The U.S. Press Loves To Pretend Widespread Corruption Doesn't Exist
The U.S. Press Loves To Pretend Widespread Corruption Doesn't Exist
The U.S. Press Loves To Pretend Widespread Corruption Doesn't Exist
Despite widespread U.S. corruption being anything but subtle, its presence consistently remains absent from corporate media narratives surrounding most U.S. dysfunction.

We're told that we don't have functional health care, cheap fiber broadband, or functional gun control – not because the companies with a stranglehold over these sectors have lobotomized government norms and ethics – but because of some sort of intangible, inherent, and largely mysterious failure of human collaboration.
This is something you'll see often. It's a rhetorical trick to deflect attention away from the fact that the extraction class and consolidated corporate power (who not coincidentally own the lion's share of modern media) have demolished the structural support pillars holding up a functional democracy.