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Two wrongs don't make a right
posted E-mail Story E-mail Story | Print Story Print Story 
A billionaire media mogul who has a long track record of supporting conservative politicians and the policies they advocate, Rupert Murdoch most likely did not feel at ease Tuesday when he appeared before a British parliamentary committee to answer questions about his company's activities in a phone hacking scandal that has swept across the United Kingdom.

The scandal also haunts Murdoch in America where his far-flung media conglomerate, News Corp., owns Fox News and The Wall Street Journal, a conservative-leaning newspaper that's also the largest newspaper in the United States circulation-wise.

Murdoch may have felt out of his element Tuesday answering questions about his integrity before a parliamentary committee, but he deserved to be there. Though he's a wealthy man and owns, operates and controls many media outlets in Europe and beyond, Murdoch is not above the law.

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