Most ignored, unreported, or underreported stories of 2003
WorldNetDaily has released its annual list of underreported or unreported stories of the year. This is a must read article for all concerned about truth in journalism.
bq.. Continuing in its annual year-end tradition, WorldNetDaily.com has compiled its list of the most “spiked” stories of the past year those major news events of 2003 that went either unreported or underreported by the mainstream media.
Of course, almost every news organization presents a year-end retrospective replay of what each considers to have been the top news stories of the previous 12 months. But WND’s editors have always found it more newsworthy to publish a year-end compilation of the important stories most ignored by the establishment press.
WND Editor and CEO Joseph Farah has sponsored “Operation Spike” every year since 1988, and since founding WorldNetDaily in May 1997 has continued the annual tradition. As is its custom, WND has invited readers to join in and submit what they considered the most underreported stories of the past year in the site’s “Operation Spike” forum.
p. The abridged list from WorldNetDaily. (See the original article for the complete details):
# The de-Christianization of America via the court system
# NASA’s use of a green-friendly but inferior material on heat shields that broke up prior to the shuttle disaster
# The legal implications of the Supreme Court’s ‘sodomy’ ruling
# Persecution of Christians worldwide, especially those in countries seen as “friends” of the U.S.
# A major federal study that found no connection between gun laws and gun violence
# The continued vulnerability of U.S. airports
# The ominous free-speech implications of the Supreme Court’s decision upholding the McCain-Feingold campaign-finance law
# The Beltway sniper investigation “hero” Police Chief Charles Moose was so obsessed with avoiding “racial profiling” that he seriously hindered the investigation
# The Terri Schindler-Schiavo case
# Human bio-chip implant arrives for cashless transactions
p. [ Full Story @ WorldNetDaily ]
p(small). Source: WorldNetDaily© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com, Inc.
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