

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/202 ... dit-eng30s
Yet another instance of an outmoded pot calling kettles antique.
Murdoch's WSJ is one of the world's great papers, and I read it nearly every day. Their conservative editorial stance doesn't bother me a bit. I grew up reading my conservative hometown daily paper.
Reading most of the WSJ editorials makes me think of MAD Magazine, frankly, although they sometimes score some points. I'm happy to read their reporting, though, which can be quite original with great depth.jserraglio wrote: ↑Wed May 25, 2022 9:25 amMurdoch's WSJ is one of the world's great papers, and I read it nearly every day. Their conservative editorial stance doesn't bother me a bit. I grew up reading my conservative hometown daily paper.
The WSJ editorials are often unbecoming of the rest of the paper.Sort of like passing gas in church.I suspect Murdoch tinkers little if at all with WSJ so as not to kill a golden goose he knows is in a different class from the rest of his media and family.
Like my paper, The Age, it WAS one of the great papers. Perhaps it remains so; the Age does not. In the '80s The Age regularly featured in lists ofthe world's top 10 with the NYT, WSJ, WP, Times of London, Frankfurt's paper etc. The WSJ has a great tradition, and perhaps in general it tries to live up to it. I have no objection to conservative papers, I think they are an essential part of balanced coverage, obviously.jserraglio wrote: ↑Wed May 25, 2022 9:25 amMurdoch's WSJ is one of the world's great papers, and I read it nearly every day. Their conservative editorial stance doesn't bother me a bit. I grew up reading my conservative hometown daily paper.
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