
The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg Not My Liberalism | Ruminant
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Mar 28, 2026 Conversations range from how newsrooms favor sensational stories to why unusual crimes dominate coverage. There are riffs on film and TV aesthetics and a warning about fraudulent books on Amazon. Political debates touch on Iran’s military costs, institutional restraints on power, and TSA bottlenecks. A long segment explores John Rawls’ veil of ignorance versus tradition and the limits of pure autonomy.
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Media Bias Is More Than Left Versus Right
- Media bias is multi-dimensional and not just ideological; news outlets prioritize vivid, unusual stories like a quadruple-amputee murderer because "if it bleeds, it leads."
- Jonah Goldberg illustrates this with the cornhole murderer story and his father's editor anecdotes to show editorial judgment drives coverage choices.
Call Out Unacknowledged Editorial Biases
- Recognize unacknowledged editorial biases by asking why editors prefer one story over another rather than labeling disagreements as partisan bias.
- Goldberg urges developing a clear theory of news judgment to distinguish expertise from hidden bias.
Military Wins Can Be Undone By Economic And Political Clocks
- Military success doesn't ensure overall strategic success; non-military variables like economics, oil supply chains, and political timelines matter.
- Goldberg uses Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, helium and fertilizer supply points to show price shocks and political clocks can undo battlefield gains.





