MSM National Public Radio is the left-wing propaganda factory you always thought it was.

RB Martin

Veteran Member

All (and Only) Left-Wing Things Considered at NPR, 25-Year Veteran Reveals​


National Public Radio is the left-wing propaganda factory you always thought it was.

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That reality was exposed in an enlightening piece published by The Free Press on Tuesday. It was written by Uri Berliner, who has worked for NPR for 25 years.

What he described is a publicly funded news network that went from having a liberal bias to one that would make Pravda seem like it was evenhanded. NPR now plays the same tired notes again and again for an extremely narrow audience with little inclination to inject even a drop of ideological balance.

National Public Radio is not national, nor does it serve the public. It’s a pipe organ of left-wing views soaking up federal money serving the interests of one political party—Democrats, of course.


Berliner—who wrote that he’s the “stereotype of the NPR listener: an EV-driving, Wordle-playing, tote bag-carrying coastal elite”—laid out what it’s now like on the inside at NPR.

He explained how the network eagerly peddled stories dear to Democratic Party leaders, like the Russia collusion hoax about former President Donald Trump that simply disappeared from its coverage when the story collapsed.

Berliner highlighted how the network is obsessed with identity issues, often to the exclusion of anything else.

“Race and identity became paramount in nearly every aspect of the workplace,” Berliner wrote. “Journalists were required to ask everyone we interviewed their race, gender, and ethnicity (among other questions), and had to enter it in a centralized tracking system.”

Berliner wrote that employees were given “unconscious-bias training sessions” and that a growing DEI staff hectors other employees to “start talking about race.” He noted that NPR now has a “burgeoning number of employee resource (or affinity) groups based on identity.”

Berliner listed some of these affinity groups and programs, including the “MGIPOC (Marginalized Genders and Intersex People of Color mentorship program),” the “Women, Gender-Expansive, and Transgender People in Technology Throughout Public Media,” and many others, in some cases equally absurdly niche identity groups.

These identity blocs, Berliner explained, are a priority for NPR’s union, which ensures that “advocacy groups are given a seat at the table in determining the terms and vocabulary of our news coverage.”

The result is a constant stream of predictably ludicrous and virtually identical programming.

“There’s an unspoken consensus about the stories we should pursue and how they should be framed,” Berliner wrote. “It’s frictionless—one story after another about instances of supposed racism, transphobia, signs of the climate apocalypse, Israel doing something bad, and the dire threat of Republican policies. It’s almost like an assembly line.”

Berliner said he did a little digging into the party affiliation of the people who run NPR and found that the outlet had “87 registered Democrats working in editorial positions and zero Republicans. None.”

When Berliner brought this information to an all-staff meeting, he wasn’t met with hostility, but “indifference,” he wrote. Nobody seemed to find this fact unusual or a problem.



Since 2011, NPR’s mostly left-leaning audience—which then still included a fair number of conservatives and moderates—is now almost entirely left-wing. He said that the network’s programming has veered further and further left, alienating nearly all but the most ideologically committed.

“That wouldn’t be a problem for an openly polemical news outlet serving a niche audience,” Berliner wrote. “But for NPR, which purports to ‘consider all things,’ it’s devastating both for its journalism and its business model.”

I agree with Berliner that there was a time when NPR at least tried to be more balanced and had programming that wasn’t either Democratic Party talking points or laughable race and gender nonsense. But shows like “Car Talk” are a thing of the past.

NPR these days, as Berliner outlined, peddles little more than regime propaganda mixed with an overwhelming cocktail of narcissistic LGBTQ propaganda and racial identitarianism. The programming is now entirely coded for a small subset of upper-middle-class left-wingers who almost certainly (and disproportionally) have those “In this house, we believe …” lawn signs in their yard.

It’s a parody, inside and out.

Of course, NPR’s direction was entirely predictable given the trends of recent years.

It’s gone down the same path as the vast majority of government agencies, nongovernmental organizations, and corporations. Any institution connected to America’s informally established secular church of higher education—especially when it gets government money—becomes almost entirely woke-ified.

What the Left stands for these days is cultural revolution, shaming America for its racial sins, liberating bathrooms from the gender binary, and obsessing over every new and novel marginalized group on the ever-expanding web of intersectionality. So that’s exactly the nonstop drumbeat listeners get from NPR.

For a network called “National Public Radio,” NPR certainly doesn’t seem to be serving the nation or providing a general service to the public. If it were an entirely private network like the equally left-wing MSNBC, that wouldn’t be a problem. The issue is that federal dollars continue to flow to NPR despite it being completely one-sided.

And that’s where I disagree with Berliner. He wrote that “defunding isn’t the answer,” and suggested that “there’s still a need for a public institution where stories are told and viewpoints exchanged in good faith.”

Waiting for institutions like NPR to reform themselves from within is a fool’s errand. Unless they have direct and continuous financial and political pressure, they will keep on doing what they’ve been programmed to do; namely, promote and further their ideological agenda.

The moment to defund NPR is past due.
 

Wyominglarry

Veteran Member
NPR is known to me as either Palistinians Public Radio or Progressive Public Radio. Either way it is dead to me. I did enjoy it when I was in college listening to Bob Edwards and Susan Stamberg.
 

energy_wave

Has No Life - Lives on TB
All they talk about these days is woke BS and climate change, like climate causes forest fires and EV's are the way of the future and how we have no choice but to make the move. China did it so why can't we. That station is nothing like I remember even ten years ago. There was one interview a few months back where the main speaker started discussing Biden's dropping poll numbers and her mic went dead. The announcer comes on to say they are experiencing technical difficulty and immediately cut to a Biden rally and change the subject. Complete gas lighting these days.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
I'm glad I stepped on Owner's "NPR Radio." He used to enjoy "Click & Clack" and even the concert portion on Saturday night that I took pleasure in.

But hooey - what it became.

For me at the start, it was "filler" - with an occasional interest in "POV" or more likely outright dismissal by both Owner and I.

I won't say NPR was ever "balanced" in their outlook/reporting. But it started out as "listen-able" - and became less and less so as the years (and kilowatts) passed.

I finally had had ENOUGH. He was disappointed when it came off the shelf and I just happened to "back" over it.

He never replaced it - except with the battery radio which he carries with him to wherever he is working.

But - (heh-heh) I have the laptop...

Dobbin
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
I found it similar to late night talk shows. Their humor wasn't close to funny. They'd have these professional voices making really bad jokes, and then turn on the laugh machine....the joke is and alway's has been, on them.
 

undead

Veteran Member
NPR is a symptom of the problem. Leftists have gravitated to the fields where they could gain control over people's personal lives... teaching, journalism, politics

It's almost a complete takeover now.
 

sy32478

Veteran Member
Truly awful content seasoned with the most obvious propaganda.

PJW's take on the late night vomit on TV - Supercringe RT ~ 8:50
 

Tex88

Veteran Member
I improved Miss Frizzle:

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mechanic 217

I was told there would be cookies!
I listen sometimes, like to hear what the enemy is doing, but will not ever donate 1 cent to any of them.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB

NPR whistleblower Uri Berliner resigns: ‘I cannot work in a newsroom where I am disparaged’​



Longtime NPR editor Uri Berliner, who was suspended after blowing the whistle on liberal bias at the organization, announced Wednesday he has resigned.

"I am resigning from NPR, a great American institution where I have worked for 25 years. I don’t support calls to defund NPR. I respect the integrity of my colleagues and wish for NPR to thrive and do important journalism. But I cannot work in a newsroom where I am disparaged by a new CEO whose divisive views confirm the very problems at NPR I cited in my Free Press essay," Berliner wrote in a statement published on X.
Berliner was referring to Katherine Maher, who took over last month as President and CEO and has gone viral for past social media posts showing far-left personal views.


Berliner penned a piece in the Free Press that criticized NPR’s coverage of Russiagate, the COVID lab leak theory, Hunter Biden’s scandalous laptop, embrace of the theory of systemic racism and accused the organization of downplaying antisemitism following Oct. 7.

Berliner also wrote that registration records in 2021 showed an astonishing disparity between Democrats and Republicans in the NPR newsroom in Washington, D.C., and that staffers were out to hurt the presidency of Donald Trump. Berliner, who said he voted against Trump twice, even said "one of NPR’s best and most fair-minded journalists" said it was good to not cover the Hunter Biden laptop story because it could benefit Trump in 2020.
His piece angered colleagues, with some telling in-house media reporter David Folkenflik they didn’t want to work with him any longer. Berliner was suspended for five days without pay and NPR told him it was a "final warning" and he would be shown the door if he violated NPR's policy about working with outside news organizations going forward. Instead, he walked away on his own terms.

Many other NPR figures, including "Morning Edition" host Steve Inskeep, publicly rebuked Berliner's conclusions.
Berliner’s work has received a Peabody Award, a Loeb Award, Edward R. Murrow Award, and a Society of Professional Journalists New America Award, according to NPR’s website.
Reached for comment on Berliner's resignation, a spokesperson said, "NPR does not comment on individual personnel matters."

An NPR spokesperson last week directed Fox News Digital to a memo to staff by editor-in-chief Edith Chapin, where she said she and her team "strongly disagree" with the veteran editor’s assessment of the quality of NPR's journalism and integrity.

"We’re proud to stand behind the exceptional work that our desks and shows do to cover a wide range of challenging stories. We believe that inclusion — among our staff, with our sourcing, and in our overall coverage — is critical to telling the nuanced stories of this country and our world," she wrote as part of a lengthy memo.

Katherine Mahers post on social media about looting


NPR CEO and President Katherine Mahers old tweets about looting, her support for Hillary Clinton and Biden-Harris have resurfaced after she addressed Uri Berliner's concerns about NPR in a letter to staff. ( (Photo by Rita Franca/NurPhoto via Getty Images), Screenshot/X/KatherineMaher)

NPR has also stood by Maher, who showed support for Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden's presidential runs while regularly sharing far-left talking points and criticizing Donald Trump on social media before landing the NPR top job.
"This is a bad faith attack that follows an established playbook, as online actors with explicit agendas work to discredit independent news organizations," an NPR spokesperson told Fox News Digital of the newly surfaced posts.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Elon Musk Blasts New NPR CEO for Her Hatred the US Constitution - After New Video Emerges of Her Trashing Free Speech Rights for Americans

NPR CEO Katherine Maher bashing Free Speech rights.
Elon Musk on Tuesday blasted radical NPR CEO Katherine Maher after video emerged of Maher trashing the First Amendment of the US Constitution.

After having secured 99% of the US legacy media, Democrats in America today are outraged that their lies and half-truths are challenged by the American public and independent voices. Today’s Democrat believes they should be the arbiters of truth despite their insane ideas and completely fraudulent statements on news and current issues.

Katherine Maher is no different.

Maher described her disgust for the First Amendment to the Atlantic Council in a recent interview.

Katherine Maher: “The “the number one challenge” here that we see is, of course, the First Amendment in the United States which is a fairly robust protection of rights and a protection of rights for platforms that I actually think is very important that platforms have those rights to actually regulate what content they want on their sites. But it also means that it’s a little bit tricky to really address some of the real challenges of where does that information come from and some of the influence peddlers who have made a real market economy around it.

The video was posted by journalist Chris Rufo.

This follows reports of her other nasty statements about President Trump and crazy defense of violent protests.

The woman is a nut.
 
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