Canadian_watcher wrote:I don't know if the AP would count as one of the corporate news publications such as the kind that might be employed to reinforce the public narrative.
The AP is more of a primary resource as opposed to almost every single 'news' outlet currently in operation in the US, which I agree are already in place to divide the public - half the truth comes out of the 'left media' and the other half comes out of the 'right media' and they laugh because the US population will NOT look at both sides - ever - and therefore they'll never see that the whole truth is right before them.
However, I digress.
The importance of NOT spying on journalists and their sources (wow, can anyone older than 20 even believe this has to be explained?) is laid out pretty well in the three articles I posted after 82's post.
I understand the importance of journalistic freedom. What I am reacting to is the fact that most journalists make a mockery of this freedom by toeing the line. For example I have followed 9/11 news for years. Pretty much every journalist that gets access to government officials never uses that access to get answers. A specific example is the HBO documentary Manhunt which details the CIA effort against al Qaeda from the 90's to Abbottabad. Director Greg Barker and all the media outlets that wrote about the documentary and interviewed CIA agents involved all followed the same narrative. CIA agents did their job. They were unfairly blamed by politicians. Torture was awful but saved lives and probably helped find Bin Laden. Terrorism is still a major threat and thus we should all be grateful the CIA is still dedicated to protecting the Homeland.