Journos serve up lightweight coverage of core tax issues
As more journalists treat reporting politics like picking winners at the races, it is hard to find serious analysis of policy options to improve living standards.
As more journalists treat reporting politics like picking winners at the races, it is hard to find serious analysis of policy options to improve living standards.
Too much media coverage is informed by the idea Israel is a colonial European power, even though more than half its Jews are descended from people who never left the Middle East.
Politicians should reflect on the importance of a free media. Steve Barrett’s journalism was never driven by political activism but by a search for truth.
Neither Antoinette Lattouf nor Nour Haydar have criticised Hamas’s October 7 massacre. Yet both are advocates for female victims of violence.
Blaming Jews for the Middle East’s problems lets the region’s governments off the hook for what they don’t do for their people and ignores violence committed by Muslims against Muslims.
The failure of some journalists to report what is really happening globally in fossil fuel consumption and renewable energy generation is a scandal.
Much TV and radio reporting here is informed by a clear view all Palestinians – but no Jews – are victims in the war in Gaza.
Social media has been corrupting journalism for more than a decade so it’s no surprise the Australian media is affected by it in reporting the war in Gaza.
Israeli Arab journalists grieve for Gaza but understand the need for military action over the October 7 massacre of civilian Jews.
No federal government has received more warnings from media and public policy experts about the inflationary dangers of its core policies and been so determined to ignore them.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/chris-mitchell/page/5