Greetings,
Amazon/Bezos buying the Post is part of a media garage sale; the Boston Globe 
was sold recently by the New York Times for a pittance. It has more to do with 
the acquisition of a brand more than anything else. For Amazon it provides yet 
another digital platform in its multifarious stable of hard and soft 
commodities. The impact this will have on political discourse in the US is 
marginal as significant political discussion has long ago vanished from the 
American media landscape. Many Americans on the left were seduced into 
believing that NPR was an alternative to Fox News, hello; the New York Times 
has been morphed into an American Pravda gallantly servicing the political 
elites. Then there are enough kaleidoscopic entities such as the Huffington 
Post offering a supermarket range of news and gossip (headlined by a few A 
listers) that the commentariat can continue to gush about all the wonderful 
qualities of democratic America. Sadly, Snowden is in exile and Manning is in 
jail; Greenwal
 d writes for the Guardian. Hardcore investigative journalism was boiled out of 
the media pot after the end of the Vietnam War and Watergate - an era when the 
left in the U.S. still had some political robustness. If the Washington Post 
was bought by the Nation or some other non-commercial entity (or - god forbid - 
political entity or Arab state) we would have something to talk about. This is 
just another turn in the dumbing-down spiral of MSM - yes, the main stream 
media.  

cheers
allan


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