I remember a book that came out about 15 years ago by a alleged mossad agent The Israeli government initially said that he was not a mossad agent. But the Israeli government went to court to ban his book as a matter of national security. In my book they tipped their hand by this and to me this meant he really was a mossad agent. I do not know if they have still admitted to it, but there is now more evidence to show he did nail the nuclear physicist he claimed he did in the 80s. ( read his book(s) it is very good. off subject but very important, I wish our intelligence agents would, it shows the mossad had a relational database 20 years ago that would have nailed the terrorists of 9-11. Our government still does not have a functional relational database. they just scrapped one half a year ago that we paid about 150 million for and are starting over. Again this tool was disclosed in his book 15 years ago. )
mossad agent backgroundmossad agentin stingwanted by another governmentIn a different account with similar logic disclosing the identity of the background bias, a new study has been released by Media Matters debunking the liberal bias in the media.
Their study was on the Sunday political shows from Clintons second term till 2005 and listing the biases of the people on the political shows. They claim the majority are right biased. The corporate media is arguing that the study is inaccurate. If they were liberals why would they argue and make a ridiculous argument that McCain(who was on talk shows more than twice as much as any democrat) is some how a liberal by their interpretation of the studys prejudice.
My point or question is like the Israeli government denying publicly on one hand and going to court over national security on the other hand did the media tip their hand by arguing that they are not biased to the right.
Question for the debate: If they were liberals wouldn’t they leave it as it is because it backs up the liberals point of view.Fri, Feb 17, 2006 7:37pm EST
http://mediamatters.org/items/200602180001QUOTE
"Media Matters"; by Jamison Foser
Media Matters study finds Sunday show guest lists favor conservatives
This week, Media Matters released the results of an exhaustive study of the guests who have appeared on the three major Sunday morning political shows since 1997. The study, covering former President Clinton's second term, President Bush's first term, and 2005, shows classified nearly 7,000 guests by political party and ideology and found that Republicans and conservatives have far outnumbered Democrats and progressives on the Sunday shows.