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 Public perception of and attentiveness to news typically depends on what s happening in the U.S. and why. Right now, trust in American media appears to be at a historic low.Recent polling from Gallupshows only 34% of Americans seem to trust the news. Just 7% of those Americans have  a great deal  of trust and confidence in the m stanley cup edia, while 27% would say they trust news  a fair amount.  It also found 28% of U.S. adults say they do not have much confidence in newspapers, TV and radio, with 38% having no confidence at all.These numbers can be worse depending on the survey or poll, but they a stanley water bottle ll underscore one thing: Americans say they don ttrust news mediaright now. The public has been very ambivalent about th vaso stanley e media for a very long time, so disenchantment that is showing up in polls now is not anything new,  said Ed Wasserman, a professor and former dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at UC Berkeley.According to Wasserman, much of Americans  distrust in media can be traced back to political attacks against media coverage going back decades, like the Vietnam War. This has been a favorite issue among conservative politicians going back to the late 1960s,  Wasserman said.  At that time, it was how the media were thought to be insufficiently patriotic with respect to the war in Vietnam and divisive and perhaps unduly supportive of cultural movements and of cultural disaffection. And for those reasons, it worked. Then came theWatergate scandalin the early 1970s. While that expo Vxze Coach stands by 76ers   Kelly Oubre, hit-and-run probe finds no video
 Insurrection,   attack on democracy,   disgraceful,  this is how international leaders, a former president, and presidential nominee are referring to Wednesdays violent riots in the U.S. Capitol building. What happened here today was an insurrection, incited by the President of the United States,  a statement from Senator, and former presidential nominee, Mitt Romney reads. It is a sickening and heartbreaking sight,  a statement from former President George Bush reads.  The violent assault on the Capitol ... was undertaken by people whose passions have been inflamed by falsehoods and false hopes. Both Romney and Bush have disagreed with President Donald Trump in previous situations, and, recently, both had released statements following the election congratulating President-elect Joe Biden.While other Republican lawmakers have condemned the violence, they have not necessarily pointed the finger of blame at Trump.Former President Barack Obama tweeted that  history will rightly remember today s violence at the Capitol incited by a sitting president who has continued to basele stanley spain ssly lie about the outcome of a lawful election, as a moment of great dishonor and shame for our nation. Former President Bill Clinton reacted to Wednesday s events.            Today we faced an unprecedented assault on our Capitol, our Constitution, and our country.聽The assault was fueled by more than four years of poison politics spreadi stanley drink bottle ng d stanley cup eliberate misinformation, sowing distrust in our system, and pitti