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I would be happy to specifically nix CNN talk shows in the same way that we already nix Fox talk shows and all opinion content in any medium (see WP:NEWSOPED, WP:NOROPED - parse, respectively as "NEWS section on OP-EDs" and "No Original Research section on OP-EDs").
For the other two, headlines have been banned for a while (WP:HEADLINE), and I'd imagine the bodies are more careful with their claims.
I would, in fact, love to see a list of claims for your preferred left-wing source (assuming the left-wing source is marked "generally reliable" on the big list). I'm sure one has been compiled somewhere already, but not in any of the few discussions on left-wing sources I spot-checked.
OK, how about the website? I quote from the top result: "Joe Rogan announced he has tested positive for Covid-19 and that he took numerous medications to combat the virus, including the livestock drug ivermectin" and then it's basically a link to a video. You can find CNN calling Ivermectin "an anti-parasitic drug used for livestock" here, in an article not about Rogan. The thing here, is, of course, that it's technically correct - you can use Ivermectin on livestock! There are products just like that! It's exactly the sort of half-truth that news media uses to lie without "lying". It's also what Fox is being accused of in the list brought against it - e.g. items 2, 3, 4.
Looking at the discussion, every item is just a motte and bailey. Bailey: "Fox is lying". Motte: "Fox is saying something sorta misleading, I guess, if you squint hard enough" - like item 2, where Fox uses "dismissed" as in "didn't use". It's not actually wrong, is it? Fauci didn't use data from some non-peer-reviewed working paper to recommend on blah blah blah. Whatever, I wouldn't either... but it's not a lie, just like "ivermectin is used on livestock".
May I quote from the anti-fox Gish-gallop then? From point 6: "[...] yes this is a headline, but it goes toward their sloppy journalism practices". In this case it's actually not sloppy journalism, it's intentionally deceptive. The point is to lie by omission and then move on. What the body even contains is actually irrelevant, since the point is what the headline doesn't say - and whether or not you can use that specific article on Wikipedia is also not the point, the point is that the Guardian is willing to lie. I don't keep a list of all the lies and half-truths I ever saw, it's just one that I distinctly remember that recently happened.
I'd like that too.
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