesperson told POLITICO Thursday. “We have talked to David about them.”
