A lot has been written about media bias when it comes to politics and social issues. There are many verifiable examples of liberal bias in those areas. Not so much is discussed when it comes to the bias in business reporting. I've been noticing it more and more. The media has not been kind to Wal-Mart, for example. Wal-Mart is a company that employs 1.2 million people worldwide. That means over a million people are earning their own money and feeding their own families from a pact with Satan. Naturally, Wal-Mart is a conscious being hell-bent on world domination by eliminating as many old, dusty mom-and-pop pharmacies it can.
Some economists believe the company holds down general price inflation and wages in the retail industry. Critics say Wal-Mart is such an effective competitor that it is gradually forcing down the wages and living standards of retail workers who aren't even employed by Wal-Mart.
They are evil, I tell you, evil!
In the U.K., the BBC chairman comes under fire for depicting businessmen as crooks.
Mr Jones, however, said that he did take it to heart and revealed that he had written once to Granada demanding to know why a serial killer who was eventually found dead at the bottom of a canal was played as a businessman and not a trade unionist. "The answer I got back is that everyone hates businessmen," he said.
Yes, everyone hates businessmen. Those bastards make us work for a living when everything should be free. If it weren't for big business, the world would be a better place. How many movies have you seen with the villain that is also a successful businessman like Gordon Gecko or Elliot Carver? They are crazy, bent on world domination and rich. There is nothing more evil than an insensitive bank manager like Mr. Brisbane in Catch that Kid. Don't forget Mr. Burns–excellent.
This bias is strong. God forbid any villains are not white and successful. How about a villain that kills thousands by deploying brain-washed stooges to do his dirty work on suicide missions. But how could that be as evil as a CEO or a discount retail store?
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Long Way From Home by The Heavy