Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 6, 2014
It is interesting and educational to view television news, not because you can learn much or be intellectually stimulated by the content, but because of how much it says about the state of modern society that they watch this circus and actually believe that it is somehow representing reality.
As I’ve been back in the US over the last couple of months, I’ve spent a lot of time with my aged Grandmother, and thus seen quite a bit of Fox News. It is, generally, as ridiculous as everyone jokes that it is. Perhaps not as bad as the liberal stations – or at least not as bad as the dyke or that Paki who they fired for saying he wanted to poop in Sarah Palin’s mouth, and those are the only two liberal show hosts I’ve seen in a while. But they are all unbelievable and surreal, like something out of a Philip K. Dick novel.
This morning, I happened to come across this show, Political Insider, featuring Fox News producer Martin Hinton as a guest. It is like a relic from the 1980s.
The show just seemed very normal, like something from PBS, and I enjoyed it. Nothing particularly meaningful about it, but certain bits seemed almost honest, and it did not rely on sensationalism and flashing CGI graphics.
Hinton began by saying that the American people have no desire to go into the Ukraine. I had assumed that there was a mandate that these people are not allowed to say anything of that sort.
Mentioning the loss of freedoms and the centralization of control under the President, he also seemed to take a reasonable approach, much different than Sean Hannity, who used the “if you have nothing to hide, why can’t they watch you?” line when Bush was in office, and then decided he cared when Obongo got caught doing it.
Note that I am not in any way endorsing Fox News or either of these individuals – the host is clearly a Jew and the guest may have been as well. I just found the tone and the overall presentation hardly fit into the agenda they have there, and this was interesting.