I’ve been lectured by liberal friends on how they were getting truthful, unbiased news from NPR for years. I knew their broadcasts were filled with lies and bias but never had evidence that they were the propagandists for Democrat candidates. Now we know the truth. The last time the liberal fascists were this antagonistic to opposing news was during Woodrow Wilson’s administration. Wilson went so far as to throw anti-war journalists into prison for writing stories opposing World War I. I’ve always believed liberals believe in the first amendment for themselves and believe conservatives should have fifth amendment protection. That is, liberals have free speech while conservatives have the right to remain silent.
Liberal journalists suggest government
shut down Fox News
By Jonathan Strong - The Daily Caller | Published: 12:01 AM 07/21/2010 | Updated: 11:04 AM 07/21/2010
If you were in the presence of a man having a heart attack, how would you respond? As he clutched his chest in desperation and pain, would you call 911? Would you try to save him from dying? Of course you would.
But if that man was Rush Limbaugh, and you were Sarah Spitz, a producer for National Public Radio (update: Spitz was a producer for NPR affiliate KCRW for the show Left, Right & Center), that isn’t what you’d do at all.
In a post to the list-serv Journolist, an online meeting place for liberal journalists, Spitz wrote that she would “Laugh loudly like a maniac and watch his eyes bug out” as Limbaugh writhed in torment.
In boasting that she would gleefully watch a man die in front of her eyes, Spitz seemed to shock even herself. “I never knew I had this much hate in me,” she wrote. “But he deserves it.”
Spitz’s hatred for Limbaugh seems intemperate, even imbalanced. On Journolist, where conservatives are regarded not as opponents but as enemies, it barely raised an eyebrow.
In the summer of 2009, agitated citizens from across the country flocked to town hall meetings to berate lawmakers who had declared support for President Obama’s health care bill. For most people, the protests seemed like an exercise in participatory democracy, rowdy as some of them became.
On Journolist, the question was whether the protestors were garden-variety fascists or actual Nazis.
“You know, at the risk of violating Godwin’s law, is anyone starting to see parallels here between the teabaggers and their tactics and the rise of the Brownshirts?” asked Bloomberg’s Ryan Donmoyer. “Esp. Now that it’s getting violent? Reminds me of the Beer Hall fracases of the 1920s.”
