new york post

6 of the Biggest Media Meltdowns This Week

1. Hillary Clinton promotes dubious, culty media outlet Verrit, internet proceeds to destroy it.

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5 Shameful Right-Wing Moments This Week: Ted Cruz Celebrates Guns!

1. Ted Cruz has a banner week.

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Glenn Beck, National Review and NY Post Might be Forced to Pay Huge Defamation Damages in Court

Libel and slander cases are increasingly viewed as long-shot legal propositions that aren't worth the effort required to see the cases to completion only to suffer defeat. But three high-profile libel suits against media organizations are bucking that trend and making their way through the legal system. Two of them have already cleared steep judicial hurdles, opening the way for the discovery phase and possible jury trials. All involve well-know conservative media defendants: National Review, the New York Post and Glenn Beck's The Blaze.

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The Lies That Will Kill America

Here in Manhattan the other day, you couldn’t miss it — the big bold headline across the front page of the tabloid New York Post, screaming one of those sick, slick lies that are a trademark of Rupert Murdoch’s right-wing media empire. There was Uncle Sam, brandishing a revolver and wearing a burglar’s mask. “UNCLE SCAM,” the headline shouted. “US robs bank of $13 billion.”

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Why Wall Street & Co. Will Do Anything to Stop Eliot Spitzer from Championing the Public Interest

Before Eliot Spitzer’s infamous resignation as governor of New York in March 2008, he was one of our fiercest champions against Wall Street corruption, in a state that had some of the toughest legislation for controlling the banks. It may not be a coincidence that the revelation of his indiscretions with a high-priced call girl came less than a month after he published a bold editorial in the Washington Post titled “Predatory Lenders’ Partner in Crime: How the Bush Administration Stopped the States from Stepping in to Help Consumers.”  The editorial exposed the collusion between the Treasury, the Federal Reserve and Wall Street in deregulating the banks in the guise of regulating them, by taking regulatory power away from the states. It was an issue of the federal government versus the states, with the Feds representing the banks and the states representing consumers.

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Goldman Sachs Banker Screams Racial Slur, Gets Knocked Out Cold

Douglas Reddish, a 25-year-old black man, was attempting to enjoy a burrito with his girlfriend in Greenwich Village on Friday when his peaceful afternoon was disturbed.

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Tourists Encouraged to Gawk At, Mock Poor in Horrifying "GHETTO" Bus Tour in Bronx

A Bronx bus company is offering tours billed as a “a ride through a real New York City ‘GHETTO’,” the New York Post reports.

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Only the Koch Brothers Could Make Rupert Murdoch Look Like Journalism’s Savior

The following article first appeared in the Nation. For more great content, sign up for their newsletter here. 

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NY Post Publishes Front-Page Photo Falsely Linking High School Track Athlete to Boston Bombing

The New York Post published a front-page photo of a high school track athlete named Salah Barhoun, 17, sprayed with the headline “Bag Men,” linking two almost assuredly innocent people to the Boston marathon bombing. Seeing his face all over social media, Barhoun immediately went to the police.

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Watch: Fox News Interrogates Roommate of Saudi Non-Suspect

A Fox News producer tracked down and interrogated the roommate of the Saudi Arabian man who was questioned by authorities following the Boston Marathon bombing. The producers repeatedly asked the roommate, Mohammed Hassan Bada, whether he believed his friend was a terrorist.

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3 Ways Bill O'Reilly's Drug War Rhetoric Is All Wrong

In a recent post to his syndicatd column, conservative pundit Bill O’Reilly asks the U.S. to please stop sending the wrong message about drug use. O’Reilly reminisces about the days of Just Say No and then goes off on a rant about the failures of other countries to stop drug use. Talk about people in glass houses! For many American children, drug use actually starts long before that first sip of beer, and the rates of youth drug use in the U.S. surpass use in most other industrialized nations. Given that, one has to wonder if O’Reilly himself is on drugs.

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