I haven't noticed any of that stuff. Maybe you're reading stuff into it.
Though I will readily admit that they come at things from a very right-wing perspective. Whenever I read news from them I keep this in mind. I think, "If someone who believes X were to write this news, how would he report it?" Then I go to a different news service where someone who believes Y is reporting on the same story. At least that way I can get a decent perspective.
I don't see Fox as these big liars. I see them as biased to the right. I also see that their reporters are more inclined to believe stories that support their world view.
But I see the exact same things on CBS, MSNBC, and CNN. I've seen reporters that spread falsehoods.
The thing is, if you are only willing to get news from one perspective, then you're world view is going to be skewed because news is reported from the reporter's perspective.
I used to be surprised when people say they don't see the blatant falsehoods on foxnews but not anymore. There are a lot of opinions and one set of facts.
But maybe you're right about perception. One might assume that when that radio host would repeat in a tag line,
"...you could leave your child with me in a Motel 6 overnight" that that host is some sort of pedophile. I wouldn't leave my child with a stranger in the media period but that's my
perception of the suggestion. You might think otherwise but then, those are your kids. lol. But show me some blatant falsehood to this stuff I posted from an MSNBC host below. Maybe you have a point about "perception" I'm unaware I have.
"Fox News host of “The Five,” Eric Bolling, Wednesday said, “
we were certainly safe between 2000 and 2008 — I don’t remember
any terrorist attacks on American soil during that period of time.”
"In November of 2009, former Bush White House staffer Dana Perino said “we did not have a terrorist attack on our country during President Bush’s term.”
Mary Matalin, former counselor to Vice President Cheney, claimed in December 2009 that President Bush “inherited the most tragic attack on our own soil in our nation’s history.”
In January of last year, Rudy Giuliani — who was the mayor of New York City at the time of the 9/11 attacks –
told Good Morning America that “We had no domestic attacks under Bush.”