Truly Right View
  • Politics
    • All
    • Political Campaigning
    • Trump 2024

    Our American Pope – The American Conservative

    States support parents in legal case over school’s secret gender transition of child

    States support parents in legal case over school’s secret gender transition of child

    NJ Dem Deletes History of Love for the Left: Fox News Politics Newsletter for May 9, 2025

    NJ Dem Deletes History of Love for the Left: Fox News Politics Newsletter for May 9, 2025

    Trump supporter stands up to Letitia James, asks: ‘Will you apologize?’

    Trump supporter stands up to Letitia James, asks: ‘Will you apologize?’

    Pope Leo XIV is a Cubs fan, a Catholic priest in Chicago says

    Pope Leo XIV is a Cubs fan, a Catholic priest in Chicago says

    Boise, Salt Lake City adopt the pride flag as official symbols

    Boise, Salt Lake City adopt the pride flag as official symbols

    Politics

    By Any Name, A Day For Remembering—and Building  

    Taxpayers in New York could be on the hook for Letitia James’ legal bills

    Taxpayers in New York could be on the hook for Letitia James’ legal bills

    Politics

    Is ‘Woke Right’ a Useful Term?

    Catholic Church to excommunicate priests for following WA law requiring child abuse confessions to be reported

    Catholic Church to excommunicate priests for following WA law requiring child abuse confessions to be reported

    Trending Tags

    • MAGA 2024
    • Donald Trump 2024
    • Trump Campaign
    • Trump 2024
    • US Elections
    • US Politics
    • Political Agenda
    • Political Corruption
    • Political Prisoners
    • Political Party
    • Biden 2024
    • Biden Voter Fraud
    • Biden Energy Policy
    • Biden Family Business Dealings
    • Trump 2024
    • US Elections
  • Real News
    Politics

    Transgender Suspect Arrested in Stabbing Death

    Politics

    Canada’s Trudeau Facing Liberal Revolt

    The Real Reason They Hate President Donald Trump

    The Real Reason They Hate President Donald Trump

    MAGA 2024 Or Bust

    MAGA 2024 Or Bust

    Trending Tags

    • Vaccines
    • Vaccine Side Effects
    • Censorship
    • Election Fraud
    • Election Integrity
    • 2024 US Election
    • Deep State
    • About Truly Right View
    • Truth Exposed
    • Vaccine Issues
    • Censorship
    • Election Fraud
    • US Deep State Coup
    • US Health Services
    • Climate Hoax
    • 2000 Mules Video
  • Trusted News
    • All
    • Blaze Media
    • Epoch Times
    • One American News
    • Tucker Carlson Truths
    Trump Campaign Alleged Email Hack Tied to Growing Global Conflict

    Trump Campaign Alleged Email Hack Tied to Growing Global Conflict

    CCP Plans to ‘Activate Agents’ to Export Persecution Onto US Soil

    CCP Plans to ‘Activate Agents’ to Export Persecution Onto US Soil

    How the CCP’s Overseas Spy Operations Work

    How the CCP’s Overseas Spy Operations Work

    CCP Instigating Regime Overthrow in Bangladesh?

    CCP Instigating Regime Overthrow in Bangladesh?

    Global Stock Market Meltdown a Signal of More to Come?

    Global Stock Market Meltdown a Signal of More to Come?

    Is the US Military Actually Unable to Defeat China?

    Is the US Military Actually Unable to Defeat China?

    New Tariffs on China Incoming; Plot Thickens on Temu

    New Tariffs on China Incoming; Plot Thickens on Temu

    China’s Internet Is Being Erased as CCP Tests System to Monitor All Online Activity

    China’s Internet Is Being Erased as CCP Tests System to Monitor All Online Activity

    CCP’s ‘New Order’ Works On Threats, Terror, Crime, and Deception | Crossroads

    CCP’s ‘New Order’ Works On Threats, Terror, Crime, and Deception | Crossroads

    How a Chinese Olympic Doping Scandal Turned Into a Conspiracy Against the US and EU

    How a Chinese Olympic Doping Scandal Turned Into a Conspiracy Against the US and EU

    Trending Tags

    • Tucker Carlson
    • Crossroads With Joshua Philipp
    • Glen Beck
    • Live Q&A Joshua Philipp
    • American Thought Leaders
    • Facts Matter
    • Over The Target
    • China In Focus
    • The Epoch Times
    • Blaze Media
    • Blaze TV
    • NTD
    • NTD Evening News
    • One America News Network
    • Tucker Carlson Truths
    • Epoch Times
    • Crossroads with Joshua Philipp
    • Crossroads Live Q&A with Joshua Philipp
    • Blaze Media
    • Glenn Beck
    • Steve Deace Show
    • Sara Gonzales Unfiltered
    • Chad Prather Show
    • Fearless with Jason Whitlock
    • One American News
    • NTD
    • NTD News Today
  • Laugh With Us
    Joe Rogan | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #403

    Joe Rogan | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #403

    Shane Gillis Live In Austin | Stand Up Comedy

    Shane Gillis Live In Austin | Stand Up Comedy

    Tom Segura: Completely Normal

    Tom Segura: Completely Normal

    Nikki Glaser: Perfect – Full Special

    Nikki Glaser: Perfect – Full Special

    Bill Burr on Women for 20 minutes straight.

    Bill Burr on Women for 20 minutes straight.

    “Whole Country is Turned into B*tch Ass N***ga” – Dave Chappelle.

    “Whole Country is Turned into B*tch Ass N***ga” – Dave Chappelle.

    Bill Burr: “I’ll Never Own a Helicopter” – Full Special

    Bill Burr: “I’ll Never Own a Helicopter” – Full Special

    Bill Burr comedy on Black People.

    Bill Burr comedy on Black People.

    Lost Laughter: The Cultural Void Without Cheech & Chong

    *BLAZING SADDLES*(1974) is made for me😂 Reaction & Commentary

    Trending Tags

    • Dave Chappelle
    • Theo Von
    • Comedy Club
    • Cheech & Chong
    • Political Comedy
    • Comedians
    • Funny
    • Funny Women
    • Babylon Bee Comedy
    • Babylon Bee
    • Funny Movies
    • Humor
    • Political Humor
  • Be Prepared!

    Our American Pope – The American Conservative

    Politics

    “It’s About Time,” Sheriff Comments On Arresting Rogue Judges – Liberty Sentinel

    Politics

    By Any Name, A Day For Remembering—and Building  

    Politics

    Democrat States Targeting Homeschoolers – Liberty Sentinel

    Politics

    Is ‘Woke Right’ a Useful Term?

    Politics

    Watch The American Spectator Editor Paul Kengor’s Remarks on Marxism and International Women’s Day – The American Spectator | USA News and PoliticsThe American Spectator

    Politics

    My Little Chickadee: Six Years, Nine Months, and 24 Days With a Los Angeles-based Rooster – The American Spectator | USA News and PoliticsThe American Spectator

    Politics

    Deconstructing Childhood Through Thought Reform – Liberty Sentinel

    Politics

    Trump’s Russia–Ukraine Reset

    Politics

    Christian Evangelist Born Without Limbs Gets Debanked for Being Pro-Life – Liberty Sentinel

    Trending Tags

    • Restoring America
    • Government Corruption
    • Government Censorship
    • China Virus
    • Religious Freedom
    • Food Crisis
    • Invasion
    • Prepper
    • Emergency Preparedness
    • Restoring America
    • Government Corruption
    • Gods Plan
    • Economic Financial Collapse
    • Survival Plans
  • Patriot Shop
    • Patriot Clothing Gear Spotlights
    • Survival Apparel
    • Survival Gear
  • Truly Right View
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
Truly Right View
No Result
View All Result
Truly Right View
No Result
View All Result

The Big Money Behind the Narrative—Sharyl Attkisson on Media Bias & Spin | American Thought Leaders

by SiteAdmin
March 10, 2024
in Main Stream Media Bias
4.9k
40
3.8k
SHARES
7.5k
VIEWS
There are all kinds of people  paying a lot of money to pull   strings behind the scenes to make sure we  see certain things on TV and on the news   and read things on the news, and that we  do not see certain things on the news.

Much of media today seeks to advance narratives  to the exclusion of facts, fairness, and accuracy,   says Sharyl Attkisson, a five-time Emmy  Award-winning investigative journalist.  In many cases, there are big  interests and big money involved.  At the same time, big tech curates  what people are allowed to see  

And applies third-party “fact-checkers”  to dictate what is accepted truth.  Attkisson’s forthcoming book, slated  to be released on November 24,   is titled “Slanted: How the News Media Taught  Us to Love Censorship and Hate Journalism.”  This is American Thought  Leaders, and I’m Jan Jekielek.

Sharyl Attkisson, such a pleasure to  have you on American Thought Leaders. Thank you for having me. Cheryl, you start your book “Slanted” with a  quote; “In a time of deceit, telling the truth   is a revolutionary act.” This is something that  I’ve actually had on my Facebook page for over  

A decade. I’m very familiar with the quote.  I always thought it was from George Orwell,   turns out it’s not. Tell me why is it that you  started the book off with this particular quote? I think for reporters and people who  provide information from any source,   actually providing truthful,  factual information has become  

Something that is looked at as something to  control by other people. It’s looked at as   something to controversialize, depending  on what it says and what the facts say. And it’s becoming harder and harder  for people interested in accuracy,  

Fairness and facts to simply do the job of  telling these stories or these facts without   censors and curations and interruptions  from propagandists and special interests. I told you this earlier that reading your book  I felt increasingly, chapter by chapter, “Okay,  

I’m not crazy. Someone else is seeing  these things that I’m seeing as well.”   Namely, one of the themes in there,  for example, is this idea that,   in some cases, if you simply do report  the facts straight up, you’re perceived  

As partisan. This is a bizarre phenomenon  to me. Can you speak to that a little bit? As I talk about in “Slanted,”  the act of simply being   down the middle and fair has become such an  anomaly in the managed information landscape.  

If you do that now you are branded as  conservative simply because, for whatever reason,   you’re not following the liberal party  line, which is now considered the default. So as you stay in the center, that is a  position that is viewed by the propagandists  

Or at least portrayed as farther and  farther to the right when it’s not. But it’s all a part of trying to  controversialize facts that are uncomfortable   to try to keep stories and information  that certain interests don’t want   told from getting told, and then by personally  attacking and controversializing the outlets,  

Or the reporters who are not following the party  line in such a way that there is hope on the part   of propagandists that a large section of the  public will not believe or will not listen to   the accurate facts. Instead, they’ll just  chew on the propaganda and the spun facts.

It’s incredible. You call this “the  narrative.” And this is something of course,   I’ve heard many people refer to over past  years. So tell me what is the narrative?   And when did you first become  aware of the narrative? It’s a word that when I first  heard it used in the news industry,  

I didn’t really understand what it meant. Now I  say it all the time to myself, and I write about   it. But I realized that a lot of people when  they hear “narrative,” that’s not necessarily   the word they may apply to [the news], or  the phrase that they may associate with it.

A narrative, I say, is a storyline  that certain interests want to be told   to accomplish a different goal. So they may  make sure that a common thread of a story,   a narrative, runs through most any factual context  until it even changes the story or plays fast  

And loose with the facts or even changes the  facts to accomplish an overarching storyline   that they’re trying to advance to the general  public or certain audience. That’s a narrative. In the book I give examples such as  climate change, which may be a perfectly  

Valid discussion to have in certain contexts.  But then you see on the news that every event   somebody ties to climate change to the exclusion  of counterpoints, and other scientific views.   Well, that’s furthering a narrative, to  the exclusion of the facts and fairness and  

Accuracy. We see that now we’ve seen the narrative  largely take over the news as we know it today,   compared to what it was,  really just about 15 years ago, Sharryl, you’re making me think of these giant  fires that we’ve had in California that have  

Affected communities, and of course the forest  themselves. Many people and prominent politicians   are ascribing these to climate change as if it’s  the obvious cause. I’m thinking there’s at least   one other very significant variable that I’m aware  of, namely, the buildup of brush in the forests  

And improper forest management, which a few  people have pointed out. What are your thoughts? The narrative demands in this current environment  that you not say those things, that’s the   frightening thing. It’s the idea that there are  now thoughts and science and views and facts that  

Are deemed to be unacceptable in the information  landscape on social media or in the news. I can think of three other factors. We’ve  reported on all of those on my Sunday TV show   “Full Measure.” There is the lack of properly  clearing the brush, which is a known factor.  

They haven’t done a good job, and  they’ve complained they haven’t   had the money to do it. We’ve talked  about the financial battles over that. Secondly, there are arsonists, as you know,  that have been caught setting fires. That’s   certainly not climate change. And thirdly which  we reported on this extensively last season,  

The power company, PG, has paid  billions of dollars to victims of   some of the worst wildfires in California,  because their power lines started the fire. A number of fires started because  they did not properly maintain   the aging power lines and they would  spark during certain weather events.  

And with the brush not properly cut away, this  would lead to these catastrophic wildfires that   a lot of people are improperly  attributing to climate change. This is fascinating, because I didn’t even  know that last one. I didn’t see the most  

Recent episode of “Full Measure” clearly  or I would have known that. By the way,   it’s an excellent program that I’ll  recommend to everyone watching today. Thank you. You can look that up  at fullmeasure.news. If you search   “PG&E,” you’ll find that segment.  I find a lot of people don’t know.  

When we did this story, we had  no agenda. We just set out to go   look at the California wildfires, and  we’ve done quite a bit of reporting. Then we learned that there was this huge court  case. There’s been a settlement with this giant  

Power company that’s been ordered by the court  to pay the victims of some of these horrible   fires. And that’s why, by the way, there are the  blackouts, and the power goes out in California   during certain times when they’re afraid  that the power lines may spark more fires.

I don’t know why that isn’t more commonly known  and reported, because it’s well established and   documented in these court cases. But again, it’s  because it has to do with a narrative driving the   news in such a way that when you turn on the TV,  or read your information, unless a certain special  

Interest has put that information in front of  the reporters or on the news, a lot of times,   you’re not likely to see it if it’s  off-narrative facts and science and information. I don’t know if we can put percentages on this  here. But how dominant is this narrative- focused  

Or narrative-leaning reporting today across  the whole media landscape, in your view? I’d say 90 percent to 95 percent. Reporters  used to take great pride, and there’s still some   who do and would if they could, take  great pride in digging up original stories  

That the interests do not want us to report. The  PR firms and political figures and super PACs and   nonprofits that actually work for special  interests, they’re always bringing these   story ideas to the table, trying to get them to  float to the top by sending out talking points,  

Planting them with the analysts that  they’ve hired to be on the news. But our job, I believe, is to find those other  stories that they’re trying to push off the   air that the special interests and the powerful  money interests don’t want told and the angles  

That they don’t want us to know about. That  used to be how we approached our industry,   particularly investigative reporting. In general  with news reporting, when I was in local news,   my goal was to try to bring something new  and different to the table other than what  

Was being put out there by the people  trying to manage public opinion. Now, it’s as if we in the media  and the news have almost totally   acceded ourselves to the special interests. I  argue in “Slanted” that we’ve allowed ourselves  

And the news to be used as a tool of the  propagandists, even inviting them to use   us to put out their talking points on each side  every day, as if we’re learning anything from it. Then we’re paying these pundits and  analysts to use us as a propaganda vehicle  

To present their information to  the public every day. It’s a really   topsy-turvy and baffling environment we’ve  allowed. If you look up the term propaganda   in a dictionary, that’s the pure definition of  what much of the news is doing today—inviting  

A political supporter on each side, even if  you do it fairly, to spew forth whatever they   want the public to believe about something.  That used to not be considered news and not   what we devoted much of our news time to. And  now it’s wholly dominated the news landscape.

You use this term, “the propagandists.”  I’ll say that in quotes. Obviously we’re   talking about pundits and obviously  we’re talking about special interests   who are looking to forward their own narratives.  But it almost sounds like there’s sort of this   ominous, unseen group of people. What do you mean  exactly when you’re saying, “the propagandists?”

I really covered this thoroughly in my last  book, “The Smear.” There is a multi- billion   dollar industry that has grown largely unseen  by much of the American public, but they see   the effects of it. The whole point of these  propagandists, or I call them smear artists,  

Is to have the result impact the public,  but have their fingerprints not be   seen on the product. In other words,  they’re operating behind the scenes. I interviewed many smear artists, both  Democrats and Republicans for the book.  

You might be surprised that they’re happy to talk  about what they do, and how successful they are   at manipulating public opinion. But as one of  them told me—and I’ve spoken of this; it gave   me chills when he said it—he said virtually every  image that crosses your path on a daily basis, not  

Just the news, but in movies and comedy channels,  and billboards and things nonprofits put out,   was put there for a reason by somebody who paid  a lot of money to put that in the public view. And once you start understanding [this], I call  it sort of “The Truman Show,” an old movie,  

If some people have seen it. But you  start understanding we’re sort of   in a Truman Show. We’re a product, we the public.  And there are all kinds of people paying a lot of   money to pull strings behind the scenes to make  sure we see certain things on TV and on the news  

And read things on the news, and that we  do not see certain things on the news. This has expanded particularly  since 2016 with President Trump   entering office to social media, because  those who are largely successful controlling   what was on the news saw that on the  internet, they lacked that same control.  

So starting in 2016, they created the perception  among us that we needed our information online   curated and fact checked and  culled through by third parties. Now we’re seeing the fruits of  that, the poisonous fruit whereby   we’ve acceded our control to the special interests  that control us through the big tech companies.  

Now they’re telling us we can access certain  facts, certain studies, certain information,   certain viewpoints in a way that is very  Orwellian. And I think it is dangerous. I definitely want to get back to this idea  that the public has been a willing participant  

In being censored. That something very  interesting that you discuss in the book.   Before we do that, as you were describing the  situation, it appears to be almost like a kind of   extreme product placement. Then you mentioned “The  Truman Show,” which is precisely that. He lives  

In a manufactured world. Another excellent film,  by the way, if our viewers want to have a couple   of hours of a really remarkable piece of cinema.  “The Truman Show” is highly recommended. But it’s   almost as if we’ve become this, as you describe  it, a product. Now what does that mean exactly?

The ability to impact our opinions, our  thoughts, what we purchase, how we vote,   what we believe, is a very valuable commodity. And  this smear industry, which is dark money groups,   and nonprofits and super PACs and charities and  all kinds of things you don’t even think about  

On a daily basis, plus government and people who  revolving-door their way between corporate and   government. This is how they pay and train each  other to appear in these forums, where they can   slant or change our thoughts to  make us think certain things.

The internet and social media has opened  up an entirely new opportunity for them.   And they’re really good at it, because it’s  easier than ever before with the internet,   and even fairly inexpensive to control social  media accounts and opinion as I talked about  

In my last book, “The Smear.” Everything  from robotics to placing fake tweets that   then become a tweet campaign that impacts how  the New York Times makes its decisions on news. Wikipedia is manipulated. Snopes  is manipulated. I think a lot of  

Smart people know something’s going on, but  they only think one layer deep. They think,   “Well, I’ll go to Snopes, and see if it’s true.”  But you have to go to three layers past that   and understand that Snopes is conflicted as  well, because anything that can be bought,  

Purchased or impacted is being bought, purchased,  and impacted to influence our opinions. The Federal Register is an unlikely example that  you probably wouldn’t even think of, which I cover   in my last book, “The Smear.”   One of the smear artists explained that they are  paid, these propagandists, by special interest to  

Post comments on the Federal Register  before certain federal rules go into effect.   And those comments, you’ve probably never  posted one, maybe you have. I don’t know   anybody who’s ever posted a comment before a  policy change online on the Federal Register. Who’s doing all of that activity? Well,  these are corporate and special interests,  

Who hire people to pretend they’re ordinary  people, to make comments about things to   try to influence whether policies are  implemented and how it’s implemented.   Anything that you can co-opt  they have found a way to do so. I have an example here at the Epoch Times, where  there’s something that simply has completely no  

Basis in fact. It’s easily disprovable, if someone  were to just go look. But it somehow has become,   at least in certain circles, an idea  that keeps being forwarded. Notably,   this was in an NBC piece, maybe  a year and a half ago now,   that we’re some sort of dark money  operation, election-focused, basically.

You can look at the ads, you can see the  subscription ads, you can see that the   funding is pretty transparent. You can look  at our filings and so forth. Yet, somehow,   it becomes this kind of thing that simply has  no basis in reality. You have a lot of examples  

Of this in “Slanted,” which were extremely  fascinating for me to see play out. How is it that   something that actually is just an idea that  someone cooked up, a convenient narrative, can   be promulgated over time and become accepted fact,  even though it’s not fact? How does that work?

That’s the goal. It’s perfect, isn’t it, from  their viewpoint when they finally have gotten this   false narrative to be so ubiquitous that  people just sort of accept it and respond   to it. Sometimes even the people who are being  smeared sort of accept that “That’s how people  

View us,” and they’ve moved into this space where  they’ve been totally shaped by the narrative. Well, I’ll give you one example of how it happens.  Let’s say a big money interest doesn’t like Epoch   Times reporting because it’s factual a lot. Maybe  it’s dual-sided on a climate change issue. There’s  

A ton of money, as you know, being put out there  to control people’s thoughts on climate change,   so they need to controversialize you rather  than just argue the points in the story. They need to make it where people won’t read  your publication, or they automatically think  

It’s discredited, right. So that’s the goal  off the top. How to accomplish that? They go,   big money—this is a hypothetical example—these  big donors send their money through a fundraiser,   so you can’t trace it, to a group like  Media Matters, which is run by the   conservative-smear-artist-turned-liberal-smear-artist  David Brock, who runs this network of Super  

PACs and nonprofits, names that you  may know and thought were independent   groups but they’re all under this umbrella—I  diagrammed it in my last book, “The Smear.” And all he has to do is write a blog about  it, and the unquestioning media is either on  

Board with the same thing, because we’ve hired  these propagandists in our newsrooms, or they’re   unaware, and sometimes reporters are lazy. They  take this information sent to them about what   a big story this is, look what we found out about  Epoch Times, and they don’t do their own checking.

And then they have it put out through their  nonprofits and their watchdog groups so it   looks like to the media that all these different  groups have discovered things about Epoch Times.   It’s really just one group and a guy and  some funders that started this, but it’s  

To give the appearance that there’s widespread  support for or against somebody or something. And pretty soon the news is reporting it.  Media Matters, word for word, lockstep,   you talk about—first sometimes it goes with a  quasi-news like Salon and Vox and Huffington  

Post and all the people that march to the same  tune when Media Matters says go. And it’s really   hard to stop that momentum of opinion when it’s  been put down and become so pervasive like that. And I think that’s what’s happened to Epoch  Times. I think it started, with your publication,  

When you came to be more and more noticed for  doing fair, off-narrative reporting on really   important topics that the mainstream media  was not itself attacking and investigating.   Instead, when you started doing important work,  that’s when I saw all of this bubbling to the top,  

All this controversy trying to be  stirred up about the publication. It’s fascinating, also, when you’re a media  and this happens because people can just   go to the website and see what’s there.  That’s what’s really interesting to me.

They don’t want the facts, and I talk about  this in the book as well. When you understand   that the narrative is the goal, not honest  reporting—you have to get out of the mindset   that these places still, by and large,  are trying to do honest reporting. They’re  

Working with a different goal in mind:  to advance a narrative. So they succeed. They don’t want the other information that you  want to provide them. It doesn’t matter what   you show them and tell them. They’re going  to stay on that narrative. I have ignored  

Many false things that have been said about me  over time because it almost drives that further. The people who are driving the false narrative  take what you say, as you prove that it’s untrue,   and they’re able to spin and turn that up  into a ball and make it all sound like that’s  

Also part of the narrative. It almost feeds it.  That’s the natural thing, what most people do,   and the false narrative becomes  bigger and bigger and more pervasive,   and more people find out about it, and  it’s almost counterproductive sometimes. I’m just remembering something, I think  in sort of early in the book, you were  

Discussing your work at CBS and how some of the  stories that you spent quite a bit of time on,   very thoughtful pieces, just were killed. But  the one example was kind of startling to me,   and it was the editor, I believe, who just  simply says, “I believe religion is the root  

Of all evil. We’re not running this as is.”  I may be embellishing a little bit here. But   this is kind of a bizarre concept because  if there’s people that are thinking this,   prominent in newsrooms, killing stories, I can  really imagine how a narrative would be shaped.  

Just this specific question, how prominent is  this kind of thing in newsrooms across America? This was some years ago. I think it’s  fairly common. In local news, I will say,   I felt there was more freedom for  local reporters. It was less political.  

What we did on a daily basis  wasn’t about politics in general.   And I didn’t feel like there was that heavy-handed  shaping. But then come into national news. When I was at CNN, back in the day, in 1990,  we weren’t shaping, nobody was telling me  

How to anchor and what to say. It was totally  different than today. We didn’t put our opinions   in anything. But fast forward to CBS—and I’m  not just calling out CBS because I know from   my friends and colleagues the same things have  happened and are happening in national newsrooms  

Across the country—but even before we saw how  pervasive it was, there are all of these little   ways that narratives slip into our reporting  by what we report and what we don’t report. And I was trying to, with these anecdotes,  talk about how I’ve put a lot of thought into  

It. I made, I’m sure, many mistakes without  thinking about how we’re shaping the news and   biasing the news, sometimes unconsciously. But  there are these startling examples like that. Now, I say in the book that I’m not a religious  person. But that’s irrelevant to the notion of  

Whether I am going to address religion in  a story in a fair way, and let people on   both sides of an issue that impacts that speak.  And that’s exactly what I was doing in a story.   But because it’s so seldom done—at least it was  seldom done in this fashion at CBS—one executive,  

When the story was finished, had the nerve—well,  they were all kind of like pooh-poohing the story,   and the only reason was because in a  dual-sided story with different people in it,   there were people on the pro-religious  side that didn’t look like nuts and fools.

And quite frankly, there were  executives that wanted me to replace   these people who are quite typical Christians,  basically here in the United States on that side   of the first story we were doing, they  wanted me to replace those people with   people who appeared more extreme and  unreasonable to represent the religious view  

So they wouldn’t look like they’re  people that the public can relate to. And I refused to do it. And I just said,  “I’m not going to put other people in the   story. These are the people that we spoke  to, and they represent that view well.”  

But that happens, not just with that,  religious stories, but that’s just one example. You describe and come back to this  concept repeatedly in the book,   the substitution game. Tell me  about the substitution game.

I think a lot of people play it today, but it’s  just that I gave it a name. I think I started   in the last book. If you see a news  item treated a certain way—when one   person or one side does something—and then it’s  treated entirely differently when another side  

Or another person does it, then you can probably  think that there’s a narrative involved. And this happens all the time. I played this on   Twitter the other day where I tweeted out and  said, “Donald Trump has announced that he’s   going to hole up and not take questions  from reporters until next Thursday and  

Not make any appearances.” And then I said, “Not  really. It was Joe Biden who did that.” But can   you imagine the news coverage if Trump were  to say, “I’m just not going to take reporters’   questions or appear in public for days, a week  and a half or two weeks before the election”?

And I’m not saying which is right or which is  wrong. I’m simply saying that whoever does that   thing should be treated in the news the same way.  It shouldn’t matter who’s the one who did it,   but too often, I think, we at home know that  incidents are treated differently, depending on  

Who did them and what narrative  is being furthered on the news. There’s this propensity to infer motive,   right. I’m thinking now of The New York Times  headline that you describe, where the President,   basically, I think he denounced racism,  denounced white supremacy. It’s curious  

Because this is something that came up recently,  of course, in the debates. He was actually asked,   “Are you ready, sir, to denounce white supremacy?”  I recall that actually, reading your book,   that it was actually on the front page of The New  York Times. But that headline was changed, right?

Yes. So for once, The New York Times actually put  an honest headline about Trump that said he had   denounced racism or promoted unity. And  The New York Times got so attacked by the   leftist mob on Twitter—and again, these  concerns are just a few people creating  

The appearance that there’s a big mob—that The  New York Times actually changed its headline. And we can see in that chapter about The New  York Times that there was a later discussion at   a staff meeting about—and a lot of headlines have  been changed on The Times like this by the mob,  

Sort of like news by popularity contest—and   there were people who are arguing, “Well,  they’ve been demanding Trump denounce racism.” By the way, I did a podcast on this the other  day. He’s done this since 2000, explicitly,  

So many times, but the media always pretends he’s  never done it, but there’s always demands for him   to do it. And then when he explicitly does it,  these New York Times staffers were arguing, “Well,   we shouldn’t report that he said it because he  didn’t mean it because we all know he’s a racist.”

So on the one hand, they’re demanding this   disavowal of racism and condemnation—which Trump  has done repeatedly—but when he specifically does   it, and it makes a headline, they  say, “Well, The New York Times, we   should not grant him that because we’re just doing  his bidding by reporting what he said.” And they  

Changed that headline to say something completely  different, then went off on another narrative. A lot of, I don’t know if we can call it  journalism anymore, is actually not just   trying to tell you what happened and dig into  that, but to tell you what to think about it,  

Right, and hence, this inferring of motives.  You have a number of really fascinating examples   of this that you’re describing. How is it that  we as an audience—I guess I’m in the media. I   play both sides—but how is  it that people are complicit  

In getting this type of whether you want to call  it censorship or shaping of narrative in only a   particular direction or in only a particular  few directions? How are we complicit in that? I’m blaming us because we are in part to blame,  but the people who are doing it to us have been  

Quite clever about the way they’ve done it. I  spoke a little earlier about how prior to 2016,   if you look at the news, people were not asking  for their news to be curated. They weren’t   asking for these massive fact checks by third  parties and conflicted nonprofits and academics.

There was a market for that that was  cleverly created in 2016 by those   who wanted us to demand it and then be  so happy when finally Facebook was fact   checking things for us because we don’t know  what to think, and we don’t know what to decide.

Think about that. Five years before  this happened, that concept, I think,   would have just really stunned everybody  that we would invite companies—who have   no expertise in any of this stuff, by the  way, no matter how many experts they hire—to  

Be the ones that step in on a moment’s notice  with a news story and tell you what’s true, and   give you context and tell you what you can’t share  as if they know any of those things in an instant?

But now, we’ve become so numb to the notion,  we’re actually inviting it. The subtitle of   my book is “How the [News] Media Taught Us  to Love Censorship and Hate Journalism.”   Many of us are inviting and cheering on these fake  fact checks and the curating of our information,  

Our news, not realizing I think, the  slippery slope that we’re going down whereby   I think in 10 years, if we don’t change  things, it’ll be a distant memory   that we could find most information we wanted  to find on the internet. We won’t be able to  

Access it anymore. Only that which the  powerful interests wish for us to see. It’s deeply, deeply disturbing, obviously.   It’s almost like we want to only be reading  the things that we already agree with. One thing, this debate over Section  230, without getting too arcane,  

But a lot of people are saying, “Well, these  big tech companies are censoring Trump and Trump   supporters and Republicans, but not liberals.”  And I fear that what comes of that is, again,   clever people pulling strings behind the scenes to  make us go, “You should censor the liberals too.”

What we’re doing if we say that is we’ll  just do it both to all of us equally,   we’re basically giving more control, and  we’re giving up more of our own thoughts,   control of our own thoughts and information to  the same players who will then go, “Okay, well,  

We’ll censor left and right. We’ll censor  everybody. We’ll really be heavy handed.” When I think we should be looking from a 30,000  foot high level, stepping way back, and telling   them not to touch our information, except that  which is illegal, not in a subconscious way  

Demanding that they actually censor more.  That’s not going to ultimately help anybody. Another thing I just thought of, a  few people have asked me about this,   actually, and I said, “Well, I don’t know.”  How do you see yourself politically? Do  

You see yourself as conservative? Do you  see yourself as liberal? Do you try to   stay out of those categories?  How do you fall, personally? I have not talked about my politics. I just  don’t, so a lot of people mistakenly assume   I’m conservative. For years, people  mistakenly assumed I was liberal.  

Just in a general sense, I will tell you that  I think I’m like a lot of Americans. Probably,   if you pick certain issues and I told you how  I felt about them, I would be liberal on some,   conservative on others, change my  mind depending on the circumstance.

What I think is really important to  do—and I’ve worked very hard to do this.   Maybe I didn’t think about it in my early  years—but assuming I feel a certain way   based on who I interviewed, or what I said, is  going to be wrong. I mean, it’s pretty hard,  

I’ve found, for reporters to take away  their own personal vested interests. But if you can, it’s a beautiful thing to open  your mind, regardless of how you feel about   something and invite in a different viewpoint  or opposing viewpoints. And I’ve told myself  

As a reporter, one way to do that is to start  with the premise that most people have a point   to make. Like, there are sometimes ridiculous  points that don’t make any sense. But in general,   people who view things differently often  have rational viewpoints on both sides.

And when you start to say as a reporter,   “I’d like to represent the most rational  viewpoints I can find on both sides,”   it just sort of opens up reporting, and I think  you get at more of the truth, you become more  

Accurate, and you shouldn’t feel like you have  to shove your own opinion down someone’s throat. If the job of your reporting is—and  I think a lot of reporters do this—if   you think people need to come away at the end  of a story thinking like you do about a topic,  

Then I think you’ve made a big mistake. I  think the goal should be to present viewpoints   and facts, especially if powerful interests are  trying to hide them. And then I say to myself,   “At the end, if you’re unconvinced of  what someone in the story was saying,  

Or if I think taxpayer money was wasted and this  is demonstrated in the evidence, but you don’t   mind how the money was spent, I’m good with that.  I just wanted to bring the information out there.”  

And I think that’s sort of how I approach my  job, and I do it in a non-political fashion. So you mentioned Section 230. This is  something that I’ve covered a number   of times on the show. Speaking of social  media giants becoming publishers—which is  

What that question really is—it seems like  Twitter, frankly, in the past week now has   kind of taken things to a different level  where they decided to suppress a story that   they transparently said hadn’t been fact  checked even by one of these, you would argue  

Not necessarily legitimately even fact checked.  I was thinking of using this story, using the   “Slanted” lens to look at this story and how it’s  playing out because I thought it’s almost like a   textbook example of all the lessons or ideas that  you’re bringing up in “Slanted.” Can we do that?

I think absolutely. The notion that Twitter  would claim to be an instant expert on a story   they have no knowledge about. Their experts can’t  possibly—even if they were to try to contradict   some of the Hunter Biden story that was in The New  York Post, they certainly have no more credibility  

Than The New York Post, who presumably  has been working on this story longer,   and neither do the one-sided experts they may  consult who would tell them that that story is   not true. They weren’t in the room, they weren’t  in a position to verify or not verify emails.

But you go back to the Russia-Trump collusion  story, which turned out to be, as we all know—and   even as Trump’s enemies working on the  Mueller team acknowledged—there was no   evidence of any American working with  Russia or colluding with Russia in 2016.

And how many stories do we still  have, and did we have at the time,   forwarded uncritically by the press, without  counterpoints, without evidence—as they like   to say, but they didn’t say it was without  evidence—as if true? Anonymous sources,   presenting false information, presumed to be  true, no counterpoints. This was the classic way  

That you cannot, as a journalist, legitimately  cover a news story, and we did it for years. And then here comes a story that has some  documentation and on-the-record documents and   sources, and all we hear about is, “unverified,  without evidence,” and it’s immediately taken off  

Twitter. What Twitter is doing in these final days  before the election speaks to me of desperation. The big tech companies—I’ll have a story on this  on full measure in a couple of weeks—insiders   talk about how important it is to some of  these companies and the people leading them  

And the employees for President Trump not to be  president, for certain agendas to be advanced,   social agendas, in a one-sided fashion and how  they make sure algorithms and the things that they   design accomplish these very partisan, political  goals in ways that are often unseen to us.

And I can only say that they’ve decided or they’ve  been fearful that in these last weeks, that hasn’t   been enough. So they’re actually stepping in and  putting the thumb on a scale in such a visible way   with people, accounts. They don’t even care  if Congress calls them in and slaps them in a  

Couple weeks, because the election will be over.  They’re trying right now to play the short game   out of desperation to try to make  sure Trump doesn’t win another term. There’s all sorts of people saying   these laptops or these drives or this  whole thing is Russian disinformation.

Let’s look at the real Russian disinformation  campaign that we know: Trump-Russia   collusion, [which] involved Russians providing  false information through an intermediary   of Democrats to the FBI. That was never flagged  by the same people as Russian disinformation,   and yet now something where there was no  evidence of Russian disinformation, that’s  

The default claim that’s thrown out  there because it will take hold. You see it does, because the public’s been primed,  a certain segment of the public, by the narrative   to believe and to accept that. Glenn Greenwald  had an interesting article. I think I read a  

Little bit of it with a tweet. He’s the liberal  publisher of The Intercept. And a lot of classic   liberals see these things the same way you do,  some of these things that we’re talking about. He said, “Can you imagine  a public that has gotten so   basically brainwashed, that  everything that happens is  

Deemed to be foreign interference or interference  by the Russians and that the public buys that? How   sad is that?” And I think he was spot on with  that. But that’s all part of the narrative. It’s been planted since late 2015 or early 2016.  And it’s really taken hold among people who are—I  

Won’t say unthinking people because they’re not  all unthinking—but a lot of people that don’t have   time to do or the desire to do their own thinking  for themselves and their own research, and they   just are pummeled with these narratives on comedy  channels and just everywhere you look. The news  

Of course and social media, it just becomes  their reality, and that’s what they believe. It’s incredible. A number of media have been   largely silent on this, but I did notice,  actually, that CBS has started to cover it.   I thought that was interesting. And the  other thing, speaking of the whole Russia  

Collusion and everything associated with that, the  Crossfire Hurricane investigation, the FISA abuse,   CBS did hire Catherine Herridge, who seems to  be doing a pretty straight-up journalistic job   around this material. Does this suggest that  CBS is deciding to go off-narrative here? It’s hard to say.  

If you read the books that I’ve written about  this, there’s so many competing things going   on at the same time. Sometimes, an outlet, in  my view, will hire somebody so that they can   keep them quiet or keep them less visible.  Catherine Herridge, I believe, had far more  

Visibility when she worked at Fox News because  she was on all the time with breaking stories. I’ve talked to people at CBS. I think she’s done  great stuff. I’ve seen her tweet out some things.   She’s not—now maybe this has changed in the last  month—she’s not seen frequently on the evening  

News. She tweets a lot of stuff that she probably  can’t get on. Or maybe she’s on the morning show.   This is how they bury [news]. They pretend  to want to cover something, but there’s a   way that certain people can, in fact, bury the  news and make sure it gets less prominence.

They’re also competing. They hired, I don’t want  to name a name who, but they hired somebody else   that had a lot of promise and talent in an arena  like that some years ago, and then basically   proceeded to never use that person on the air.  This is not an unusual thing that happens.

That having been said, not everybody at all the  networks [is like this]. There’s still some great   people, there are still some good news people,  there’s still some great reporting being done,   even at The New York Times, which is [devolving].  I spent a whole chapter talking about the  

Devolution. Even at CNN. So it’s not a monolithic  thing for which there are no exceptions. But in a general sense, I think,  we’ve reached a place where,   like you just said, you’re surprised that  there’s an instance where, wow, CBS actually  

Covered one of the biggest stories of the last  week. They actually gave two minutes to it.   It’s sort of like we think that’s progress because  the situation is so, the starting point is so bad. You mentioned earlier that you feel like  in 10 years, we might be past the point  

Of no return. I don’t think you’re meaning  to be alarmist, but you’re saying things   are heading in this direction where there just  isn’t a lot of news anymore, and it seems to,   I don’t know if you agree, it seems to be  accelerating in that direction. What do you see,  

And this appears a bit I think in the conclusion  of your book, but what do you see as the path   forward to try to get back to straight-up  journalism and let people make up their own minds? I think people should definitely keep speaking  about it. Don’t quiet down and just accept that  

This is the way it is. Fight and call it out  when you see it. But I think the answer—there’s   a lot of people working on this problem because  in the general public outside of Washington,   DC and New York and outside of the newsrooms,  the public wants regular old news again.

I’ve asked a lot of questions of people over  the years, even those who want to watch CNN and   MSNBC for the left news and want to watch Fox  News for the right news or CBS or whatever—CBS  

For their left. They still all say they  would go to a place that was in the middle   if there was a place because they know they   have to kind of discount the news they  see depending on where they watch it.

They know that if they see a certain thing,  “Well, I know where they’re coming from.”   And they want a place where they can go and  kind of get the straight story and believe   that they’re getting a factual representation.  So there’s a market for it, I believe. And a lot  

Of people know this, and a lot of news people  are trying to figure out how to make the most   of that and how to make it where these big tech  platforms then don’t control what they’re doing.

So on two fronts, there are news people that are  trying to develop news sources that do that very   thing. And secondly, there are technical people  that are working on the problem of being able to   distribute news and opinion outside the platforms  controlled by the big tech companies in a way that  

They can’t deplatform you and take your opinions  off and take certain scientific studies out. I think we’ll have a breakthrough because  there’s smart people working on the problem.   I’m not smart enough to know technically what  form that’ll take, but I’d like to think we’ll  

Go down that road. One of the scariest things  to me, let’s look at the coronavirus example.   Google announced that it had developed a  partnership on the front end of this with   the World Health Organization to make sure when  people were searching under coronavirus early  

On that they would be directed to World Health  Organization-approved information and sites. How dangerous is that, especially when you  consider that WHO admits it was wrong about so   much? But by doing this, Google has cut us out  of the equation of being able to say, “We know  

You guys are wrong. Medical experts are sometimes  wrong and the government is sometimes wrong and   certain experts,” and then they’ve cut you out of  being able to easily do your own research and find   unconflicted information because they’re directing  what you’ll see when you look for information.

And again, by their own admission, were dead  wrong about quite a few things that they put out.   But that’s all we were allowed, that’s  where we were being pointed to. So   imagine that—and that’s happening with other  issues too that they’re not disclosing—on  

A massive scale where pretty much any information  you try to access, they get to control   who you’re pointed to, and you will never  find the scientific studies that say the   other thing because they’ll have effectively  buried them or made sure that they’re unseen.

This is a very interesting point because I  think there’s tons of evidence that the WHO   was compromised by perhaps the biggest special  interest out there, the Chinese Communist Party. That is the most important reason, again, why I  at least don’t want special interests coming in  

And curating my information in my searches. And  I firmly believe if a private company wants to   offer that service to the people that work  with it, “Hey, would you like us to curate   your information? Would you like us to aim you to  places where we want you to look?” that’s fine.

But I also think we shouldn’t have to opt  into that because there are some of us   on various topics that want to do our own  research. Some of my best stories have come from   me being able to go off of the narrative, off of  what’s being reported by these news organizations  

That would be accepted as the only true sources  that are actually reporting wrong information. And I’m able to dig deeply and find counterpoints  and people who know different information and   other scientific studies that ultimately turn out  to provide the truth. If you cut that off from  

People, you’ve 1,000 percent been able to just  control the line of thought in a negative way. And I joke that if this were  the case several decades ago,   we would still say cigarettes were safe  because let’s say there were all these  

Studies that show cigarettes can cause cancer.  Well, the prevailing opinion at the time said   that that wasn’t true. Doctors at the time said  there was nothing wrong with smoking cigarettes. They would effectively be able to impact what  we see and know so that we would never see those  

Studies that show that cigarettes were actually  unhealthy. And we would be bouncing around today,   happily smoking or believing that that was true, I  guess, and wondering why people were dying without   understanding that there were many scientific  studies supporting the other view because we  

Wouldn’t have been able to access them under  this sort of control that we’re talking about. Sharyl, there’s many, many of these examples,  and I think your book is an incredibly thoughtful   treatment of this whole issue, and frankly,  in a very, very balanced way. I actually  

Also haven’t—that’s why I asked you about  your political inclinations, because   you keep them close to yourself, clearly. When is  the book coming out, and how can people get it? November 24. Preorder now anywhere. If  you don’t want to order from Amazon,   you can order from HarperCollins  or anywhere you like to get books.  

And on my website, thank you for asking,  sharylattkisson.com, if you click where I’m   promoting “Slanted,” you can find out how to get  signed copies or a free signed bookplate sticker   to put in there as a gift for somebody, whatever  you want to do. All the information’s there.

I’ve said that it would really be nice—my social  media is throttled down if people know what that   means. My reach is far smaller this year than it  has been in past years, even though I have a much  

Greater following because it’s being dialed back.  And so I’m trying to promote the book any way I   can, and I say: wouldn’t it be nice for The New  York Times to be forced to put my third book in a  

Row on its bestseller list when there’s a chapter  in it about the devolution of The New York Times?   That’s like one of my goals, so I  hope people will consider preordering. I wish you the best of success with that.  Any final thoughts before we finish up?

I would just say that as simple as something  [like a review]. I’ve gotten some very nice   reviews and discussions of the book from  people like you and others. But interestingly,   I thought it was interesting, Publishers Weekly,   wasn’t even sure what that is, but they put  out what I consider a very lukewarm review,  

Doesn’t even look like they read the book, very  short review, where they call it unconvincing. I’m thinking, “This is interesting.”  It’s another example of, in my opinion,   somebody who doesn’t want people to  read the book for their own reasons,  

Made sure a review was written—there’s no name  signed with these reviews that they put up, but   they’re pretty well read inside the industry—and  they put out sort of a negative review. And this is all, again, part of I think, I  suspect, a shaping of the information landscape,  

And it reminds me of Scott Adams, who’s  off-narrative. He’s written those comedy books,   comics about Dilbert, and he’s a Trump supporter.  And he talks about—and I have this in my last   book—when he became a Trump supporter, [he] became  someone that people didn’t like for that reason.

His speeches got canceled. He got negative  reviews about his book that was coming out   that were suddenly posted. There are all kinds  of things that are happening in ways that are   unseen to us. And I just say, dig deeper when  you see something happening or a narrative being  

Forwarded by so many people, your first thought  should not necessarily be, “I believe that,” but   “Who wants me to believe that and why?” And  that, I think, will lead to a lot of truth. Sharyl Attkisson, such a pleasure to have you on. Thanks so much.

Video Tags: American Thought Leaders,Epoch Times,the epoch times,Jan Jekielek,ATL,sharyl attkisson,donald trump,trump,media bias,cnn,fox news,cbs,investigative journalism,fake news,journalism,social media,cbs news,election,current events,president trump,mainstream media,free speech,big tech,facebook,google,twitter,epoch times,jan jekielek,big money,hunter biden,joe biden
Video Duration: 00:50:03
Tags: American Thought LeadersATLbig moneyBig TechCBScbs newsCNNcurrent eventsDonald TrumpElectionepoch timesFacebookfake newsfox newsFree SpeechGoogleHunter Bideninvestigative journalismJan JekielekJoe Bidenjournalismmainstream mediamedia biasPresident Trumpsharyl attkissonSocial MediaThe Epoch TimesTruly Right ViewTrumpTwitter
Previous Post

The Crazy Nastyass Honey Badger (original narration by Randall)

Next Post

Adam Schiff’s shady ties to Ukraine exposed

Next Post

Adam Schiff’s shady ties to Ukraine exposed

Please login to join discussion

Product Categories

  • Apparel & Accessories (6)
  • Camping Gear (8)
  • Gifts and Other (3)
  • Gloves (1)
  • Gun Parts (2)
  • Gun Storage (1)
  • Guns & Ammo (1)
  • Health & Fitness (4)
  • Holsters (3)
  • Hunting and Shooting Vests (3)
  • Hunting Gear (11)
  • Knives (2)
  • Laser Sights (1)
  • Mens and Womens Apparel (2)
  • Night Vision Accessories (1)
  • Outdoor Gear (4)
  • Pets (1)
  • Red Dot Sights (1)
  • Red Dot Sights & Accessories (1)
  • Security Products (1)
  • Shooting Accessories (3)
  • Sporting Goods (6)
  • Sports Equipment (2)
  • Sports/Outdoors (8)
  • Survival Gear (4)
  • Tactical Gear (4)
  • Trump 2024 (9)

Products

  • trump 2024 shirts Trump 2024 Take America Back Eagle T-Shirts $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
  • trump 2024 hat Trump MAGA Embroidered Make America Great Again Hat $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
  • trump 2024 tumbler 2024 Trump Save America Again Coffee Mug 11 Oz $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
  • trump 2024 baseball cap Donald Trump 2024 Make America Great Again Hat $14.99 Original price was: $14.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.
  • trump stickers 2024 Trump 2024 The Revenge Tour Stickers $14.99 Original price was: $14.99.$8.99Current price is: $8.99.
Truly Right View

© 2025 Truly Right View

Navigate Site

  • Politics
  • Real News
  • Trusted News
  • Laugh With Us
  • Be Prepared!
  • Patriot Shop
  • Truly Right View

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Politics
    • Trump 2024
    • US Elections
  • Real News
    • About Truly Right View
    • Truth Exposed
    • Vaccine Issues
    • Censorship
    • Election Fraud
    • US Deep State Coup
    • US Health Services
    • Climate Hoax
    • 2000 Mules Video
  • Trusted News
    • Tucker Carlson Truths
    • Epoch Times
    • Crossroads with Joshua Philipp
    • Crossroads Live Q&A with Joshua Philipp
    • Blaze Media
    • Glenn Beck
    • Steve Deace Show
    • Sara Gonzales Unfiltered
    • Chad Prather Show
    • Fearless with Jason Whitlock
    • One American News
    • NTD
    • NTD News Today
  • Laugh With Us
  • Be Prepared!
    • Restoring America
    • Government Corruption
    • Gods Plan
    • Economic Financial Collapse
    • Survival Plans
  • Patriot Shop
    • Patriot Clothing Gear Spotlights
    • Survival Apparel
    • Survival Gear
  • Truly Right View

© 2025 Truly Right View

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used.