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should I tip or not?
getting you thinking is never bad. but getting you to think does not = legitimacy. the unabomber got me thinking too...
Glenn Beck may have seemed extreme BUT he was the only one who spoke the truth, told it like it is, had great guests on his show, which was contradictory to the left tendencies of CNN.
I'm glad Glenn is off CNN and look forward to his new show on Fox. You can still listen to Glenn's radio show, via his website.
You will see more and more cancellations like this one. If you don't project a left tendency, plan on losing your job because you're days are numbered. Say what you want about Fox News, but it's the only conservative show left on the air. Radio talk shows are the next targets of the left.
And I have to say, there's a reason why there's only one conservative network on the air, just as there's only one (clearly) liberal news network on the air (MSNBC): I think a lot of people, like me, just want factual news. I would argue that Fox is less conservative than it is partisan - look at the ridicule they heaped on Ron Paul, the most conservative politician out there (in my opinion).
I think CNN's closer to factual than most news networks - my biggest complaint with them is that they tend towards the Entertainment Weekly style of reporting... lots of "here's the latest on that kitten in the well" types of stories. I'm not a fan of talk radio, left or right, simply because it's an echo chamber. Same thing with political blogs - too few divergent opinions. I like to get news, not opinion.
I've read a lot of posts and op-eds summarizing major media summaries on the crisis, which is interesting enough if well written, but do you know if anyone has compiled or otherwise reported on those who foresaw and critiqued this stuff earlier on? Before the relatively recent WSJ op-eds started being published?
My only question about that is that given there's a bubble in some sort of area every decade or so, when will people wise up that if it looks like a bubble and smells like a bubble, it is a bubble? I thought the real estate bubble was a bubble (just because I'm always a cynic about the next great investment idea), but I had NO idea it would pop so badly. I thought it would adjust fairly quickly, like the dot-com bust.
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2007/03/...
It happened with the tech, housing, and energy run ups in about 10 years. For housing it was immigration. For energy, it was dwindling supplies and Chine/India. The internet was pure magic and thus required no additional explanation of why it was different. All three markets crashed and burned after being often touted as "This time it is different."