NPT folded late last year due to lack of funding, and has been on hiatus ever since. It provided localized in-depth investigative work in the field of public, political and social issues around the Borderland area. In addition, like many of the other investigative websites previously mentioned, it frequently gave the user insight into various government and public source documents which were being referenced. Since then the website has been purchased by the El Paso Community Foundation, and has spent some time becoming a c non-profit.
With the Knight foundations help and community support, the EPCF plans to formally announce the return sometime around Sept. Both Crowder and Negron will be returning to report. The future for America is in jeopardy. In March of I cracked a code online that is written across thousands of websites. These websites are selling every money making opportunity you can think of, from mystery shopping, to paid surveys, to every aspect of affiliate marketing and affiliate marketing education.
By making fun of a group of scam artists, I discovered that this group is enormous, highly sophisticated, and positioned to make billions by destroying the US economy. They are Al-Qaeda. This organization, Al-Qaeda online, appears to have run the last presidential election on the most highly ranked site in Google search, Youtube. It sounds ridiculous, but these people have been putting this code together for decades.
That plan appears to be to overthrow the US government. I believe that the FBI had a similar theory about Obama, given his background with radicals such as Bill Ayers, and radical preachers.
It appears that a coup has taken place. It should be a core function of journalism. Nelson has a dramatic suggestion, based on research by her University of Maryland journalism school colleague, Susan D. Moeller, who in examined the spread of inaccurate reports about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Truth-telling and source maintenance, however, can sometimes be in conflict. When sources and reporters each have something the other wants, deals get struck that are favorable to both sides; for instance, a source gets anonymity, and the reporter gets the truth.
But these days, high-level sources are increasingly getting what they want from reporters and only giving them spin in return.
Hudson recalls that when he was a reporter at The Roanoke Va. Then he was able to piece the facts together. Now owned by McClatchy Newspapers, that bureau continues to break stories that run contrary to the official narratives. After reviewing classified intelligence reports, reporter Jonathan S. Landay recently called out the Obama administration for deceiving the public about the targets of its drone campaigns, many of whom did not present threats to the United States.
Massing urges reporters to spend less time quoting high-level sources talking about what the government should do and more time exploring the possible consequences, especially when military action is one of them. As American newsrooms shrink, the notoriously expensive field of long-form investigative journalism has taken a particular hit. The good news in investigative reporting is all the nonprofit news organizations trying to come to the rescue, including groups like ProPublica and the Center for Investigative Reporting , along with fellowship programs from groups like the Nation Institute and the Alicia Patterson Foundation.
Through news media, citizens can express themselves and advocate for their causes, whether they be political, religious or just personally meaningful to us; share our thoughts and ideas; petition the government; and plan assemblies. News media can be our own personal amplifier for sharing our unique perspectives, as well as a wider lens through which to view and engage with our communities.
Much in the way we use social media but more civil, in my opinion , news media offer a forum, for the people who matter most — the members of our own community. But beyond offering a means for citizens to exercise their First Amendment freedoms, news media also help protect those rights: through their role as government watchdogs.
Journalists work to keep the legislative process transparent and hold government officials accountable. Perhaps because of our prominent mention in the Constitution, news media are uniquely committed to their pursuit of the truth. But news publishers are finding themselves currently without a way to recoup their investment in quality news, which puts the future of journalism in jeopardy.
The tech platforms currently do not pay for their use of news content, making it increasingly difficult for publishers to reinvest in journalism. The Alliance has called for news publishers to be granted an antitrust safe harbor to be able to come together to negotiate for better business terms with the platforms. This is the best solution to correcting the imbalance in the digital ecosystem and ensuring a sustainable future for digital news.
News media have made our democracy stronger, our citizenry more informed and engaged, and our Constitutional rights secure and strong. As we mark National Newspaper Week, we ask that anyone who relies on news for their information — whether in print or online — to ask Congress to support the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act.
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