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Monday, February 09, 2009

NEWSWEEK OUTS ITSELF AS SOCIALIST RAG

Newsweek Magazine has confirmed what many of us have been saying for years (and harshly condemned for doing so, I might add) that the publication is nothing more than a Socialist rag.

According to NewsBusters the magazine blasts Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck for warning the public about Barack Obama's Socialist agenda and celebrates the notion that America 'is a socialist country like France.'

Here is an excerpt:

Newsweek's Jon Meacham and Evan Thomas are tired of all this talk of socialism. We need to stop talking about yesterday's news, they say, and embrace the great new fact that America is already a socialist country. They chortle that America is just like France. Meacham and Thomas chide Sean Hannity for using socialism as a dirty word because it "seems strangely beside the point." The pair is enthusiastic about our new American socialist society!

We are a European country and we like it, claim the Newsweek duo. Unfortunately, they seem to misunderstand so very much about what they speak.

The rest of the story can be found at the link provided above.

At least we now know what the mainstream media actually thinks about Obama and the plan to turn America into a Socialist nation. Half of the battle is knowing how the enemy thinks, and when they admit it up front, we can then stop the debate about whether or not the news media is actively pursuing a political agenda and move on to actually fighting them.

And believe me, the fight has just begun...

3 comments:

idahobob said...

Socialism, Fascism, Communism.......

Same ol' s**t, different cover.

Read Naomi Wolf. Watch the UTube videos.

Bob
III

John Higgins said...

It's frightening that they're so open about it, but it's never been a secret. We've been a socialist country since the founding. To paraphrase Bob LaFavre, "As long as you have a public sector, to that extent you have socialism."

Welshman said...

Mmmm, not exactly. The definition of Socialism is that the government controls the means of production. As long as the public sector doesn't do that, it's not socialism.