Fox News Opinion Programming v. Everyone Else!
I believe that a major contributing factor to the great political divide is focus and an explosion of media. People now have so many choices to get their "facts" that they choose sources that align with and reinforce their beliefs. They enjoy political porn. You like listening to Maher and Cobert because they reinforce what you already thought. It's like when people shop for a car they read only one or no reviews. Once they buy the car they read a dozen reviews to affirm their smart decision.
I try not to make a political lean and attempt to watch as many news sources as I can (the truth has to be in there somewhere). I did run across this article which speaks to two studies speaking of the ills of Fox news and how it leads those who watch it to be more uninformed than those watching nothing at all.
I mostly try to avoid watching the major news stations and instead stick to getting the snippets from various online sources. I feel that leaning to either party and reading too much of their news can lead you to become biased and misinformed either way. So while the study above may make you think that Fox News is "dangerous" I feel that watching or reading only one source of news is dangerous no matter what it is.

Two years ago the University of Maryland created a bit of a controve
It takes some skill to despin what they are serving, but it can be done.
The only dangerous idea is the idea that ideas are dangerous.
I am a conservative and I am constantly looking to other news outlets to compare and make my own opinion.
So foxnews,cnn,msnbc they are all just as bad as they other.
That being said, take a moment to peruse the other Cable networks, or for that matter the Broadcast networks and look for an opposing opinion. FOX, with all their faults, DOES put people on from the other side, on their opinion shows, and during elections actually runs a clock to ensure equal time (between guests). ALL the remaining networks are clearly on the other side of the political spectrum, and like Fox, they all have their scandals, whether they be Dan Rather pushing a phony fitness report on Pres Bush, or MSNBC with their can't-help-themselves Progressiveness, it is rare to find ANYBODY from the right on those networks.
In conclusion, they're all flawed models, but ignoring the opinions of others particularly in the absence of any reliable news, because the news is anything but reliable, or accurate, regardless the source, leaves one in an information vacuum, AND shelters one from various perspectives from which incidences can be viewed or perceived.
Although I may disagree with your political affiliation, it is yours and I respect that. I also used to watch Fox News, and before that, MSNBC. However, they are all mainly opinion, and very little news.
I am studying to be a journalist,and am in no way interested in writing as these news outlets report. It is not only the cable news outlets that are giving journalism and objective reporting a bad name, the mainstream media, including the three major networks have become unreliable.
As a future journalist, I have watched all of them, and although they may not lie, per say, they tend to be more subjective in what the report.
The fact that the media has become so actively involved in Washington politics discredits everyone of them. Scandals about the NSA abusing it's authority to spy on reporters, news casters caught distorting stories, and countless other allegations has made it nearly impossible for the educated viewer to know what is going on.
So I do not offend anyone, let me explain my use of "Educated Viewer." An educated viewer does try's to look beyond the words to actually what is being said. Simply put, they can read beyond the rhetoric. News casts are full of leading reports and emotive language designed to enrage emotions in the direction they want them to go.
The danger is not the news channel tuned in on the office wall, the danger is uninformed viewers that tend to believe anything they hear, as long as it sounds good to themselves.
You mention that young troops are young and impressionable, many adults are impressionable also when the proper, emotive, language is presented to them.
The news you mentioned that you watch, it's biased also. I have observed in your statement that you seem to be more concerned that someone may watch something you disagree with. I am not trying to be disrespectful, just pointing out an observation.
So I will answer your question from a conservative point of view. I partially agree with you, all news outlets are biased. Too many want to base their opinion on soundbites and buzz-words. To quote Yoda, "Dangerous, Very very Dangerous." This is what is driving news today.
Even the shows you watch are biased, but wait the problem gets worse. With the internet, it is easy to go straight to the source of the news. C-Span one and two both show live broadcasts of public hearings and debates in the House and Senate. Her is the bigger problem. Many of the politicians speaking, are just feeding the news people their soundbites.
Most documents, laws passed, as long as they are not classified, executive orders, and other public records can easily be accessed. I suggest that people begin looking as close to the source for their news and turn off all news.
Me, and most of my young and impressionable friends were conservative in our views. Had there been a television on every office wall, or in every shop, it would not have changed our views. we thought and formed our own opinions based on our own beliefs.
To suggest that removing a channel because you do not agree with it and it may affect a young impressionable service member, is crossing the line from leadership to parenthood.
Might I respectfully suggest that, you give them credit. They have already made a decision to fight, and if needed, die for their country. Let them form their own opinions. Most of them are pretty intelligent and can probably distinguish between fantasy and reality.
I don't believe that one can be right or left-leaning in constitutional analysis. It's a document, which is plainly written. You read it and move on.
I have a problem with the hand up/hand out issue and Fox is a good example of what causes the problem. Republicans aren't against social programs even though the House votes like they do. Fox has portrayed those taking handouts as nothing more than lazy, useless people. What they don't tell you is that those folks make up a very tiny percent of the population receiving aid. They do the same thing for voter fraud when it comes to the laws that supposedly make voting free from fraud, but in effect, keep a lot of people from voting--mostly minorities and women (In some places). Fox sensationalizes the small stuff to make it seem like more of a problem than anything. I know that all media outlets do this, but being liberal, I am going to focus on Fox. That's the point of the discussion anyways.
I don't have a problem with gun ownership, I just think it needs to be regulated with newer background checks in every instance of a gun purchase. This is another thing Fox has sensationalized. The President isn't going to take away your guns. That's just a marketing ploy by the NRA and producers/distributors to sell more guns. And it works very well. The President isn't about to erase a freedom guaranteed in our Bill of Rights--what's more, he can't do that. It has to go through Congress. His EO authority doesn't even remotely extend that far.
News is about ratings. It is an entertainment venue and we should all keep that in mind when watching or listening. They pander to their market and sensationalize to get reactions and gain better ratings.
Your passionate comments are proof of that.


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