Wall Street Journal
Can reading the newspaper made you smarter?
- Jennifer Doyle
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Wall Street Journal
Well, reading this one can. I love this paper. I'll get a new edition [my mom brings them home from work, she's in the financial business] and go directly to the Op/Ed page. I love the people they have writing. I believe that this paper has a lot less slant than other papers around here.
Here is a great link to the Op/Ed articles online: http://www.opinionjournal.com/
Here is a great link to the Op/Ed articles online: http://www.opinionjournal.com/
“God grant me the courage not to give up what I think is right even though I think it is hopeless.” Chester W. Nimitz
- shasta
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Wow, I've never met anyone else who enjoyed reading the Journal. The print version is the best reporting out there, it doesn't give you that liberal bent like the New York Times.
The one column online not to miss is Peggy Noonan.
Another great source for current events and analysis is The American Enterprise Magazine (www.taemag.com).
-king shasta
The one column online not to miss is Peggy Noonan.
Another great source for current events and analysis is The American Enterprise Magazine (www.taemag.com).
-king shasta
- Jennifer Doyle
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- The Top Crusader
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Actually, the WSJ tends to lean right... not that that's a bad thing, though.
*hugs the journal*
*hugs the journal*
- Jennifer Doyle
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Well, I disagree. I think that since all we know is the left bias, things in the middle seem slanted right by comparison.The Top Crusader wrote:Actually, the WSJ tends to lean right... not that that's a bad thing, though.
*hugs the journal*
“God grant me the courage not to give up what I think is right even though I think it is hopeless.” Chester W. Nimitz
- Thursday Next
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I think it all depends on how you're taught to write. I don't know how many universities that stress the importance of objectivity, but I know when I was in broadcast news class objectivity was stressed. If people write how they see it then the slant will come more into play because they are seeing it through their values, background, etc. However when you get both sides of the story it is easier to find the true story. However I did like what I read in the WSJ
- Clodius Albinus
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I find this interesting, and perhaps a case of projecting preconceived biases onto paper. The reporting of the Wall Street Journal is by no means right-leaning. Of course, ideally, all but the editorial pages of any newspaper would be as objective as possible, but this is simply not possible. Even the judgment of what to print is a value judgment, and those simply cannot be made in a vacuum. As newspapers go, the actual news content of the WSJ leans slightly further left than most. Al Hunt had a lot to do with the day-to-day operations over the years, and many studies have indicated that the Journal has been, for the most part, slightly to the left of other major papers, including WaPo and NYT, in its news coverage.
Still, it is most certainly thorough and features high quality reporting. I don't read the Journal's news coverage much, as it is not available for free online, and while I can pull articles from the paper via services available on my college's network, it is generally not worth the hassle if one's purpose is to merely browse, not seek out a particular article. Nonetheless, despite my somewhat limited familiarity with it, I would probably rank it up there with The Washington Post as providing some of the best reporting in the country.
Where it is undeniably right-leaning is on its editorial page, under Robert Bartley and now Paul Gigot. I highly recommend opinionjournal.com as a source of some of the better opinion pieces around.
Still, it is most certainly thorough and features high quality reporting. I don't read the Journal's news coverage much, as it is not available for free online, and while I can pull articles from the paper via services available on my college's network, it is generally not worth the hassle if one's purpose is to merely browse, not seek out a particular article. Nonetheless, despite my somewhat limited familiarity with it, I would probably rank it up there with The Washington Post as providing some of the best reporting in the country.
Where it is undeniably right-leaning is on its editorial page, under Robert Bartley and now Paul Gigot. I highly recommend opinionjournal.com as a source of some of the better opinion pieces around.
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