In five pages this paper examines the rapid development of global communication in terms of how news 'spinning' or biased reporting will be influenced in the future. Three sources are cited in the bibliography.
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that same information can be transmitted with electronic speed to almost any where in the world. Yet are we all getting the same news? This discussion will examine
the possibility and subsequent history that will put a different slant on the "spin" of international communications Bibliography lists 3 sources) BBprcomm.doc HISTORY & DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL
COMMUNICATION IN THE FIELD OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Written by B. Bryan Babcock for the Paperstore, Inc., June 2001 Introduction The history of international communication is as varied as the development of the
nations themselves. The speed of development of all communications is linked to the economic progress of that nation. Where, once the stories, or the information seemed related to
the community, then the state, and the nation, now, that same information can be transmitted with electronic speed to almost any where in the world. Yet, are we all
getting the same news? This discussion will examine the possibility and subsequent history that will put a different slant on the "spin" of international communications. Trust Us, Were Experts
: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles With Your Future by Sheldon Rampton, John Stauber. 12/22/2000. The authors, of this amazing text, talk about "snake-oil salesmen," who in the beginning
of the old West toured around the country and sold a "magic elixir," that would "cure whatever was ailin ya." We may guess that the alcohol content was high
enough, that after a while the person did indeed "feel better," but it was hardly the result of the "magic." We might find a similarity in the "used car