Partying with Cosby on BlogTalkRadio

Have you heard about Bill Cosby’s LISTENing parties? The New York Times just reviewed ...

Celebrating ‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’

In honor of the opening day of New Moon, the latest film in The Twilight Saga, we thought we ...

The Cheryl Behind the Cheryl

Known to many as the long-suffering (ex)wife of funnyman Larry David, the man behind Seinfeld, ...

 

Your show will start playing after this message

Profile

Halthouse1


Country: United States

Language: English

Follow on Twitter

Visit on Facebook


On Demand Episodes

Friends

  • Douglas V. Gibbs
  • PoliticalVindication
  • MikeBurkholder
  • Usapatriots-shout
  • Black Conservative
  • Evil Conservative
  • JohnCSweet

Halthouse1  

Commentary and analysis on the world at large, our politicians actions (and inactions), the trends within the financial markets, and how I see them affecting us all.

  • Archived Blog Post

    Date / Time:

    The G-20: Anarchists and Correspondents Speak Out

    From The Political and Finncial Markets Commentator at http://politicsandfinance.blogspot.com

    Watching The News: The Bias Is Sometimes To Much To Take

    Before getting to the G-20 itself, I have to say that the coverage from some "news" outlets is unbelievable in it's biased love affair with President Obama. I know that this comes as no great surprise, but sometimes it gets to the point where it has to be brought up.

    John Harwood is the Chief Washington Correspondent of CNBC and a political writer for the New York Times. I watch him report on CNBC, only because I watch the ticker on the bottom. As a correspondent, it is his job to report the news, not to invoke his opinion of the news.

    That is not the case and at times it is to much to bear. The commentary Wednesday was that the throngs of protesters in downtown London stood in stark contrast to the throngs outside of Buckingham Palace expressing their adulation for President Obama, ostensibly proving the strength of his popularity not only in the United States, but in England and the rest of Europe as well.

    If that is the case John Harwood, then the protesters and anarchists must be an indicator of popular U.K. and European thought as well. More likely, these are both relatively small groups of people drawn by a specific occasion. Each could be in the majority of English thought or minority, but it is not John Harwoods place to make that determination. I would also assume that not every person outside of the Palace was pro-Obama or pro-United States, but in this case of consistent partisanship, that possibility was not mentioned.

    Anarchists and Financial Fools Day 

    In a world that is feeling the pain and frustration of the financial crisis, the protests that went on Wednesday in London by anarchists and other groups was for the most part non-violent, although uniform in the condemnation of the capitalist way of doing business.

    The first thing that I was struck by is that as non-participants in capitalism, the protesters have more than enough time to travel to these summits and demonstrate. The second thing that I was struck by was that it seemed as if there were some non-anarchist types interviewed who also seemed to question whether an alternative system might be better.

    The problem as I see it is the potential for these types of protests and waves of dissatisfaction to slip from fringe groups to the regular folks who begin to understand the extreme depth and ramifications of the problem. These world leaders and rainmakers need to solve or stem the tide of the problem before the term social unrest spreads to groups that we would never have anticipated that it could spread to.

Comments

There are no comments at this time.

Everything Else

Listen

 

Participate

 

Services and Terms

 

Corporate

 

BlogTalkRadio

 

© 2009 BlogTalkRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.