For a political partisan, there are only two positions. His own position — parroting the party line of his group — is absolutely correct. Everybody else is lumped together. Anybody who dares to point out something which is outside of his group’s talking points must be shouted down.
Public discourse is a disgrace in this country, mostly because few people care about anything other than their side winning. Almost nobody is interested in another point of view, much less learning something which hadn’t occurred to him before — and which falls outside the bounds of his group’s talking points.
The faux controversy over an editorial delivered by close to 200 local TV stations owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group is a case in point. For instance, New York magazine had this headline: “News Anchors Reciting Sinclair Propaganda Is Even More Terrifying in Unison.” All the other news networks have had similar stories, mostly with headlines darkly reporting that TV anchors at those stations were “forced” to “recite Sinclair propaganda.”
What actually happened?

Joe Rogan isn’t insightful to me, so I just don’t listen to his show
When people show you who they are, trust their actions, not words
What if we had a birthday party for the USA — and nobody came?
I haven’t learned to stop walking on eggshells around angry people
If you play the DC power game, all that matters is the game
Obama administration wants to choose skin color of your neighbors
If an election can destroy your life, your priorities are out of whack
My drive to be perfect led to lack of compassion for self and others