The NYT praised Valerie Solanas, labeling her manifesto a "must read".
Bezos' WaPo printed an opinion article titled "why can't we hate men".
CNN claimed "patriarchy kills people" in an article a few years ago after a rise in shootings.
State-funded NPR gave glowing praise to a book where all men are killed by a disease, calling it a "critique of patriarchy".
The state-funded BBC stood up for a female murderer, then tore apart a man appealing the same logic of being pushed to kill by his partner's abuse.
The Guardian is a feminist Der Sturmer knockoff, I don't even need to provide examples, because everyone knows.
I could keep going, but I don't know enough languages to call out all their propaganda worldwide. I'm sure the likes of La Repubblica in Italy, Marca in Spain, Bild in Germany and even the much talked about Charlie Hebdo in France would have the same.
It absolutely is the prevailing opinion of those who work in "journalism".
It's probably not common in terms of absolute number of people, but in today's culture (thanks social media) the influencers with those crazy opinions are the most influential. They push the Overton window even if people aren't explicitly agreeing with those ideas. There's implicit agreement where push-back doesn't exist.
But I don't think it's nearly the most important issue of our time.
The NYT praised Valerie Solanas, labeling her manifesto a "must read".
Bezos' WaPo printed an opinion article titled "why can't we hate men".
CNN claimed "patriarchy kills people" in an article a few years ago after a rise in shootings.
State-funded NPR gave glowing praise to a book where all men are killed by a disease, calling it a "critique of patriarchy".
The state-funded BBC stood up for a female murderer, then tore apart a man appealing the same logic of being pushed to kill by his partner's abuse.
The Guardian is a feminist Der Sturmer knockoff, I don't even need to provide examples, because everyone knows.
I could keep going, but I don't know enough languages to call out all their propaganda worldwide. I'm sure the likes of La Repubblica in Italy, Marca in Spain, Bild in Germany and even the much talked about Charlie Hebdo in France would have the same.
It absolutely is the prevailing opinion of those who work in "journalism".
It's probably not common in terms of absolute number of people, but in today's culture (thanks social media) the influencers with those crazy opinions are the most influential. They push the Overton window even if people aren't explicitly agreeing with those ideas. There's implicit agreement where push-back doesn't exist.
But I don't think it's nearly the most important issue of our time.