Why do you assume my criteria is that I disagree with the websites? I disagree with much of what's written in any news website I've ever read. I get the plurality of my news from cnn (although I consider NPR the best source), and about half a dozen times before I have emailed them to either tell them I strongly disagree with something, or that I'm very upset about the way they expressed something. And while I'm very proud of you for staying away from white supremicist websites for your news, somehow I feel that isn't a very powerful standard.
I googled the first sentence of the quote (when you first posted it I googled the entire quote, please see the end of this post to see why I didn't do so for this little experiment.) Let's take the first few websites one by one. I'll state the main reasons I consider them uncredible websites, none of which is because I disagree with them btw.
American Thinker
- The extremely gaudy and amaturish ads flashing blinding me from the right and bottom of the screen.
- From wikipedia, "The articles published are often mentioned on The Rush Limbaugh Show".
The Patriot Files
- I really don't have much opinion about the website. The quote shows up as part of a forum member's signature. He goes by the handle "Obama bin Lyin'". Quite tasteful.
I'm blocked from the next two websites at work. (If they knew what was good for them they would block me from this website!)
Free Republic
- It's quoted off the American Thinker website, so not much more need be said. However, wikipedia again proved enlightening.
Quote
Influencing online polls
Media web sites, including newspapers, television networks, and America Online, run occasional "polls" that do not use the sampling methods of formal opinion polls, but instead invite all Internet users to respond. Some Free Republic forum messages, usually captioned "Freep this poll!", urge Free Republic members to vote en masse in these polls. Members are also urged to "'Freep' C-Span's 'Washington Journal' with telephone calls pointing out media bias." The concept, and even the term "freeping", has gained wide usage among political websites, both left and right.,
"Whenever a poll is posted on Free Republic.com, everybody goes and votes the right way, and there's nothing wrong with that," says Marinelle Thompson, Freeper and founder of gun rights group Second Amendment Sisters. "We just do it for a laugh. It doesn't really mean anything." The polls can also be manipulated, said Vlae Kershner, SF Gate News Director (and poll writer): "People are finding a way of getting around our system that only allows one vote, and they're voting hundreds of times. It's not thousands of people voting one way; it's one or two people voting hundreds of times."
Occasionally, if the current results of an online poll are unfavorable to them, Freepers will "reverse freep" it, voting against their own views to pad the opposing vote to the point where it loses credibility.
Good practice for the real elections perhaps?
Sean Hannity discussion forums
- Um, need I even say anything?
Btw, speaking of not credible;
luke warm, on Mar 6 2009, 06:57 PM, said:
how do you know from which site i copied/pasted the quote? it appears on thousands of sites...
Um, allow me to correct you. If you google the entire quote you get 6 hits. Two of which are Youtube.
That's not thousands of sites. That's 5. And this, um, error, was perpetrated by the same person whose claim to accusations of bias is to say we are all biased...
Btw, if you want to criticize me because I don't know your source then knock yourself out. I would be happy to give a "fair" and much more specific criticism if you admit your source.
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.