this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2023
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[–] Linkerbaan 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There are few articles that are not favorable to the IDF in there but they are few and far between. You could then also say that Aljazeera is fully factual and unbiased since they also publish negative stories about Hamas or Qatar sometimes. And I'm not even going to take the stance that Aljazeera is unbiased.

The word "cruel" in that title is not a quote. It is a word they injected there themselves.

Journalism is impartial when it doesn't try to inject unnecessary fluff wording and presents the facts as they are. Words like "evil" or "cruel" should very rarely be used, especially in this case when somehow an announcement is cruel??

Putting every article (and even titles) full of propaganda quotes that add nothing to the factuality is not unbiased nor is it even factual as most of the IDF quotes are straight up disinformation. Nor are the attributions done to a person. A lot of the time it's "IDF spokesperson said " at which point there's not even a name attached to the quote.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

The word “cruel” in that title is not a quote. It is a word they injected there themselves.

Then why is it in quotation marks? How come it occurs in the IDF's description of Hamas' claim? Just coincidence? How come they put it in quotation marks, unlike "brutal" or "abuse" in the IDF one? That's how quotes work in English journalism, at other times people are complaining when e.g. the Guardian titles, say "Crowd impressed by 'beautiful' flower display", using quotes around beautiful because they interviewed someone and 'beautiful' is the term they used, while "crowd impressed" is the Guardian's own judgement of the situation.

A lot of the time it’s "IDF spokesperson said " at which point there’s not even a name attached to the quote.

Statements by IDF spokespersons are not statements of the person but of the IDF.


Seriously, you should brush up on your media competency. But for completeness' sake: Aljazeera English by and large isn't half-bad in most cases, just make sure to not consider them neutral as soon as it concerns anything the Qatari government has a strong opinion about. Also they aren't always properly thorough e.g. Hamas never claimed 500 dead at Al-Shifa.

[–] Linkerbaan -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Half a quote is not a quote. A single word from a quote is not a quote. Either you quote a whole sentence or you don't. Learn what quoting is.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

You've seriously never came across those "Crowd impressed by 'beautiful' flower display" headlines? Read more newspapers then I'd say. It's standard practice at least in British and British-influenced journalism, that's not up to debate it's a fact.