Tuesdayâs PBS NewsHour actually brought on a critic of the pro-Hamas protesters currently infesting college campus quads across the country, which so far have gotten a nearly free ride fromâŠ
The âPolitics Mondayâ edition of PBS NewsHour, as hosted by substitute anchor William Brangham, was spicier than usual. Brangham found âcontroversyâ on Trumpâs side (no surprise there) butâŠ
The PBS NewsHour was back to its old rhetorical tricks this week on the LGBTQ front. Lately the outlet has been reacting with pro-transgender alarm when yet another state restricts transgenderâŠ
Stuart Stevens is senior adviser of the Lincoln Project, a âRepublicanâ outfit whose pathetic stunts and scandals have discredited it everywhere but in the mainstream media, where it remains aâŠ
On Mondayâs Amanpour & Co., which runs on PBS and CNN International, host Christiane Amanpour took the side of the pro-Hamas campus protesters who are spewing anti-Jewish rhetoric on ââŠ
Thursdayâs PBS NewsHour covered the hate virus spreading on progressive college campuses nationwide of agitators threatening Israel and Jewish students. Of course, thatâs not how PBS saw it,âŠ
Tuesdayâs edition of the PBS NewsHour took on the anti-Jewish, pro-Hamas protesters camped out at Columbia University, with some âprotestersâ spewing eliminationist rhetoric at Israel and tellingâŠ
Sundayâs edition of PBS News Weekend spent 13 minutes out of its allotted 25 taking the loose liberal attitudes toward homelessness (or âthe unhousedâ) against an upcoming Supreme Court case. PBSâŠ
The latest, foreign-policy facing episode of Washington Week with The Atlantic found the weekly journalistic roundtable quite comfortable with both American hard and soft power -- as long asâŠ
The latest, foreign-policy facing episode of Washington Week with The Atlantic found the weekly journalistic roundtable quite comfortable with both American hard and soft power -- as long asâŠ
The latest, foreign-policy facing episode of Washington Week with The Atlantic found the weekly journalistic roundtable quite comfortable with both American hard and soft power -- as long asâŠ