arildno said:
Incorrect.
He presents absolutely no evidence for his web of assertions. Thus, there is no need to "address" his argument further than just that. It is sufficient, due to the lack of evidence from his side.
Granted, he doesn't provide any real evidence in the web clip. However, given the nature of that clip, I would argue that it would be inappropriate to really do more than articulate his point of view. If he wrote a book on it (which I'm sure he did), that would be the place I would look for real evidence.
As it stands, many large corporations and conglomerates overwhelmingly support the Republican Party. Most main stream news outlets are owned by large corporations or conglomerates. Therefore, it seems that it would be in the interests of news outlets to support the particular interests of whatever corporations own them and these corporate interest are most likely conservative.
You also have the problem with advertising, something which is necessary for any major news outlet. In 2003, a Fox News executive said, "The problem with being associated as liberal is that [it] wouldn't be going in a direction that advertisers are really interested in... If you go out and say that you are a liberal network, you are cutting your potential audience, and certainly your potential advertising pool, right off the bat." Granted, this is a Fox News executive and I didn't get the quote from the best source*.
I realize that none of this proves Chomsky's argument, all of it is really speculation. But I think that it suggests that Chomsky might be able to produce some evidence to support (at least some of) his claims.
*
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2595
Indeed. Precisely because he, throughout his entire life, has been incapable of producing evidence.
Evidence? If you keep making claims and declaring them as absolutes without any real evidence whatsoever, are you any better than Chomsky?
Incorrect. Dismissing him as a crackpot is the highest rational assessment of him.
It does nothing to directly address the argument, so it's a logical fallacy. If you happen to address his argument
and point out that he's a crackpot, then sure, that would actually help your argument (assuming you can establish that he is one). But as of this moment, all you've really done is call him a crackpot and provide maybe two or three examples of a liberal bias in the media. Not only do those examples not even remotely prove a systematic liberal media bias, they don't address Chomsky's argument.
It certainly does, because he never has any evidence whatsoever for his assertions.
Again, evidence? An example or two does nothing to show a systematic liberal bias and does nothing to address the role of the publisher.
Respectable?
Who? His students?
Howard Zinn and a number of other historians who regularly cite some of his work.