Politics and Religion

That's obvious from Jams_Cornhole's posts. (eom)
BigPapasan 3 Reviews 226 reads
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If it weren't for they we might not about the four Democrats in Philadelphia who are on 100 hours of surveillance tapes taking bribes to votes again important measures like voter ID. And we might not know that the DOJ refuses to charge any of them because they were all four black Americans .  

We may not know race baiter Al Sharpton was an FBI RAT in the 1980s because he too be caught in tapes maken deals to an undercover for 35 K a kilo.  

We might not know that several involved  was yelling beat that white M ..... F when the mob of 150 jumped the bloke in Detroit after he stopped to help a lad he hit with his truck . We might not know the lad and he mates be playing chicken with autos on a busy road. And we might not be knowing that the DOJ is already saying not enough there to charge a hate crime.  

What is the fear the other TV news has with reporting truth about your American ball and chain ?  

Their coverages of Jews attacking your American  Christian holidays is much of  the same .

-- Modified on 4/9/2014 1:41:32 AM

salonpas304 reads

In summary: "The More you Watch Fox News, the Less you Know."


Those who watched no news—answering questions by guessing or relying on existing knowledge—fared much better than those who watched the most popular 24-hour cable news network (i.e., Fox News).  
Media outlets such as Fox News and MSNBC have a negative impact on people’s current events knowledge, while NPR and Sunday morning political talk shows are the most informative sources of news, according to Fairleigh Dickinson University’s newest PublicMind survey.

Researchers asked 1,185 random nationwide respondents what news sources they had consumed in the past week and then asked them questions about events in the U.S. and abroad. On average, people correctly answered 1.6 of five questions about domestic affairs.  

Because the aim of the study was to isolate the effects of each type of news source, they then controlled for variables such as other news sources, partisanship, education, and other demographic factors.

They found that someone who watched only Fox News would be expected to answer 1.04 domestic questions correctly compared to 1.22 for those who watched no news at all. Those watching only The Daily Show with Jon Stewart answered 1.42 questions correctly, and people who only listened to NPR or only watched Sunday morning political talk shows answered 1.51 questions correctly. In terms of international news, people correctly answered an average of 1.8 of four questions. With all else being equal, people who watched no news were expected to answer 1.28 correctly, those watching only Sunday morning shows figured at 1.52, those watching only The Daily Show figured at 1.60, and those just listening to NPR were expected to correctly answer 1.97 international questions.

Those watching only MSNBC were expected to correctly answer only 1.23 out of four, while viewers of only Fox News figured at 1.08. The study noted that the effects of Fox News, MSNBC, and talk radio depended on the ideology of the consumer.

"Ideological news sources, like Fox and MSNBC, are really just talking to one audience," political scientist and poll analyst Dan Cassino said in a press release. "This is solid evidence that if you’re not in that audience, you’re not going to get anything out of watching them."[/quote

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