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Reference
Chicago Booth Initiative on Global Markets
While political and other biases are common in academic institutions, at this point AllSides has not identified a particular leaning at Chicago Booth, otherwise knows an The University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Chicago Booth shares research and opinion on markets and the role of policies and institutions. Its IGM Forum encourages shares voices and opinions from a variety of authors with different political and other biases, so the initial bias rating has been set for "Mixed".
Apr 22 2021
Perspectives Blog
Did The New York Times Spread Misinformation About a Capitol Officer’s Death?
Earlier this week, it emerged that Capitol Police officer Brian D. Sicknick suffered two strokes and died of natural causes a day after the January 6 riot at the Capitol, according to a ruling by the District’s chief medical examiner.
The ruling means federal prosecutors will likely be unable to bring homicide charges in connection with his death. Two men have already been charged
Julie MastrineApr 24 2021
News
Vaccine passports: Pandemic spurs rise of portable health records
On a snowy April morning, Laurie Riley is heading to Aruba. Prior to the pandemic, she would come to Boston’s Logan Airport with her ticket and passport. Now, she also carries her COVID-19 test results before boarding the flight. She printed them out and also put them on an app in her cellphone, called CommonPass.
In Aruba, the pass will give her access to dedicated immigration lanes
Christian Science MonitorMay 23 2021
News
Trump’s internet influence drops to five-year low as much-promoted blog falls flat, report says
Donald Trump’s new website is up, and his online presence is down – way down.
According to a new report by The Washington Post, social media engagement with Mr Trump is at its lowest point since he ran for president five years ago. Even since January, it’s down by 95 per cent.
“The difference is ridiculous,” Megan Squire, an Elon University computer science professor who studied
The IndependentJul 16 2020
News
Bari Weiss Resigns from The New York Times
This Abridge News topic aggregates four unique arguments on different sides of the debate. Here are the quick facts to get you started:
THE QUICK FACTS
This week, Bari Weiss, a high-profile editor and writer for the New York Times opinion section, announced her resignation from the paper. Weiss published a 1,500 word letter to Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger Abridge NewsJan 25 2022
Perspectives Blog
Media Bias Alert: Supreme Court Justices Dispute NPR Story
Each week, our Media Bias Alerts examine biased news coverage of a major or important story using the AllSides Media Bias Ratings™ and our Media Bias Chart™. From the LeftThe Supreme Court stirred controversy last week by denying an NPR (Online News rated Center) report saying Chief Justice John Roberts had “in some form” asked his fellow justices to wear masks. A reporter from Fox News (
Joseph RatliffMay 17 2019
News
Eye-popping number of Dems: I can beat Trump
Two dozen Democrats have entered the primary to take on President Trump, a historically high number that will create unique challenges for the party, the media and the candidates themselves.
The field includes six women and six people of color — though 18 of the candidates are male while 18 are white.
A former vice president, Joe Biden, is the clear frontrunner, but his
The HillJul 25 2023
Headline Roundup
What's Behind Musk's Decision to Rename Twitter 'X'?
Elon Musk is reshaping the popular social media platform Twitter into an all-encompassing application called ‘X.’ After initiating the name change and outlining his vision, outlets across the spectrum are analyzing the decision from a business and legal standpoint.
The Everything App: Musk tweeted that he bought the platform last year to use it “as an accelerant for X, the everything
Bloomberg Fox Business CNBCDec 05 2014
News
The Obamacare paradox: the law looks terrible but is doing great
Politically, Obamacare has had a terrible past few weeks. First there was inaccurate enrollment data (the administration wrongly included dental plans). Then there were Jon Gruber's comments on "the stupidity of American voters." And it was capped off with Sen. Chuck Schumer saying that passing the law was a mistake. That led to headlines like: "Dark days ahead for Obamacare," "The Obamacare
VoxFeb 19 2020
News
WaPo Opinion Piece Calls For Elites to Have a 'Bigger Say in Choosing President'
“Democracy Dies in Darkness” may be The Washington Post’s slogan, but after running an opinion piece calling for elitists to have more control in U.S. elections, many are wondering if it’s actually the paper’s mission statement.
“It’s time to give the elites a bigger say in choosing the president,” reads the op-ed written by Julia Azari, an associate professor and assistant chair in
Townhall