Amy Goodman
![Amy Goodman](/assets/img/authors/amy-goodman.jpg)
Amy Goodman
Amy Goodmanis an American broadcast journalist, syndicated columnist, investigative reporter, and author. Goodman's investigative journalism career includes coverage of the East Timor independence movement and Chevron Corporation's role in Nigeria. Since 1996, Goodman has hosted Democracy Now!, an independent global news program broadcast daily on radio, television and the Internet. She is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Thomas Merton Award in 2004, a Right Livelihood Award in 2008, and an Izzy Award in 2009 for "special achievement in...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionJournalist
Date of Birth13 April 1957
CityBay Shore, NY
CountryUnited States of America
I loved what she said about Cindy Sheehan. ... I think it's important that she exposed the oil companies' destruction of our planet and how they hire the military to kill village people where they are raping the resources and the people in Nigeria. And she's exposing the oil spills ... and how the Pentagon tried to hide the truth about atomic bombs (and paid a New York Times reporter) to write stories that covered up the radiation sickness,
Journalism is the only profession explicitly protected by the U.S. Constitution, because journalists are supposed to be the check and balance on government. We're supposed to be holding those in power accountable. We're not supposed to be their megaphone. That's what the corporate media have become.
If 2,000 Tea Party activists descended on Wall Street, you would probably have an equal number of reporters there covering them.
Beware of mothers who have nothing left to lose.
Independent media can go to where the silence is and break the sound barrier, doing what the corporate networks refuse to do.
A typical Ponzi scheme involves taking money from investors, then paying them off with money taken from new investors, rather than paying them from actual earnings.