Is that an upside down Missouri flag?I hope Mississippi ends up going with this one, which is no longer in use since 2006.

Is that an upside down Missouri flag?I hope Mississippi ends up going with this one, which is no longer in use since 2006.
That’s the funny y-take the original confederate flag, slap your state logo on-all good, and nobody cares.Meanwhile Georgia waits nervously
Every time, except the first change, to the 56 flag has been a different Confederate flag.That’s the funny y-take the original confederate flag, slap your state logo on-all good, and nobody cares.
Huh, interesting analysisI find this interesting. One important function of the media is as a political watchdog. Social media's role so far has been to function as a one-stop content aggregator for news reporting and discussion.
But social media platforms plan on banning offensive Trump statements...which removes their ability to support this function and will probably have the effect of exposing fewer people to these statements, leading to less outrage, leading to better support for Trump.
Former Rolling Stone editor, I believe.Taibibi is a pretty liberal guy . . .
Good read. I’m glad there are people out there willing to call out that lunacyThere was some talk earlier in this thread about a book called White Fragility. This book has become something of a bible for those that believe that all whites are racist whether they think so or not. I came across a really interesting review of it by Matt Taibbi, who says, among many other things, "White Fragility, may be the dumbest book ever written"
https://taibbi.substack.com/p/on-white-fragility
Taibbi is a pretty liberal guy, but he takes some tough positions against the mainstream leftists.
It's kind of a long read, but its worth your time. If only to give you comfort that not all liberals are mindlessly following the herd these days.
Robin DiAngelo is a troll. When she taught at Westfield State University, that bastion of higher education, she complained that the students were “too unaware” to enroll in her oh-so important courses. In higher ed most consider her book...to use our “special l gauge”...a fallacy of reification.Good read. I’m glad there are people out there willing to call out that lunacy
This doesn’t occur when CNN and MSNBC are unwilling to ask Democrats the hard questions, or when Fox or Rush Limbaugh are unwilling to ask Republicans the hard questions. The news media is failing at their function.One important function of the media is as a political watchdog.
There's a second half to this, which is . . .This doesn’t occur when CNN and MSNBC are unwilling to ask Democrats the hard questions, or when Fox or Rush Limbaugh are unwilling to ask Republicans the hard questions. The news media is failing at their function.
However, thinking in terms of game theory (e.g. prisoner’s dilemma), there is not much incentive for a news outlet to ask everyone the hard questions equally. The outlet would irk half their viewers one hour and the other half the next hour. You’d think that there would be a big market demand for unbiased media, but actually I think people are dumb and lazy, and they just want to hear what they “already know to be true.”
Not just an aggregator, but a filter bubble generator. It'd be one thing if it just aggregated, say, Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, the Big 3 broadcast news channels, CSM, WSJ, Reuters, AP, Slate, and National Review. Or a similar basket of sources. Then, you might get a quasi-credible smorgasboard of opinions from across the spectrum.Social media's role so far has been to function as a one-stop content aggregator for news reporting and discussion.
I disagree. As long as I can tune into Fox News to find out what nefarious activity the 'Kenyan' President Obama was up to or CNN to find out what outrageously racist thing Trump said when you snip 3-7 words out of context, the media as a conglomerate is doing its job.This doesn’t occur when CNN and MSNBC are unwilling to ask Democrats the hard questions, or when Fox or Rush Limbaugh are unwilling to ask Republicans the hard questions. The news media is failing at their function.
How many people do you know watch a multiple, varied channels methodically like that?I disagree. As long as I can tune into Fox News to find out what nefarious activity the 'Kenyan' President Obama was up to or CNN to find out what outrageously racist thing Trump said when you snip 3-7 words out of context, the media as a conglomerate is doing its job.
The press today is far more fair and balanced than it was in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
This doesn’t occur when CNN and MSNBC are unwilling to ask Democrats the hard questions, or when Fox or Rush Limbaugh are unwilling to ask Republicans the hard questions. The news media is failing at their function.
However, thinking in terms of game theory (e.g. prisoner’s dilemma), there is not much incentive for a news outlet to ask everyone the hard questions equally. The outlet would irk half their viewers one hour and the other half the next hour. You’d think that there would be a big market demand for unbiased media, but actually I think people are dumb and lazy, and they just want to hear what they “already know to be true.”