Pittsburgh’s taxpayer-funded NPR affiliate, WESA 90.5, ties Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate Doug Mastriano to an antisemitic mass-murder. His crime? Purchasing advertising on the right-wing social media platform Gab.
By Albert Eisenberg
Gina Diorio: Headline hit jobs
Headlines too often tell readers what the mainstream press only wishes were the story.
By Gina Diorio
Wally Nunn: Mainstream media should keep facts and opinions separate
The Inquirer has no problem calling Trump a liar, but is silent about its own participation in the Russia conspiracy theory.
By Wally Nunn
Wally Nunn: Mainstream media only sugarcoats the lie
“The holier-than-thou hypocrisy of big media companies who lay claim to the truth, but publish only enough to sugarcoat the lie, is why the public no longer respects them.”
By Wally Nunn
David Black: Who paid for that political ad? Who knows.
The Supreme Court has ruled that it’s not constitutional for legislators to regulate outside political spending. Our answer is very simple: Let’s make it constitutional.
By David Black
David Lampo: Legacy media “fact-checkers” are all in on their own Jan. 6 narrative
Their own partisan agenda matters more than the facts.
By David Lampo
Wally Nunn: Broad + Liberty fills an important role
Groupthink in the legacy media leaves us all less informed.
By Wally Nunn
Christine Flowers: On the demise of a once-great newspaper
Begrudging open-mindedness has given way to stifling groupthink.
By Christine Flowers
Christine Flowers: Masking the truth about Justice Gorsuch
Even after a story on the behavior of Supreme Court Justice was debunked, the Inquirer went forward with a column — nicely written — but full of twisted logic and tired hobby horses.
By Christine Flowers
Jennifer Lindner: If our values are self-evident, why must we defend them?
The radical left is gaslighting the American people and upending everything we know to be true. It is time for conservatives to hold fast to our unalienable rights and continue to turn the tide.
By Jennifer Lindner
