
Media Bias Chart
Source: Ad Fontes Media 8/24

Media Bias Chart
Source: Ad Fontes Media 8/24
Washington Post photo.

Continuing saga of the Kansas police chief vs. Marion County Record. Cop now charged with a felony. Raid a newspaper and an editor’s home – FAFO.
Article in the Washington Post on 8/13/24 by Ben Brasch and Sofia Andrade.
Headline: “Ex-police chief who led raid on Kansas newspaper faces felony charge”
“The Aug. 11, 2023, raid of the Marion County Record’s newsroom and the home of its editor and publisher, Eric Meyer, brought the nation’s attention to a county of 12,000 residents roughly 60 miles north of Wichita. The raid sparked national outrage from press freedom advocates.”

From The Guardian article of 8/9/24 by Redwan Ahmed and Kaamil Ahmed.
Headline: “Bangladeshi journalists hopeful of press freedom as Hasina era ends”
Recently the authoritarian leader Sheikh Hasina fled the country after protesters forced her out. This followed years of oppressive rule and censorship of the press.
“Arrests, abuse and forced disappearances at the hands of Bangladesh’s security forces have loomed over journalists for most of Hasina’s 15-year rule, preventing them from routine reporting for fear of writing anything that could be perceived as embarrassing for the government.”

Article by Sherman Smith in the Kansas Reflector, 8/4/24:
Headline: “Judge who authorized Kansas newspaper raid escapes discipline with secret conflicting explanation”
About a year ago in August, 2023, a national news article article by Joseph O’Connell in the Washington Post, reported that the police raided a Kansas newspaper. The Marion County Record was exposing alleged corruption in the city government.
Now reported in an article on 8/4/24 by Sherman Smith in the Kansas Reflector you may follow this link to read the story:
(The original article may be found on this website’s August, 2023 archive):

From The Guardian article by Sakhidad Hatif on 5/1/24
Headline: “The Taliban targeted us, beat us and chased us out. This is how we run our Afghan newspaper from exile”
“In the two decades before the Taliban returned to power, Afghanistan had vibrant media sector. There were newspapers, television channels, periodicals, magazines and more, invigorating the public discourse by allowing citizens to express their views on national and local issues. That is completely gone”
Headline: “Missouri AG sues Media Matters over its X research, demands donor names – Media watchdog clams ‘meritless, expensive, and harassing investigations.'”
From Ars Technca, Article by Jon Brodkin 4/26/24
“Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey yesterday in an attempt to protect Elon Musk and X from the nonprofit watchdog group’s investigations into hate speech on the social network. Bailey’s claims that “Media Matters has used fraud to solicit donations from Missourians in order to trick advertisers into removing their advertisements from X, formerly Twitter, one of the last platforms
dedicated to free speech in America.”

An image obtained by The Associated Press shows an unidentified detainee standing on a box with a bag on his head and wires attached to him in late 2003 at the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, Iraq. – from NPR.
Headline: “Correct a black mark in US history’: former prisoners of Abu Ghraib get day in court”
Article by Alice Speri in The Guardian 4/14/24.
//www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2024/apr/14/abu-ghraib-iraq-torture-abuse
This week marked the 30th anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda. This book describes what happened when it was stopped and a new government took over. Another casualty was a free and vibrant

Source: Reporters Without Borders
