Thank goodness for the alternative press

There is no media in the Old Media

(NaturalNews) In another sign of the weakening "influence" of the mainstream media, not one of the major scandals currently swirling around the Obama Administration were broken by what you could fairly call theFact: Over the past few weeks, three major scandals have broken over the Obama Administration, and it is a very sad (and frightening) truth that our pathetic, American, lapdog mainstream media are not responsible for breaking even a single one," writes John Nolte inBig Journalism section.He goes onto note that the three scandals - involving the IRS; NSA/Verizon phone records; the Justice Department's improper seizure ofphone records; and Benghazi - were either broken by foreign media or the so-called U.S. alternative media (of whichis a proud member).The Verizon story was broken by The Guardian , a British newspaper (the whistleblower in this case, 29-year-old Edward Snowden, an NSA analyst, probably didn't trust anyone in the U.S. with this story).How about the IRS' improper targeting of conservative political action groups? Again, that story was broken "with a planted question," Nolte points out.In the case of the Justice Department's targeting of AP reporters and editors, evenfailed to break that story; it only emerged after the Justice Department notified the AP what had occurred, so essentially, the department tattled on itself.And Benghazi? Again,. Even though there was plenty of smoke there, the mainstream media - which has been in bed with Obama since day one of his initial campaign - took a pass en mass. There were a few exceptions, most notably Jake Tapper and Sharyl Attkission, but other than that, only Republican members of Congress andhave been aggressively seeking the truth about what actually took place there when our ambassador, Christopher Stevens, was killed and brutalized."Left up to the media , we wouldn't know anything about Libya. All of the media's energy was collectively poured into ensuring the truth was never discovered," Nolte wrote. "And do you want to know what makes this realization especially pathetic? In three of the four scandals (the AP being the exception), had our media been less interested in protecting Power and more interested in holding Power accountable, these huge, career-making stories were right there for the taking."What's more, the media has been extremely hypocritical (no kidding) on some of these scandals. Take the IRS' targeting of Tea Party groups.In early June an editorial published by the editorial staff atwas highly critical of the president over his administration's targeting of the phone records of millions of Americans, all in the name of. And rightfully so; it is an abuse of the Fourth Amendment like no other in the history of the country.But more than a year before the IRS scandal broke, the was all about having the nation's tax collection agency target those very same groups."But because Obama told them to, the media hate the Tea Party. So in the face of these complaints and even a few Congressional inquiries, the media either ignored the harassment reports or openly sided with the IRS," wrote Nolte.The same thing can be said about what happened in Libya. Because Barack Obama was in reelection mode; and because the mainstream media was all-in to help him get reelected; and because the president's reelection narrative on terrorism in general was that al Qaeda was on the run - the mainstream press willingly went along and refused to dig deeper on Benghazi. Had that failed operation been scrutinized, many more Americans would have known before Election Day that the administration essentially sacrificed Stevens and three other Americans for the sake of political expediency."Our media are not only biased; it is an utter and complete failure and embarrassment. And although there are plenty of remaining table scraps to make meals out of, the media are already losing interest in the IRS, Libya, and AP scandals, but for only one reason - they are absolutely terrified of where they might lead," Nolte writes.