No, I can’t get by the paywall, which is always the case with the Times, and the only reason I never read it. Doesn’t stop me reading articles from the Telegraph or The Spectator occasionally. The latter, once considered he in house Tory weekly, has been distancing itself from this shower for some time.
If you are trying to convince me that either The Times is impartial, or that, individual journalists notwithstanding, the right wing bias of most print media in this country isn’t a huge problem, you have work to do.
The rise of the far right in continental Europe may or may not have something to do with the failings of the left; I don’t know. But in this country, Brexit, the subsequent rise of the grifter Farage, the rise and fall of the narcissist Johnson and the lunatic Truss, can all be partially attributed to the press. The media helped create the monster, and can’t seem stop feeding it. You can include the broadcast media in that too; how many times has Farage been on question time?
I'm not trying to convince you of anything. I'm merely saying that people would actually do well to read things written by good journalists, rather than pumping out soundbites and tropes like "mainstream media" or "liberal globalist etc etc" without having actually read any of the things. It's a very new-way thing to do, and it's fantastically Trumpian - saying something that sounds catchy, without having actually looked at whether it has any basis in reality.
That being said, I don't really think the press is particularly right-wing (there are right leaning outlets like the Telegraph and Spectator, just as there are left leaning outlets like The Guardian and The Mirror - all of which can be compelling as well as a bit silly on occasion). The Times is somewhere in the middle, perhaps with a slight bias to the right, but I always find its commentators (even when I disagree) make well thought out and reasoned points. Hence why it's my paper of choice. I'm not sure I'd give too much weight to the issues you raise being attributable to the press (though fair enough you're only saying 'partially'. I think more blame sits with social media).
In terms of QT - yes, Farage has been on far too many times for someone with his history of political failure, but the BBC need eyes on the programme to justify it, and he's a "populist". People watch when he's on. So much of the press now is constrained by a fight for survival, so they often will have to take that route, sadly. And I'm not sure you could seriously accuse the BBC of a right wing bias?
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