When making editorial decisions for his newspaper, the owner/editor mostly picks issues that are in line with his political beliefs and those that his advertisers approve of despite his publicly stated goal "to be a champion for free speech and for the development of the community." This indicates that ________.

A) the company's strategic goals do not leave any room for interpretation
B) the company's stated goals are not its real goals
C) the company's goals are directional in nature
D) the company's financial goals derive from its strategic goals

Respuesta :

Answer:

B

Explanation:

When making editorial decisions for his newspaper, the owner/editor mostly picks issues that are in line with his political beliefs and those that his advertisers approve of despite his publicly stated goal "to be a champion for free speech and for the development of the community." This indicates that the company's stated goals are not its real goals. The owner picks his own interest which is not in line with the actual company goals and those that his advertisers approve of

Answer:

The company's stated goals are not its real goals

Explanation: Obvious The owners political goals supercedes the newspaper stategic goals. His choice to always pick issues that are inline with his political beliefs forfeits the newspapers goal which is to be a champion for free speech and for the development of the community because he lacks transparency.