Originally posted by: thunderroller
true. Sometimes I don't like the mix of the panel members they have but then they do highlight lots of important topics and news that go unnoticed on mainstream tv and online news sites.
So while driving i always tune on the fm to npr. but hey, their fund drive is starting next week & its going to drive me nuts. So will be listening to a few nice CDs that I have.
That NPR harbors a liberal bias is an article of faith among many conservatives. Spanning from the early ?70s, when President Richard Nixon demanded that ?all funds for public broadcasting be cut? (9/23/71), through House Speaker Newt Gingrich?s similar threats in the mid-?90s, the notion that NPR leans left still endures.
Despite the commonness of such claims, little evidence has ever been presented for a left bias at NPR, and FAIR?s latest study gives it no support. Looking at partisan sources?including government officials, party officials, campaign workers and consultants?Republicans outnumbered Democrats by more than 3 to 2 (61 percent to 38 percent). A majority of Republican sources when the GOP controls the White House and Congress may not be surprising, but Republicans held a similar though slightly smaller edge (57 percent to 42 percent) in 1993, when Clinton was president and Democrats controlled both houses of Congress. And a lively race for the Democratic presidential nomination was beginning to heat up at the time of the 2003 study.
Republicans not only had a substantial partisan edge, individual Republicans were NPR?s most popular sources overall, taking the top seven spots in frequency of appearance. George Bush led all sources for the month with 36 appearances, followed by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld (8) and Sen. Pat Roberts (6). Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, Secretary of State Colin Powell, White House press secretary Ari Fleischer and Iraq proconsul Paul Bremer all tied with five appearances each.
Originally posted by: Perknose
I hear you have access to a lot of sharp intstruments. Your brain in not one of them.Originally posted by: heartsurgeon
NPR= National Proletariat Radio
almost (but not quite) as leftist as the BBC
NPR is not moderate or middle of the road, it is far left leaning.
And yet, finally, we agree. NPR is about as leftist as the BBC. :roll:
Originally posted by: piasabird
I think this is a stupid POLL. The thing is there are a lot of programs on NPR that are not news related. They have a large following at NPR for a wide variety of programs that are intertainment based like music programs and those Comedy/Music programs on Saturday/Sunday. However, I pretty much ignore the news they have. As news goes they have a slightly liberal slant, but it is usually pretty thorough. The problem is network news is not very Truth centered and Truth Centered. It seems most networks selectively pick news segments to support whatever agenda they have. I do not beleive anything I see on Network News unless it is discussed on both Liberal and Conservative sources. Network news and liberal sitcom shows most often just bore me and make me sick.
The main Basis that the government is suppose to allow a License for networks is based on their activities to relay the news and they are not meeting this commitment in my mind.
Originally posted by: phonemonkey
I'd like to hear some examples of how NPR is left leaning. Since the conservatives here make it sound like it's so pervasive, can you list a program (or even a specific date/time of a show?) that doesn't at least try to be non-partisan?
I like to listen to NPR on my way home from work, and even when dealing with politics, they try to give both sides equal time (even when a member of the GOP was going off the topic to attack Kerry, they tried to talk out his points).
Until someone can give me an example of how NPR is so biased, I'm just gonna give a to those who say it's biased with nothing to back it up.
Originally posted by: arsbanned
If anything NPR has become more attuned to Conservatism, right wing accusations aside.
Criticisms of NPR as too Conservative 2606
Criticisms of NPR as too Liberal 731