Saturday, August 26, 2017

Mismanaged, money-losing, mendacious MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS "Doubled Down" on Right-wingedness in Ten Months Before Fire Sale to GateHouse (Politico)

Liberation from fascism is at hand. The final days are here. In only 36 days, MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS will no longer own The St. Augustine Record. In the year before its $120 million fire sale of eleven newspapers to GateHouse, MORRIS was one of the few newspapers anywhere to endorse insane billionaire DONALD JOHN TRUMP for President. And MORRIS also issued an insanely right-wing tabloid editorial insert around the time of the inauguration of Herr TRUMP, while starting a right-wing website full of fascist opinions. It all makes sense now, like the Final Days of President RICHARD MILHOUS NIXO, doesn't it?

Here's A.G. Gankarski's story from Florida Politics from earlier this year:


Florida Times-Union writer featured on Morris Communication





Morris Communications, the parent company of the Florida Times-Union and the St. Augustine Record, launched a right-wing website recently.
(Note: the headline is not redundant, so save your jokes.)
The company, which created a kerfuffle last year by endorsing Donald Trump as an “agent of change” in the T-U and other corporate properties, has doubled down on its position with the launch of Crossroads for America.
The website does not appear to be affiliated with Karl Rove‘s PAC, American Crossroads.
However, the sentiments contained within Crossroads for America, a look at “government at the crossroads” and “challenges in today’s democracy,” would likely be endorsed by George W. Bush‘s former strategist.
A few of the articles up on the site on Wednesday morning were written by Mike Clark, the editorial page editor of the T-U, including the one promoted Tuesday evening by the local Jacksonville paper.
On the site, Clark takes issue with the national debt, using muscular language like “We know what needs to be done. Now we need leaders to take action.”
What “needs to be done,” asserts Clark: cutting entitlement programs.
“That is where President Donald Trump comes in. He is bold, he isn’t worried about political correctness and he certainly isn’t playing the Washington spin game,” Clark asserts.
In “Obamacare Will Not Cure Nation’s Ills,” Clark takes his scalpel to the Affordable Care Act.
Happily, the House of Representatives has the palliative care for which America clamors, Clark writes.
“There are a variety of good Republican plans in the mix such as the Better Way plan from Rep. Paul Ryan or the recently released plan from the Republican Study Group,” the T-U editorialist asserts.
“Here is what Americans can expect from the Republican president and Congress: More choices. Less government control. Access favored over guarantees. More individual responsibility. More simplicity, less complexity,” Clark contends.
Clark avoids El Presidente’s campaign call to build a wall and let Mexico pay for it (the check is in the mail!) in his essay solving the problems regarding illegal immigration.
However, the editorialist does find time to cite anti-immigration advocate Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies and not the Florida State soccer coach, below the virtual fold.
Krikorian, when he Skyped in as a Florida House committee witness in Tallahassee recently, occasioned a walkout by the Democrats on hand.
House Majority Leader Janet Cruz called Krikorian a “white nationalist,” reported our own Mitch Perry, who spotlighted one of Krikorian’s provocative positions (“Haiti’s so screwed up because it wasn’t colonized long enough”) in the piece.
Jacksonville residents made a lot of noise about cancelling newspaper subscriptions in the wake of the Times-Union endorsement of Trump (a position not shared on the news side).
Frank Denton, in his editorial role, punted on accountability for that endorsement, saying it’s a corporate position.
And it looks like corporate has doubled down on that pro-Trump stance, and will continue to as long as the Morris family owns newspapers.  (Emphasis added).

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