Blaming BLM for Homicide Rise—and Excusing Massive Spike in Gun Sales
Media show a striking lack of interest in the massive increase in gun sales as a driver of shootings and homicides.
FAIR is the national progressive media watchdog group, challenging corporate media bias, spin and misinformation.


Media show a striking lack of interest in the massive increase in gun sales as a driver of shootings and homicides.


Because stories of youth resistance are powerful and deserve to be told, it’s time to reevaluate the way that media have been telling them.


“Regurgitating claims that the Second Amendment somehow impedes us from doing anything about this problem is a real hindrance, I think, to the kind of conversations we have publicly about this issue.”


Many are simply fed up with the idea that change is too hard. Will media conversation shift to keep up with them?


“It’s not to anyone’s benefit to intimidate voters. It’s not to anyone’s benefit to have armed, non-publicly accountable individuals, private armies, on the streets.”


Unlawful militias manage to be part of the political landscape while somehow escaping rigorous media scrutiny.


“We can’t continue to work in silos of doing this gun violence work, that urban areas’ gun violence, domestic violence, suicide rates from gun violence, all talked about in the report, all tie together, and you have to come together as one human community to really address these issues.”


Vast majorities of Americans support serious regulation, but corporate media debate still seems to revolve around the supposed “rights” of the few, rather than the right of the many to live a life free from this scourge.


Please ask USA Today not to inflame the gun control debate with clickbait headlines.


While radio hosts like Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Michael Savage indoctrinated older demographics in conspiratorial right-wing politics in recent decades, right-wing YouTube videos serve the same purpose for younger age groups.


This is Hollywood’s relationship with the gun industry: When you put a gun on screen, people are going to want to buy it, regardless of whether it’s used by good guys or bad guys,


“The military is attempting to put as many adolescent fingers around as many triggers as possible. They understand the impact, the psychological lure, of firing a weapon.”


The NRA is a bit of a paper tiger, and I think more and more legislators will find that out as they challenge the NRA.


If Americans really want to stop being “the only country where this happens,” which keeps officially claiming there’s “no way to prevent” it, it will require not just deep examination of the multiple roots of mass violence of this sort, but also an approach to political processes that keeps its eye on the prize of real change.


Reporting on the epidemic of mass shootings, All Things Considered gave a platform to the gun debate’s equivalents of anti-vaxxers, and gave no scrutiny to their claim that more guns are the solution to gun violence.


I have noticed that so many people like him are all alone and unknown, yet when they spill a little blood, the whole world knows who they are. A man who was known by no one is now known by everyone. His face splashed across every screen, his name across the lips of every person […]


The Supreme Court case of Gill v. Whitford, deciding whether the way Wisconsin Republicans redrew voting districts in 2011 amounted to “an aggressive partisan gerrymander,” touches on nothing less than whether the US can ever become the democracy so many hope for.


I found two graphics on the gun crisis particularly interesting: one because it brought hope, and the other because it blew that hope away.


Concealing a Spy Who Hid Torture; Misremembering Thatcher; PBS’s Debate on Social Security


On two Sunday shows this weekend, the hosts made the same point about the White House’s plan for modest gun control efforts: The public isn’t going along. Oddly, they both ignored their own networks’ polling that would have undermined their argument.

FAIR is the national progressive media watchdog group, challenging corporate media bias, spin and misinformation. We work to invigorate the First Amendment by advocating for greater diversity in the press and by scrutinizing media practices that marginalize public interest, minority and dissenting viewpoints. We expose neglected news stories and defend working journalists when they are muzzled. As a progressive group, we believe that structural reform is ultimately needed to break up the dominant media conglomerates, establish independent public broadcasting and promote strong non-profit sources of information.
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