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Media Bias In The Media

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Media bias cripples our ability to find information about politics. Prejudice among different news sources, such as The Hill, NY Times, and CNN makes it difficult to see beyond opinionated information and determine what’s really true. I personally find it exasperating to read about or watch the news and stay updated on current events, especially with controversial topics, with all the sifting between what’s real, and what happens to be false or skewed information due to beliefs held by the individuals in charge of covering these issues. From what I can tell by looking at the three former sources I’ve chosen, the use of word choice among certain topics and their way of labeling certain groups or individuals varies, even if they might be describing the same event or news story that’s going on at that time.

To start, the New York Times used an interesting choice of labeling Middle Eastern soldiers. “The United States military bombed Islamic State fighters in Somalia for the first time on Friday, a sign that the air campaign against the group was expanding after recent battlefield successes against the militants in Iraq and Syria.” The New York Times also used the phrase “the extremists in Iraq and Syria”. This came as a surprise to me, seeing as the other two sources referring to these “Islamic State fighters” as simply “Terrorists”. I assume the reasoning behind this is to avoid the use of derogatory terms and label the group more as radicals under terms of religion, rather

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