The stigma of government affiliated news (here in the US at least) is that it makes the “news” a government mouthpiece. So there’s a distinction here between getting grant money from the government and effectively being the government.
In other countries, like Canada and UK for instance, government media such as CBC and BBC are operated very different to how NPR operates, and they’re careful to put up a barrier between the rest of the government and the news agency. We can question how effective that barrier is, but we could also question how US corporate media outlets might allow advertisers to modify stories too. But in any even, what Musk was trying to do was equate NPR to some of the notoriously government run news outlets in the world because he’s a liar and a dirtbag.
hasnt_seen_goonies@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Great point. Many governments have media teams that produce propaganda and present it as news. This can be confusing, so social media sites label articles from these government entities as state-sponsored or whatever. It’s supposed to help Americans not trust propaganda that another country puts out, uncritically.