Briahna Joy Gray and Robby Soave react to John Stewart's recent commentary on Tucker Carlson.
Short Summary
Late night comedians, including John Stewart, criticized Tucker Carlson for his positive review of Russia, accusing him of failing to understand the darker side of the Russian State.
Chris Cuomo commented on the segment, pointing out the hypocrisy of Democrats who were upset with Stewart for criticizing Biden but cheered when he made fun of Carlson.
Tucker defended himself against accusations of being a tool of the Kremlin, sharing a story about Boris Johnson demanding a million dollars for an interview.
The discussion touched on the importance of public transportation as a government-run service that should be efficient and beneficial to taxpayers.
Stewart was criticized for praising Moscow's subway system, with the argument that having poor public transportation is not a price of freedom but a public service that should be well-maintained and accessible to all.
The conversation highlighted the need for realistic assessments of different countries' living conditions and infrastructure.
Comparisons were made between the average American home size and indoor plumbing availability compared to Russia.
The speaker discussed food costs and income allocation towards food purchases in Russia.
The importance of historical movements leading to public infrastructure development and income equality measures like Medicare and Social Security was emphasized.
Her commentary about the subway was really concerning and shows that she either took zero time to do a modicum of research about Stalin’s subways, or she’s intentionally trying to be disingenuous.
Stalin’s subways were by no means a Russian version of Roosevelt‘a WPA projects. They were famously built with a lot of forced labor from gulags. And the gulags famously contained lots of politician prisoners, POWs, people with “individualistic tendencies,” etc.
And they were built to signal that Soviet communism could do big things. But like many big things under authoritarian rule, there is often a lot of pain and suffering hidden behind the shining facade.
A journalist is an individual who collects/gathers information in the form of text, audio, or pictures, processes it into a news-worthy form, and disseminates it to the public.
Regardless of if he's listed on some stupid fucking wiki or has ever called himself that, that is what he is currently roleplaying in his position.
We're not talking about Jon Stewart here. We're talking about the two hosts of "The Hill" segment.
The Hill journalists focused entirely on the facade of Stewart's comments and didn't acknowledge or engage with his main points about the deceit and hidden oppression that Tucker's segment tried to elide over.
The Hill segment focused only on Stewart's passing comments about US public transportation. Stewart was not commenting on the differences between US and Russian (Moscow) public transportation. Stewart was talking about how Russia is a brutal and oppressive regime and Tucker is a despicable "journalist" by knowingly lying in an attempt to make his audience believe that they need to sacrifice their freedoms.
How about the praising Tucker Carlson? Or hand-waving away the pictures of people being arrested for simply grieving Navalny? Basically trying to downplay Jon Stewart's emphasis on the lack of political freedom that Russia's citizens actually have.