Presstitute

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Revision as of 20:50, 3 December 2020 by Sunvalley (talk | contribs) (rewording for clarity, not sure as for keep or not, but the wiki most likely soon gone, will be harder to find who coined the term, wiktionary.org will not keep that info I think, does not now, the picture says it perfectly and quiet funny-maybe we should keep for that alone)
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Journalists who give biased and predetermined views in favour of the government and corporations.

Presstitute was initially meant to denote journalists “who give biased and predetermined views in favour of the government and corporations”, thus neglecting their fundamental duty of reporting news impartially. The term originally coined by Gerald Celente[1] is a portmanteau of press and prostitute and used it to describe biased media organisations. It is a form of journalism which involves tailoring news to fit a particular partisan, financial or business agenda.

With more information accumulating over time it has become clear that CIA influence operations and other activity in this area have never stopped and the media is tightly controlled by the deep state.

Usage

India

The term created controversy after General Vijay Kumar Singh, the Indian Minister of External Affairs, began referring to a section of the media as "presstitutes" in his tweets.[2][3]

Journalists for Hire

The second release in English of the book "Journalists for Hire: How the CIA Buys the News" (German title literally translates to: Bought Journalists) by Udo Ulfkotte was named: "Presstitutes Embedded in the Pay of the CIA: A Confession from the Profession".


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References