Journal Chacham's Journal: Opinion: News is opinion with a few extra facts. 14
Is there even such thing as news anymore? What is the difference between news and opinion? Which gets more fanfare?
The difference between news and opinion is: opinion is theory with some facts; news is facts with some opinion. Sound good? Well, it isn't. While opinion can ignore other facts, news cannot. Unfortunately, it does. And that makes news nothing more than an opinion piece with a few facts added for good measure.
Just read news about bombings in Israel. The first noticeable thing is the term "Israeli warplanes". It's mentioned three times in the story: in the title, the second word of the story, and later on. Why it calls jets "Israeli warplanes" is simply opinion. It's an opinion to intentionally give bad connotations. They should reports facts, and leave out the opinion. There is also mention of how many women and children Israel killed indirectly (Twenty-five people were wounded, including three women and five children.), but no mention of how many women and children the Arabs killed *intentionally* (Dozens of bystanders were maimed and wounded.). They also failed to mention that candies were distributed by Arabs after the bombings. Something that would have been reported if the Israelis were accused of it.
I wish some news source would just report the facts. Have everybody's full quotes, have exact numbers. If broken down, break it down for everyone. And have links to the history as reported by facts.
Then, if someone wants to opine, they could, and reference the facts. The Associated Press would be really nice for that, because then other news providers could offer their own opinions based on facts. Instead, it's either the AP's opinion, or opinions based on their opinions.
Anyway, i happened to see it there. I am certain that no stories about anything are fully factual. So, i take news as opinion. And once i do that, i might as well read opinions that coincide with mine. There's no point in being objective, there simply aren't facts that everyone will agree to.
Perhaps that's why opinion pieces come with such fanfare. Although non-factual, they (usually) do not hide their agenda, and as such, are the most factual things out there.
"Objectivity" (Score:2)
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
Yep; the BBC seem particularly bad at this. Funded by a c. $4bn/yr tax on TV ownership in the UK, and completely unaccountable to anyone except the government (and that only to a very limited extent), they seem to believe this makes them completely impartial - rather than completely unaccountable a
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
When lives are in danger, yes. When not, the US gives relatively light sentences. Which is why the Jonathon Pollard [jonathanpollard.org] case is so out of hand. Check out the Comparative Sentences [jonathanpollard.org] sections.
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
The first name to spring to mind for me was "Rosenberg", given the subject matter. In the Pollard case, I'm not convinced a life sentence was inappropriate - many of their "Comparative Sentences" entries aren't very comparative. (The sole "Great Britain" entry had nothing to do with the UK, for example: he leaked some milit
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
As for the rest, it's subjective, so i'll just accewpt that you don't agree. I disagree with you, but i doubt talking about it will matter.
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
I'd argue the Israeli guy who leaked Israeli nuclear secrets to the press did something similar; apart from anything else, when the information was published globally, only a very dim enemy could have missed it! Presumably the Israeli government felt the same way, from his current location (prison)...
As for the rest, it's subjective, so i'll just accewpt that you don't agree. I disagree with you, but i doubt
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
First of all, allies are based on agreements, not actions. Unless those actions go opposite either country.
Anyway, Israel does quite a bit. First there is the business aspect. There are many US companies in Israel. For example, the Intel fabrication plant that made the Pentium. There are agreements that remove tariffs and the like. Then there's Israel agreeing to the US vote in the General Ass
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
Hardly a good ally in the way that the UK and Autralia are, but at least it provides useful support (basing rights). It also manages to avoid embarassing the US in the way Israel does multiple times a year, and has strong trade links (without demanding massive bribes in exchange).
There are many US companies in Israel. For example, the Intel fabrication plant that made the Pentium.
Ditto the PRC...
There are agreements that remove tarif
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2, Interesting)
Actually, it embarrasses the US quite a bit. You just don't hear about it too often. You only hear about it with Israel because Reuters and CNN have a blatantly anti-Israel bias and will report anything to embarrass her, and the AP isn't to helpful either. Do you have any idea how many children were kidnapped by a Saudi Arabian parent, and Saudi Arabia basically laughs at the US when asked to return them?
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
Oh, Saudi's a l
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:2)
Noone said it did. That was talking about allies. Aid is giving for completely different reasons.
indeed, given the balance of trade between the US and Israel (massively skewed in Israel's favor), Israel would be by far the bigger loser if that trade were threatened.
Probably, because she is so small. The US is able to diversify, so the few companies that would be hit hard by a non-agreement (intel, some pharmoseudicals (deal with Teva), and other indus
Re:"Objectivity" (Score:1)
good point (Score:1)
the problem is that news agencies exist to make money. people (by this i mean the population at large) don't listen to facts. they listen to what other people think about the facts. interpretation of facts is what makes them important, but it also takes effort that most people don't want to put into it. so they listen to news full of opinions. so news agencies create more of what sells their product.
The Problem (Score:2, Insightful)