My bet is, he won't. He seems to believe giving in to my question is some how a trick and he's afraid of getting caught saying something that will be thrown back at him. But he's just another person who has every right not to engage in debate but merely toss out statements that he will not backup/ explain.
I don't think his statement of disarray is that some dislike Trump while others love him, but I guess we'll never know because he isn't going to answer any question from little ole me.
Any excuse not to answer a simple question. You stated that Fox news is in disarray over Trump. That was you going off topic which you seem to think is a venal sin.
I ask how you see and hear this disarray and all of a sudden, I'm off topic.
So if Salty doesn't mind, I'll bet he won't, I'll ask again, "how is Fox news in disarray over Trump"?
Originally Posted by HedonistForever
Salty is correct with his insight.
"But I think his point may be that some there on Fox seem to dislike Trump - while others love him."
Your opinion quoted above is completely wrong. You consider yourself a heavyweight, but you are turning into a tub of lard during retirement.
And the disarray has been increasing and getting bigger and bigger. Some at FOX now hang up on Trump during phone interviews if he brings up his false statements of MASSIVE election fraud.
The above alone should be enough to shut you up. But since you insist on being a complete asshole, here is some additional reference material for you to ponder.
Fox News Potentially Facing Major Financial Damage In Dogged Suit Over Election Lies
A massive $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit by a voting machine company over Fox News election lies got a whole lot more serious last month when a judge ruled the action can proceed in a scathing ruling against Rupert Murdoch and his son.
Dominion Voting Systems was given the green light in June to proceed in its suit against both Fox News and Fox Corp, its parent company, by Delaware Supreme Court Judge Eric David.
He determined that it was a reasonable inference that Murdoch and son Lachlan either knew outright that Dominion had not manipulated the election or “recklessly disregarded the truth” when Fox disseminated lies initially launched by Donald Trump.
“Dominion has a very strong case against Fox News,” Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, a constitutional law professor at Florida’s Stetson University and fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice, told The Guardian.
All of the “conspiracy theories about Dominion’s machines were just pure bunk,” she added. “Fox as a news organization should have known that and not given this aspect of [Trump’s] ‘big lie’ a megaphone.”
What’s particularly bad for Fox, she noted, is that Dominion asked the network to stop disseminating the lies and correct the record, yet “Fox persisted in spreading misrepresentations about the voting machine company.”
A particularly intriguing development could be the exposure of text and email messages among the Trump White House, Fox News personalities, and even Rupert Murdoch.
“I think once you start to pull the discovery material, what you’re going to find is there was a lot of communication between the Trump people both internally and externally about pushing very specific lies and narratives,” Angelo Carusone, chief executive of Media Matters for America, told The Guardian.
A Fox spokesman told the newspaper: “We are confident we will prevail in this case, as the First Amendment is the foundation of our democracy and freedom of the press must be protected.”