What are the best conservative news websites? One person said they were all the same; she was right! Because the left and the right both use a different dictionary to interpret words, and because of the different definitions of words, there really isn't much of a difference. We'll just look at five conservative news websites from the perspective of a writer.
The Wall Street Journal has been accused of a conservative right-wing bias, although the editors do state that most of their stories are "balanced." The truth is that they are so liberal that they even publish stories with opinions on them! So yes, they have a right-wing bias, but they are hardly a left-wing bias. The New York Times has long had a liberal bias, and they are very popular. They also publish many investigative journalism stories, and so there is some comparison.
There are lots of other conservative news sites that exist solely as a fact-based information website. Many facts are used in these, as well. But they are mostly opinion-based articles. There are lots of fact-based information websites, and they work great for getting the straight story without any liberal political slant. These are the best conservative news websites and the one I recommend you go to first when you want to find out more about conservative topics or news.
There is a new web site which is called "The Free-Beacon" and it is part of the Beacon Network. I have often compared these websites with the Washington Post, but I have nothing to do with either the Post or the Free-Beacon. What I do have a problem with is these so-called "fact-based" websites. They often use simple headlines to spin articles into politically-correct news. The only way a story can be fact-based is if it was written by a reporter.
This happens quite often on many of the so-called top sites for conservative news websites. For example, take a news story about immigration. Most likely you will see a sentence like this: "U.S. Immigration officials say Border Patrol agents encountered some unauthorized immigrants trying to enter the country illegally late last month along the Mexico border." That's a good sentence. Now, if that was a fact-based sentence, that might be newsworthy.
That's because it's a fact-based sentence. It's not "news" because the Border Patrol agent just encountered some folks trying to illegally enter the country. Now, that might be interesting if that were true, but it isn't now, is it? Why would they even say that?














