You said that editors over the world know which articles to publish or not. If I am understanding what you said correctly, the editors of Charlie Hebdo knew that they should not publish that comic mocking Muhammad. — Lionino
Why decide to publish? Because it's an individual artist's or columnist's right to express an opinion, whether everyone agrees with it or not, whether the editor agrees with it or not.But then, why? Because of Muslim extremists that would hurt them, or because it is incorrect to make fun of minority religions, or both? — Lionino
That's what Julian Assange thought before his visit to Sweden. — jkop
That is, is Swedish and French (for example) news more accurate, — Hanover
Yes, of course they're more accurate.The Swedish media accountability system has a long, evolving history. It consists of three sets of rules:
Publicity rules:
These rules ensure fair reporting, respect for privacy, interviewee rights, the right to reply, and the treatment of images. They are the oldest part of the code of conduct.
Rules of professional journalism:
These rules govern the conduct of journalists, covering their integrity, assignments, source relationships, and more. They are established by the Association of Swedish Journalists (SJF).
Editorial advertising guidelines:
These guidelines address the relationship between advertising and editorial content. They emphasize that news should be based on news value, not advertising value, and that advertising should be distinguishable from editorial content. https://www.meltwater.com/en/blog/sweden-media-landscape
While they all may not be more accurate than their American counterparts, some are likely to be more accurate than others, just like their American counterparts.Yet the French media outlets follow the more general trend of empowering (more) autonomy from politics, most news radio channels, TV channels, and more particularly news magazines and newspapers, still express a political orientation if not a partisanship backing or sponsor.
Charlie Hebdo disagrees. — Lionino
The world is watching Trump. — Hanover
Yes, there would be a reason. Pro and con. But mabe you're dividing it another way. — Hanover
Would a European nation provide both sides of a Trump related issue or would that just not be necessary due to the homogenous view they might have on the topic? — Hanover
Is this news reportage, editorial comment, or an open discussion? Who were "they"?I was listening to public radio last night and the issue being discussed was how to dissuade the Biden protest voters who have said they won't vote for Biden as long as he is supportive of Israel. — Hanover
And this conversation is broadcast 24 hours a day, exclusively? Or is it part of a spectrum of opinions and one of many discussions on diverse topics? (BTW, Is it "anti-Israel" to tell the truth about Israel's current leadership or disapprove of what it's doing? Is it "anti-Israel" to let someone express disapproval of those action? If so, should all "anti-Israel" opinion be censored on news media?)That was a pro-Biden, anti-Israel, anti-Trump conversation. — Hanover
What you or I think the media ought to do is a very moot point. Of course news media should report factual news and dispense useful information. If the press were free, as is wistfully hoped in the constitution, the various outlets would represent every shade of opinion under the sun.The question is whether that is what the media ought to do. — Hanover
The problem with that is that our best example of publicly funded news (PBS and NPR) is left leaning. — Hanover
Only, the government and arm's-length public funding agencies in general are not in charge of the reporting, any more than they're in charge of medical services through the CDC or of law enforcement through the FBI. The government, whether the prevailing administration is liberal or conservative, can control the financing of these organizations, but not their day-to-day functioning.Putting the government in charge of reporting the news is a nod toward allowing propoganda. — Hanover
The right wing doesn't need a publicly funded platform for its propaganda: it has plenty of very large commercial platforms. If a Trump, or any of his ilk gained sufficient power, all public information outlets - along with public schools, clinics and libraries - would cease to exist.but what would a publicly funded media look like that was ultimately answerable to a Trump administration? — Hanover
Your right, it is not a requirement and few would sign or abide by it if it was. — Sir2u
I don't think the concept is coherent enough — AmadeusD
"hate speech" is not a very good descriptor of anything, despite its legal use.. which is equally as muddy and controversial. — AmadeusD
The debate in the article referenced what was reported versus what should be covered up. — Hanover
They have no right to take sides in politics because that would automatically breach their pledge to provide the public with the whole, complete and impartial facts. — Sir2u
I don't want to die either. I just need a rational or any reason (maybe even irrational) to live that would really work for me. — rossii
What do you mean by "We are individuals of our kind"? — Agree-to-Disagree
I personally came to the same conclusion, but only due to the inability to deliberately create/manipulate the exotic matter necessary, and the OP (had you actually read it) makes the necessary presumption that this restriction isn't there, it having never been proven. — noAxioms
which it isn'tFirst of all, the time travel has to at least be a tiny bit plausible under physics — noAxioms
which is what you et al proceeded to do.The alternative is magic, and if you posit magic, you can also conclude anything you want. — noAxioms
Who made what up to get whom to drop what filters?CHATGPT made him up. It was part of a way to get it to drop its filters. — RogueAI
CHATGPT made him up. It was part of a way to get it to drop its filters. — RogueAI
The one I recall most fondly was in a little nothing village, built of adobe, like most of the houses, and whitewashed once every three years. Dirt floor, studded with walnut shells, got sprinkled with water in summertime. Wooden altar and pews. The roof would probably have to be reshingled about once a generation. Get enough volunteer hands, it cost hardly anything at all.Don't get me wrong -- I love a nicely maintained charming old church. But charming old churches are a bottomless pit of maintenance expenses. — BC
The church may or may not have christianized the Empire, but more significantly, the Empire certainly imperially bureaucratized the church. — BC
Since no other kind can be relevant to time travel, I refer to that version as impossible, yes.I suspect the time to which you refer is a fourth kind: one that has a location in space, is tangible, and that, if you traveled to where it is, you can step in. — noAxioms
You still haven't identified which kind of time you're making all your assertions about. — noAxioms
It is cruel to make children eat vegetables. :grin: — Agree-to-Disagree
Hitting, locking in a closet, starving, ear-pulling, burning with cigarette ends, force-feeding, carping and exorcism are cruelties. Allowing is not a cruelty. Is it not kind to let children bump a knee, but non-interference where the parent can see such a consequence might teach the child to exercise caution another time. Non-interference when he's about to fall off a three-storey building is counter-productive.You have to be cruel (let them make mistakes which "hurt" them) — Agree-to-Disagree