You said:"More like they were talking about van jones and segued into a different subject". They were not talking about Van Jones prior to that. Thus, it was not correct. I don't see how you can still think that much of your statement was correct.
They brought up Jones for the sole purpose of talking about how unreliable a source of information the Internet is. That would make as much sense as me using a psychic who exactly predicted what would happen to me today as a jumping off point for how unreliable they are. The example they used was one of their failure and not of the blogosphere. It's nonsensical to use that to start a cautionary lecture about how you shouldn't trust anything on the Internet.
They continue to make themselves look like fools by talking about the chilling effect this has- I believe it was Friedman who said that it shows young people today not to write or say anything, because it will be used against them if they're ever appointed ambassador. He's blindly missing the point- it's not that you can't write anything, it's that you can't write anything patently offensive and idiotic and expect not to hear about it if you become a public figure. I don't see where finding out that an appointee thought the government, that he is being appointed to serve, perpetrated a massive scale terrorist attack on its own people is a bad thing. How is it bad if we find out if people are fringe kooks before they're appointed to office? It's not! Yet, the way they frame the discussion, they leave you thinking it is bad and lamentable.
Uh-huh. They used Jones as an example to set up their next topic.They were talking about obama giving a speech at a school and then mentioned van jones and transitioned into a new subject.
Yes, I disagree with much of what he says. I agree insofar as you shouldn't take any information as gospel without some kind of verification. But that's nothing unique to the Internet. Really, just referring to the "Internet" and judging it as whole makes shows how clueless they really are. Saying "I saw it on the Internet" is not worse than saying "I saw it on TV". There are lots of things on television that also aren't true. Also, for what it's worth, I don't know anyone who says "I read it on the Internet" or "I saw it on TV" with a straight face when trying to win a point.You can pull the open sewer comment out as often as you like, but do you disagree with what he was saying or just the word choice?
Congratulations. I hope you found a filter for the transcript though, you can't believe what you read on the open sewer.In googling to find the transcript I went through the sean hannity forums and and angry ranting blogger![]()
Even that is a poor comparison. The blogosphere isn't readily comparable to TV stations- the "channels" and subjects are near infinite. If you picked a well-reputed blog and compared it with Beck or Olbermann, I think it would hold up quite well. Yet, if I compared a alien abduction blog with CSPAN, it wouldn't look very favorable.Pick a tv news show at random and pick a blog at random and which will be better? The tv news by leaps and bounds. Cherry picking one example of a failure by the msm says very little, however annoying you find their tone. And they don't "lament the free flow of information" and suggest that "all the news should be filtered through them", which you said originally. If I were to cherry pick an example of a failure of internet reporting![]()
They never said directly that all information should be filtered through them(and neither did I), they just implied the hell out of it through their tearing down of a competing form of media without ever making even a passing mention or acknowledgement of their own repeated failings.
When I first read the allegations that Jones was a truther, there was an accompanying link to the website of the organization and the statement he signed onto. Compare that to the validation that Meet the Press gave when they covered it....... oh wait, they didn't.
In short, their entire discussion was vacuous and self-serving.![]()
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