NPR's beclouded notion of truth is convenient for journalists who, unfettered by any allegiance to objectivity, are free to choose whichever of the “many different truths” best align with their activist narratives.
In the April 9 installment of Bari Weiss’ The Free Press, Uri Berliner, a senior editor at National Public Radio, spilled the few credibility beans remaining in public radio’s corporate pot. According to the 25-year veteran of NPR, the organization’s initial stage-one bias has aggressively metastasized to produce a decline and homogenization of its listening audience. To put a finer point on it…