Semantic Warfare of the Left Series: Rhetorical Tactics

Political conflict is rarely driven merely by laws, elections, or economics. Long before public policy changes, language changes. Words shape moral imagination. Repetition alters social assumptions. Cultural narratives influence what citizens consider compassionate, hateful, reasonable, or extreme. Modern political battles are therefore increasingly rhetorical battles. Many conservatives believe the modern American left has become especially…

Media Hall of Fame Series: Fox News

In the modern American media ecosystem, no outlet has been more synonymous with conservative news than Fox News. Since its founding in 1996 by media mogul Rupert Murdoch and former Nixon and Reagan advisor Roger Ailes, Fox News has grown from a fledgling upstart into the most-watched cable news network in the country. It is…

Media Hall of Fame Series: The Post Millennial

In an era of mass censorship, politicized violence, and inverted morality, The Post Millennial (TPM) has emerged as one of the most audacious truth-tellers in the modern media landscape. Launched in Canada and growing in influence across the United States, TPM made its mark by covering what legacy outlets feared to touch: Antifa riots, gender…

Media Hall of Fame Series: CBN News

In an age where the mainstream media industry is awash in relativism, selective outrage, and secular dogma, CBN News stands out as a powerful exception—one that not only reports the truth but does so with spiritual conviction and biblical clarity. As the news arm of the Christian Broadcasting Network, CBN News brings something few other…

Media Hall of Fame Series: The Daily Wire

In an era where once-trusted media institutions have succumbed to the dogmas of progressivism, where truth is sacrificed on the altar of narrative, and where many conservative outlets tread lightly for fear of cancellation, The Daily Wire stands apart. Bold. Unapologetic. Effective. Founded in 2015 by Ben Shapiro and Jeremy Boreing, The Daily Wire began…

Media Hall of Fame Series: GB News (UK)

In an era where much of the British press has surrendered to ideological conformity, corporate groupthink, or government appeasement, GB News has emerged as a beacon of dissent, common sense, and free inquiry. Launched in 2021, GB News was widely mocked by its progressive media rivals. But rather than crumble under the weight of criticism,…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Buzzfeed

Founded in 2006 by Jonah Peretti, BuzzFeed began as a viral content experiment that combined listicles, quizzes, memes, and pop culture commentary with a growing appetite for “internet-native” news. Its early success was driven by shareable clickbait headlines and social media optimization rather than journalistic rigor. Over time, it attempted to evolve into a serious…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Daily Beast

The Daily Beast was founded in 2008 by Tina Brown, the former editor of Vanity Fair and The New Yorker, with financial backing from media conglomerate IAC/InterActiveCorp. IAC, chaired by Barry Diller (a longtime Hollywood and media powerbroker), has owned a wide array of digital properties including Match.com, Vimeo, Investopedia, and People Media. It also…

Media Hall of Shame Series: The Atlantic

The Atlantic carries itself as a publication of gravitas—serious, literary, urbane. It appeals to readers who see themselves as thoughtful and enlightened, citizens of the world rather than mere inhabitants of a nation. Founded in 1857 by abolitionists and intellectuals like Ralph Waldo Emerson and Harriet Beecher Stowe, The Atlantic has long framed itself as…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Discovery Now!

Discovery Now! is the kind of name that inspires wonder. With its bright visuals, trendy narration, and dynamic programming, it presents itself as a digital-age platform for “curious minds” and lifelong learners. A newer face in the media landscape, Discovery Now! has sought to blend educational content with pop culture relevance, aspiring to become a…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Rolling Stone

Rolling Stone magazine was once the iconic voice of the American counterculture. Founded in 1967 amid the swirl of psychedelic music, Vietnam protests, and youthful rebellion, it captured the spirit of a generation demanding freedom from “the Man.” But decades later, Rolling Stone no longer fights “the system”—it is the system, echoing the ideological demands of modern…

Media Hall of Shame Series: NPR

Among American media outlets, few possess the aura of quiet authority and intellectual charm quite like NPR (National Public Radio). With its calm-voiced hosts, refined music interludes, and thoughtful long-form features, NPR has cultivated a public image of credibility, civility, and sophistication. For many of its loyal listeners—especially on college campuses, in coffee shops, and…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Reuters

Among global news organizations, Reuters occupies a distinctive position. It is not known for flashy anchors, primetime punditry, or ideological screeds. Instead, Reuters wears the mantle of a straight-laced wire service, supplying raw news to newspapers, websites, financial firms, and governments around the world. In many ways, its reputation for neutrality rivals that of the…

Media Hall of Shame Series: ABC News

ABC News, the news division of the American Broadcasting Company, is one of the most recognized and trusted names in American media. For decades, it carried an aura of dependability and respectability, largely shaped by the gravitas of figures like Peter Jennings and Barbara Walters. For many baby boomers and Gen Xers, ABC News represented…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News is often presented as the grown-up in the room: sober, data-driven, and immune to the hysterics of legacy broadcast networks. Its target audience isn’t the average voter—it’s the policymaker, the hedge fund manager, the international bureaucrat. With its vast network of reporters and global presence, Bloomberg offers financial news, economic forecasts, and business…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Associated Press (AP)

The Associated Press (AP) enjoys one of the most prestigious reputations in global journalism. It’s often referred to as the “gold standard” for objective, fact-based reporting. Its wire service feeds newspapers, broadcasters, and digital platforms around the world—its content reaching more than half the globe’s population on any given day. For decades, the AP symbolized…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Jacobin

Jacobin is not your typical news outlet with a thin veneer of objectivity hiding a partisan agenda. It is, proudly and openly, a socialist publication, founded in 2010 by Bhaskar Sunkara and based in New York City. Though rooted in the United States, it draws heavily from European Marxist traditions and global Leftist thinkers. It…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Wikipedia

Wikipedia presents itself as a free, crowd-sourced online encyclopedia “that anyone can edit,” a claim that seems democratic and open-minded on the surface. However, this anonymity and openness mask an entrenched ideological ecosystem shaped not by the average contributor, but by a relatively small group of senior editors, moderators, and administrators. These gatekeepers enforce not…

Media Hall of Shame Series: Insider

Originally launched in 2007 as Business Insider, the outlet began with a focus on financial and tech news but has since expanded into a wide-ranging digital platform known simply as Insider. Under the leadership of co-founder Henry Blodget—a former Wall Street analyst banned from the securities industry for fraud—Insider quickly adopted a brash, attention-grabbing style…