News is News

The Wall Street Journal online is a great way to get the news, as the Wall Street Journal is a great paper. So much more than just a paper about stocks, companies, and economics, the Wall Street Journal has some of the best Op Ed pieces I’ve ever read. It’s probably the only newspaper I’ve ever read that genuinely feels objective and unbiased.

Most papers I’m familiar with have gotten so bad in recent years, its no longer funny. I’ve long since noticed a faint liberal bias in most newspapers, but under our current republican government it has become blatantly obvious, and I myself am what most people would consider a liberal. I am certainly no huge fan of Mr. George W. Bush, but when I read a newspaper I want it to be objective and I want to decide for myself.

The information most papers chooses to present, the way it presents it, and the information most papers choose to not present are all indicative of a motive behind the print, and that bothers me. No matter how right or wrong they might be, or what their intentions are, that kind of ‘news’ just calls to mind a single word; propaganda. Of the online news sources I frequent, the Wall Street Journal online seems to be the only one without a motive.

The Wall Street Journal online is a great way to get a relatively unfiltered version of the news at a discount price and in a convenient manner. Ordering the Wall Street Journal online can be as cheap as around four dollars a month, and gives you access to all the same articles that appear in the printed version right on your computer. If you’re like me, you do most of your news reading on your computer anyway, so the Wall Street Journal online is probably the way to go.

Of course having an actual paper in your hand to read in the morning is nice too. Maybe it’s a tad excessive, but I actually subscribe to both the Wall Street Journal online, and the printed version as well. If you order them together, you can get a favorable discount on what would normally be a lot more. While its certainly amongst the more expensive newspapers, the Wall Street Journal online and in print is just good news, and quality journalism that doesn’t make decisions for the reader is worth a little more.