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Wealthy journalists have a conflict of interest in covering Bernie Sanders.
Bernie's positions on taxing the wealthy are likely to bias wealthy journalists who write cover him him and moderate debates. As an example of a journalist whose personal financial interests might influence coverage, consider Sydney Ember who covers Bernie Sanders for the New York Times. Her husband is a hedge-fund employee, and her father-in-law is the CEO of Bain and Company. She stands to lose tens of millions of dollars (or more) under a more progressive tax policy (both income and estate taxes). Another example, Anderson Cooper is worth over $100 million. Thus, this petition to require moderators of the Democratic candidate debates to release their tax returns: [change.org]

TXLarry 5 Mar 22
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Wouldn't poor journalists be inclined to give overly favorable coverage to Bernie because they would stand to gain, instead of lose?

All coverage is slanted to some extent, it's up to us as consumers to read/watch/hold our gag reflex in check to try and figure out when and where it is.

1of5 Level 8 Mar 23, 2019

How many poor journalists have you seen moderate a debate on national tv? They may be diverse with regard to race and gender, but not economically.

@TXLarry none, but then I don't watch tv debates because they're anything but.

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My first response to the first couple of sentences was "There are wealthy journalists?" But after reading the rest of it, I see that it could be a good idea.

😀

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