Activist media fails Economics 101
Few journalists have had the wit to point out people with large superannuation balances have probably paid a lot of tax during their lifetimes.
Few journalists have had the wit to point out people with large superannuation balances have probably paid a lot of tax during their lifetimes.
Our media needs to cover rural issues with vigour rather than just parrot Greens propaganda.
Few journalists have ever made the case but Labor’s real aim is shoring up the industry super funds run by its union mates.
Young journalists and rich Teals voters may be impressed that Albanese is walking in the Mardi Gras next Saturday. But the mortgage belt will care more about the cost of living.
It should not be beyond the national broadcaster to ask questions in the interests of ordinary Australians.
Motoring journos have been obsessed with EVs for a while but media spruikers seem to have missed the global implications.
The problems are not confined to the NT. They are happening all over Australia and have been for at least 30 years.
Most media outlets no longer care about truth. They want to fan the preferences of the audiences they already have. It has little to do with real journalism.
Depending on your news source, last week’s gas legislation by the Albanese government was either de facto nationalisation of the industry or perfectly reasonable politics.
Activist journalists and lawyers have been happy to trash Bruce Lehrmann’s right to the presumption of innocence.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/chris-mitchell/page/9