merphie said:
How are they bias? That's funny. Here is one way. Source If you can't see how biased they are then you are blind.
You can use psychic powers if you wish. You could also request information from the government under the "Freedom of infomation Act".
I was sure I saw you somewhere arguing for gun control. I could be mistaken. Since they lost my account I can't go back that far in post.
If I had you pegged wrong, I appologize.
OK, you've shown one article by one man about how elements of the media are biased against
guns. This topic is not about
guns.
Here is a more interesting link to an article about GENERAL media bias:
http://slate.msn.com/id/2078200/
For 'war bias' as a for instance, Ted Turner calls Rupert Murdoch a 'Warmonger'.
http://pages.zdnet.com/trimb/id81.html
You should note that some of the more damning citations in the opening post are from the White House's own web site.
Naturally a 'Freedom of Information Act' citation on my part would take the better part of a year to complete, and if I posted the result, you would merely claim it was fabricated, and if I told you to submit your own 'Freedom of Information Act' request, then you would not bother because it would take YOU a year to get it completed, and you'd just claim "inaccessible evidence". No, for the time being, links from major and relatively respected news organizations will have to do. I am forced to rely on records already made public, usually by reporters who have filed a 'Freedom of Information Act' for me, or gotten someone on the inside to fax some papers out.
Believe me, there are plenty of anti-war hits on web sites and sources that I don't bother to cite because they have an
obvious bias.
Here's a better organization to cite about what may be biased or not:
http://www.fair.org/whats-fair.html
As for my 'argument for gun control', I usually use vehicle deaths as an example of a benchmark for something that should be 'banned' before guns are. I usually use the CDC's mortality data for this.
http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/wisqars/
Unintentional
MV Traffic 42,443
Firearm 802
(The 'accidental' figures speak for themselves, and if you go for children 'accidentally' killed, it's less than 40 versus thousands.)
Intentional
Homicide Firearm 11,348
Suicide Firearm 16,869
(Suicide doesn't really count in my opinion; if you don't have a gun to shoot yourself, there's always rope to hang yourself.)
It also has a new category this year: 'Terrorism' (from the 2001 data). It compellingly shows that cars kill and injure WAY more people than terrorists do, which also shows where the relative threat of 'terrorists' stands compared to your daily routine.
2001, United States
Overall Motor Vehicle Deaths 43,987
2001, United States
Terrorism Deaths 2,926
2001, United States
Adverse effects - Drugs 277
So, as you can see, the 'War on Terror' and the 'War on Drugs' and even firearms are relatively small things (as measured in annual deaths caused by them), compared to what people driving vehicles unsafely do every day.
So, you'll find that I'm very anti-car, (in a tongue in cheek sort of way). Seriously anti-scary drivers, though.