Socialism is the gospel of envy.
The NY Times reported that a senior editor / reporter published a Substack essay (linked below) that was quite critical of NPR and its bias. He has since been suspended, nominally for publishing external work w/o getting permission.
I used to listen to NPR some, and no longer do. The NYT article says NPR is struggling, and many commenters on the NYT piece were liberal Dems who lamented the serious decline, and have either stopped listening or have cut back. So I am far from alone.
Here's the essay. You don't have to subscribe to read it. Themes are Trump, COVID and Fauci worship, identify politics, and others. Here's a lengthy excerpt about a particular topic, the drumbeat of Russian collusion with Trump that eventually disappeared.
Like many unfortunate things, the rise of advocacy took off with Donald Trump. As in many newsrooms, his election in 2016 was greeted at NPR with a mixture of disbelief, anger, and despair. (Just to note, I eagerly voted against Trump twice but felt we were obliged to cover him fairly.) But what began as tough, straightforward coverage of a belligerent, truth-impaired president veered toward efforts to damage or topple Trump’s presidency.
Persistent rumors that the Trump campaign colluded with Russia over the election became the catnip that drove reporting. At NPR, we hitched our wagon to Trump’s most visible antagonist, Representative Adam Schiff.
Schiff, who was the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, became NPR’s guiding hand, its ever-present muse. By my count, NPR hosts interviewed Schiff 25 times about Trump and Russia. During many of those conversations, Schiff alluded to purported evidence of collusion. The Schiff talking points became the drumbeat of NPR news reports.
But when the Mueller report found no credible evidence of collusion, NPR’s coverage was notably sparse. Russiagate quietly faded from our programming.
It is one thing to swing and miss on a major story. Unfortunately, it happens. You follow the wrong leads, you get misled by sources you trusted, you’re emotionally invested in a narrative, and bits of circumstantial evidence never add up. It’s bad to blow a big story.
What’s worse is to pretend it never happened, to move on with no mea culpas, no self-reflection. Especially when you expect high standards of transparency from public figures and institutions, but don’t practice those standards yourself. That’s what shatters trust and engenders cynicism about the media.
https://www.thefp.com/p/npr-editor-how-npr-lost-americas-trust
I can't argue with this:
On March 10, 2022, I wrote to a top news executive about the numerous times we described the controversial education bill in Florida as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill when it didn’t even use the word gay. I pushed to set the record straight, and wrote another time to ask why we keep using that word that many Hispanics hate—Latinx.
The welfare of humanity is always the alibi of tyrants.17