2015-09-11



Since most sane conservatives can only handle liberals in small doses, I have decided to pepper the list of the most dangerous liberals on TV, with some of the most sensible conservatives on TV. It is my hope that as much as reading about the liberals and the things they’ve done will make your blood boil, these other clips will balance you out a bit. Enjoy!

In the first video, I’m not sure how they got Debbie Wasserman Schultz to sound so funny to make this video. From the liberal in this clip you can expect more of the usual nonsense. We need more of the Fairness Doctrine, the Tea Party is a national threat, Fox News is the Great Satan, blah blah. Same old, same old. The liberal chick (they love being called that) is quick to point out there are more important things than making sure you got all the facts right for a story, like having good intentions. When questioned about the double standard and total hypocrisy, the peach of a lady is quick to enlighten the young man that it’s not “hypocrisy, but rather she was being ‘unintentionally ironic.’” According to her, that’s a very “trendy” way to speak these days…

MY GOSH… YOU CAN’T EVEN MAKE THIS STUFF UP…

Rachel Maddow



Maddow is so partisan and outspoken she makes Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews look like reasonable individuals, she is, without a doubt, the creme de la creme of leftist ideologues at MSNBC.

Maddow was born in Castro Valley, California. Her father, Robert B. “Bob” Maddow, was a Captain in the United States Air Force . Maddow has stated that her family is “very, very Catholic,” and she grew up in a community that her mother described as “very conservative.”

Maddow was a competitive athlete and participated in three sports in high school: volleyball, basketball, and swimming. A graduate of Castro Valley High School in Castro Valley, California, she attended Stanford University. Maddow earned a degree in public policy at Stanford in 1994.

In April 2005, Maddow’s weekday two-hour radio program, The Rachel Maddow Show, began airing; in March 2008 it gained an hour.  In June 2005, Maddow became a regular panelist on the MSNBC show Tucker. During and after the November 2006 election, she was a frequent guest on CNN’s Paula Zahn Now; she was also a correspondent for The Advocate Newsmagazine, an LGBT-oriented short-form news magazine for Logo deriving its content from news items published by The Advocate. In January 2008, Maddow became an MSNBC political analyst and was a regular panelist on MSNBC’s Race for the White House with David Gregory and MSNBC’s election coverage, as well as a frequent contributor on Countdown with Keith Olbermann.

While she hosts a variety of radio and television shows, Rachel is most known for her show, The Rachel Maddow Show. After being on the air for more than a month, Maddow’s program doubled the audience in the time slot (which is not too difficult when you work at MSNBC).

Anchoring her own show made Maddow the first openly gay or lesbian host of a prime-time news program in the United States. Asked about her political views by the Valley Advocate, Maddow replied, “I’m undoubtedly a liberal…” Maddow lives in Manhattan and western Massachusetts with her partner, artist Susan Mikula.

Ezra Klein



Business Insider listed Klein as the most liberal figure in media today. According to Forbes, Klein is “one of the young Turks of liberal Washington blogging” and “cable news channels, newspapers and magazines call on him to see what he thinks.” Make no mistake, Klein’s leftist opinions shape what was once known as news.

Ezra Klein was born and raised in Irvine, CA. Having transferred from UCSC to UCLA, he graduated in 2005 with a Political Science degree. Having been identified as a man of influence in GQ, Klein left his job at The Washington Post and opened a new venture, VOX.

Klein’s greatest attribute is his ability to appeal to a generation that holds high voting power, yet little knowledge and Klein has mastered the art of how to display information that really lacks any information whatsoever, and he is also known for his ability to simply bounce from one topic to another.

His dominance over Wonkblog at The Washington Post, allowed him to be recognized by a mass market of Internet users. This stint brought him fame and he began to branch out to many other media outlets. Providing commentary for Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell allowed him to saturate multiple demographic pools and influence both young and old.

His illogical representation of Health Care and how socioeconomic status influences health, makes him an appealing commodity to the left-of-center crowd. Raised Jewish, he currently claims to be an agnostic.

His detractors say that his indecision as to where to go next with his career and his poor judgement make him a wild card unworthy of touching. Klein was once quoted as saying, “You are never going to have, in a country as rich as ours [the USA], that borders a country as poor as Mexico, an end to immigration. You just won’t. The question is, if you make it humane and if you make it regulated. It’s much better for an American worker to compete against a regulated immigrant inside labor standards, than it is to ever to compete against an illegal immigrant.

Katie Couric

Couric has a reputation as a “mainstream” television personality, but her views are very liberal and she is not afraid to engage in advocacy on the airwaves. The Media Research Center once said; “Katie Couric has often used her perch to salute her liberal heroes (including Hillary Clinton and Jimmy Carter) or complain about ‘right-wing conservatives.’ In her years on Today, She’s lectured Charlton Heston about the need for gun control, championed the need for campaign finance ‘reform,’ and even touted the wonders of France’s nanny state.”

Born to a mother who was a part time writer and a father who was a public relations executive and news editor at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the United Press in Washington, D.C., it can be said that Couric was destined for a life in journalism from the start. She was born and raised in Arlington, VA where she attended public schools. She attended college at the University of Virginia and graduated in 1979 with a degree in English. Throughout school, Couric engaged with multiple projects that promoted her writing and journalism experiences, much to the excitement of her parents.

Couric’s career has moved her all over the place over the years. She has worked for the major television networks; ABC, CNN, CBS, NBC; and was a regular host on the Today show. In 2004, Couric earned induction into the Television Hall of Fame. In November 2013, Yahoo! CEO Marissa Mayer made a bold move and hired Couric as the Global Anchor of Yahoo! News.  Couric began the new role on January 13, 2014, by hosting an interview with former United States Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. She also famously interviewed United States Secretary of State John Kerry.

In March 2015, Yahoo collaborated with ABC and began using Couric and other Yahoo editors to appear in daily segments on Good Morning America. The partnership allowed Couric to have a spot in the ABC News division, as a special contributor.

Couric married attorney John Paul “Jay” Monahan in 1989. They had two children together before Monahan died of colon cancer in 1998 at the age of 42. Couric then became a spokeswoman for colon cancer awareness and is infamous for conducting a colonoscopy on live television.

She was dubbed “Americas Sweetheart” for the time she spent on the Today show and her ability to sway the public via her good girl image has allowed her to get away with taking very liberal editorialized stances on many political and social topics without feeling a great deal of heat and that’s the primary reason why she included on this list.

Mother Jones:

According to Business Insider, Mother Jones is the second most liberal publication in the country, second only to The Nation and it beats out both the far-Left Daily Kos and Salon.

Mother Jones or MoJo as it is commonly known by its most loyal followers, is an American magazine featuring news reporting on politics, the environment, human rights, and culture. Clara Jeffery serves as editor. Steve Katz has been publisher since 2010 and Monika Bauerlein has been CEO since 2015.

Past editors include a Who’s Who of the Left such as Michael Moore, Adam Hochschild, Paul Jacobs, Richard Parker, Deborah Johnson, Jeffrey Bruce Klein, Mark Dowie, Amanda Spake, Zina Klapper, and Deirdre English.

The magazine was named after Mary Harris Jones, known as Mother Jones, an Irish-American trade union activist and opponent of child labor. The stated mission of Mother Jones is to produce revelatory journalism that in its power and reach informs and inspires a more just and democratic world.

Staying true to its core, Mother Jones has been known to slander such political figures as Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney. It highlights american corporations such as ExxonMobile, Beckett Brown International and GM.

Mother Jones is published by the Foundation for National Progress, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) leftist organization. Mother Jones and the FNP are based in San Francisco, with other offices in Washington, D.C., and New York. The magazine is produced bi-monthly, with 200,000 copies circulated every issue.

In addition to stories from the print magazine, MotherJones.com offers original reported content seven days a week. During the 2008 presidential election campaign, MotherJones.com was the first to report John McCain’s “100 years in Iraq” comment. Also in 2008, MotherJones.com was the first outlet to report on Beckett Brown International, a security firm that spied on environmental groups for corporations.

Because of its publication power and reach Mother Jones is one of the most hated publications of the Right.

While its audience is small, it is very influential and its longevity and representation in print, web and radio has created a strong channel of communication for liberals.

Responsive Three

Since most sane conservatives can only handle liberals in small doses, I have decided to pepper the list of the most dangerous liberals on TV, with some of the most sensible conservatives on TV. It is my hope that as much as reading about the liberals and the things they’ve done will make your blood boil, these other clips will balance you out a bit. Enjoy!

In the second video, Megyn Kelly was comparing the chants between Tea Party groups, and angry Black Lies Matter rhetoric. Megyn pulls up some clips from the typical liberal boobs that are quick to run their mouths, and shows them for the asses that they are. Front and center on film in 2011 was Debbie Wasserman Schultz who was “appalled” by Tea Party chants to “Read the Bill,” but just last week she was out praising Black Lies Matter despite their chants for “Pigs in a blanket, Let’s fry some bacon.” Liberals are such human filth.



Andrew Sullivan:

Forbes hits the nail on the head when it says that Sullivan “clings unconvincingly to the ‘conservative’ label… His advocacy for gay marriage rights and his tendency to view virtually everything through a ‘gay’ prism puts him at odds with many on the right.”

Andrew Sullivan is a British-born author, editor and blogger, who has long resided in the United States and has since become a naturalized citizen. He was a pioneer of the political blog, starting his in 2000. A former editor of The New Republic and the author or editor of six books, Sullivan often claims he has conservative views, yet stands for liberal positions not generally shared by most conservatives.

Born and raised in England, he has lived in the United States since 1984 and currently resides in Washington and Provincetown, Massachusetts. He is openly gay and a practicing Roman Catholic.

Sullivan was born in South Godstone, Surrey, England, into a Roman Catholic family of Irish descent. He studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in Modern History and Modern Languages. In 2001, it was exposed that Sullivan had posted online anonymous advertisements for unprotected anal sex, preferably with “other HIV-positive men.”

On 27 August 2007, Sullivan “married” Aaron Tone in Provincetown, Massachusetts. Sullivan is the author of The Conservative Soul (once again, he claims to be a conservative) and, to be fair, he does hold a number of  Libertarian positions, such as a belief in limited government; however his social and moral views on gay rights and other social issues puts him firmly on the hard-Left.

On a number of controversial public issues, including same-sex marriage, social security, progressive taxation, anti-discrimination laws, ObamaCare, the U.S. government’s use of “torture,” and capital punishment, he takes a position not typically shared by conservatives in the United States.

In late 2000, Sullivan began his blog, The Daily Dish.  Sullivan opposes government involvement with respect to sexual and consensual matters between adults, such as the use of marijuana and prostitution.

Matthew Yglesias:

Matthew Yglesias’s father Rafael Yglesias is a screenwriter , which might explain what pushed him towards writing. His grandfather was novelist Jose Yglesias. Yglesias went to high school at The Dalton School in New York City and later attended Harvard University where he studied philosophy.

Yglesias keeps his private life private but it is known that Yglesias is married with no children to date.

Yglesias started blogging in 2002, while still in college, focusing mainly on American politics and public policy issues. He has also written for a number of liberal publications such as the New York Times Magazine, and has made occasional appearances on radio and television as a political commentator.

Yglesias is often referred to in the blogosphere as Big Media Matt.

Liberals see him as a man who is willing to play on both sides. He once stated that he voted for Mitt Romney when he ran for Governor of Massachusetts. He is also not afraid to be critical of liberals. In fact, he is so well known for his willingness to criticize his own team that Andrew Sullivan takes nominations on his blog for the Yglesias Award, an honor “for writers, politicians, columnists or pundits who actually criticize their own side, make enemies among political allies, and generally risk something for the sake of saying what they believe.”

Yglesias is also somewhat infamous for the many spelling mistakes in his blog posts, a weakness to which he frankly admits.

In February 2014, he joined Vox Media to work on Vox.com with Ezra Klein. Because of Yglesias’s reputation of not always being a team player, he is considered by many to be a wild card and a challenge. Followers claim he can be hard to support when it comes to his opinions and ideas, and it is also said that his youth makes him hard to trust.

Maureen Dawd:

How liberal is Maureen Dowd? Let us count the ways. Dowd once called Congressman Paul Ryan a “fresh face on a Taliban creed.” She has also claimed that Republicans live “to wrestle women into chastity belts” and she called members of the Tea Party in Congress “gargoyles” and “adamantine nihilists” who would love nothing more than to watch the House of Representatives burn to the ground… enough said

Dowd was born into a deeply religious Catholic family, and was the youngest of five children. Her mother was a housewife and her father was a police inspector. She received a B.A. in English from The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.

Dowd began her career in 1974 as an editorial assistant for the Washington Star, where she later became a sports columnist, metropolitan reporter, and feature writer. When the newspaper closed in 1981, she went to work at Time.  Dowd became a columnist on The New York Times Op-Ed page in 1995 and she won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize, for distinguished commentary.

In 2010, Dowd was ranked #43 on The Daily Telegraph’s list of the 100 most influential liberals in America; in 2007, she was ranked #37 on the same list. Dowd, who perceives her columns to be an exploration of politics, Hollywood, and gender related topics, often uses popular culture to support and metaphorically enhance her political commentary. She enjoys dumbing-down major issues and uses pop culture as a way to connect with her audience. Because of this approach it has become hard to identify if Dowd is truly serious in her thoughts or merely trying to gain popularity through connecting with her audience on mundane issues.

Toughing through issues from marijuana to ER doctors, her disillusionment with reality has made her tough to follow due to her inability to truly write about anything with seriousness.  Dowd’s columns have also been described as often being political cartoons that capture a caricatured view of the current political landscape with precision and exaggeration. Dowd is unmarried and has no children. She is infamously known for dating men in Hollywood, including Aaron Sorkin, the creator and producer of The West Wing and having “a brief fling” with actor Michael Douglas.

Finally, Judge Jeanine does what Judge Jeanine does best, and that’s light up Obama like a Christmas tree and puts him and his administration on full blast for the ignorant fools they are with their non-stop failed polices placing us all in danger.

Bill Boyers:

“Moyers, at 74, is the éminence grise of the liberal media.” -Forbes… Eminence grise is French for “grey eminence” and the title is well deserved. No list of the most influential or dangerous liberals in the media is complete without Bill Moyers. Moyers is retired, but liberal journalists never really go away.

Born Billy Don Moyers in Choctaw County in southeastern Oklahoma, he was the son of John Henry Moyers, a laborer. He served as White House Press Secretary in the Johnson administration from 1965 to 1967. Moyers has been involved in public broadcasting for decades, producing documentaries and news journal programs. He has won numerous awards and honorary degrees for his investigative journalism.

Moyers began his journalism career at 16 as a cub reporter at the Marshall News Messenger in Marshall in East Texas. In college, he studied journalism at the North Texas State College in Denton, Texas. In 1954, then-U.S. Senator Lyndon B. Johnson employed him as a summer intern and eventually promoted him to manage his personal mail. Soon thereafter, Moyers transferred to the University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, and in 1956, he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Journalism. During Senator Johnson’s unsuccessful bid for the 1960 Democratic U.S. presidential nomination, Moyers served as a top aide, and in the general campaign he acted as liaison between Democratic vice-presidential candidate Johnson and the Democratic presidential nominee, U.S. Senator John F. Kennedy.

Many people don’t know that Moyers was ordained in 1954 and is a minister. He is married and has three children.

Having worked for numerous media outlets throughout his life, his career has stood the test of time; with some wondering how long he would work. When he retired in December 2004, the AP News Service quoted Moyers as saying, “I’m going out telling the story that I think is the biggest story of our time: how the right-wing media has become a partisan propaganda arm of the Republican National Committee. We have an ideological press that’s interested in the election of Republicans…

Fareed Zakaria:

Fareed Zakaria has “a perch in virtually every medium” according to Forbes.  Put another way, what he lacks in raw ideology, he makes up by virtual of the scope of his influence.

Zakaria was born in Bombay, Maharashtra, India. He was raised in the Muslim faith, his father, Rafiq Zakaria, was a politician and his mother edited local papers. Zakaria attended the Cathedral and John Connon School in Bombay. He received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University, and he later earned a Doctor of Philosophy in Government from Harvard University in 1993.

Zakaria is presently the host of CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS and writes a weekly column for The Washington Post. He is the author of five books, three of them international bestsellers. He is married with three children, residing in New York City.

Zakaria identifies himself as a “centrist” but he is far from the political center and even his fellow liberals view him as a wildcard.

George Stephanopoulos said of him in 2003, “I can’t be sure whenever I turn to him where he’s going to be coming from or what he’s going to say.”

Zakaria stated that he tries not to be devoted to any type of ideology, saying “I feel that’s part of my job… which is not to pick sides but to explain what I think is happening on the ground. I can’t say, ‘This is my team and I’m going to root for them no matter what they do.'”

While the above statement is probably a fair self-assessment, one should never assume that a man is not a liberal simply because he believes he is not listening to the prevailing wisdom when he forms an opinion.

In 2011, the editors of The New Republic included him in a list of “over-rated thinkers” and commented: “There’s something suspicious about a thinker always so perfectly in tune with the moment.”

Zakaria has been involved in a number of major controversies in his career such as his position in the 2003 invasion of Iraq, debate on the Park51 Islamic Center. He has also been accused of  plagiarism.

Shipley

While Shipley is unknown to most in the general public, Shipley used to oversee the most widely read op-ed page in America; and whereas The New York Times is the “paper of record” that every reporter in every newsroom in America turns to as the ultimate source as to what constitutes news and what does not constitute news, Shipley’s influence is not to be underestimated. He truly is the man behind the curtain.

While little is known of Shipley, we do know he was born in Portland, OR. He was married, with two children up to 2005 when he divorced. He acquired his degree from Williams College in Journalism and has been actively working ever since.

He is executive editor of Bloomberg View, managing its editorial page and its associated columnists and op-ed contributors. He was picked for this position in December 2010 and jointly launched Bloomberg View with James P. Rubin in May 2011.

Shipley was formerly the op-ed editor of The New York Times. In 1986, he landed his first journalism job with Simon & Schuster. In 2007, with Will Schwalbe, he co-wrote the book Send: The Essential Guide to Email For Office And Home which was later republished with a secondary title, Send: Why People Email Badly And What To Do About It.

Because of his position with Bloomberg View, his influential power is large and he is known to be a man that is hard to please. Because of his allusiveness, many have dubbed Shipley the “silent killer.”

He is perhaps best known for stating that he “remains a believer in the power and potential of editorials to help us understand the world as it unfolds before us, to help us navigate and even anticipate the twists and turns. I’m also a sucker for the discipline of having a bunch of people, many of whom have very different views, gather around a table to try to come up with thoughtful and realistic solutions or approaches to issues and situations that vex us all. Individual columnists are great but I think in this age of stardom we tend to devalue the collective enterprise, and that’s a mistake.”

Maddow is so partisan and outspoken she makes Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews look like reasonable individuals, she is, without a doubt, the creme de la creme of leftist ideologues at MSNBC.

Maddow was born in Castro Valley, California. Her father, Robert B. “Bob” Maddow, was a Captain in the United States Air Force . Maddow has stated that her family is “very, very Catholic,” and she grew up in a community that her mother described as “very conservative.”

Maddow was a competitive athlete and participated in three sports in high school: volleyball, basketball, and swimming. A graduate of Castro Valley High School in Castro Valley, California, she attended Stanford University. Maddow earned a degree in public policy at Stanford in 1994.

In April 2005, Maddow’s weekday two-hour radio program, The Rachel Maddow Show, began airing; in March 2008 it gained an hour.  In June 2005, Maddow became a regular panelist on the MSNBC show Tucker. During and after the November 2006 election, she was a frequent guest on CNN’s Paula Zahn Now; she was also a correspondent for The Advocate Newsmagazine, an LGBT-oriented short-form news magazine for Logo deriving its content from news items published by The Advocate. In January 2008, Maddow became an MSNBC political analyst and was a regular panelist on MSNBC’s Race for the White House with David Gregory and MSNBC’s election coverage, as well as a frequent contributor on Countdown with Keith Olbermann.

While she hosts a variety of radio and television shows, Rachel is most known for her show, The Rachel Maddow Show. After being on the air for more than a month, Maddow’s program doubled the audience in the time slot (which is not too difficult when you work at MSNBC).

Anchoring her own show made Maddow the first openly gay or lesbian host of a prime-time news program in the United States. Asked about her political views by the Valley Advocate, Maddow replied, “I’m undoubtedly a liberal…” Maddow lives in Manhattan and western Massachusetts with her partner, artist Susan Mikula.

Read the article at Conservative America here

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