L'Emmerdeur wrote:You could have simply typed 'fake news' in all caps and saved yourself a lot of effort.

L'Emmerdeur wrote:You could have simply typed 'fake news' in all caps and saved yourself a lot of effort.
You're like a rhetorical train wreck. Or a rhetorical machine gun just spraying (mostly empty) rhetoric all over the shop.Forty Two wrote:I thought my approach was more fun, and might drive the point home for some folks, who seem to think these reports have some credibility.L'Emmerdeur wrote:You could have simply typed 'fake news' in all caps and saved yourself a lot of effort.
The utter bullshit that's reported and taken as fact, largely unexamined, is insane. And, I don't care if it's about Trump or anyone else.
I recall how when Trump said that he thought his building has been "wiretapped" the media was apoplectic. No evidence! They said. How can you say something totally without evidence! Little did he know that all Trump needed to say was that he talked to "source familiary with the process" or a "source close to the FBI" and the allegation would not be questioned by the press. The media would never ask who the source was, what their motives were, what it meant to be "familiar" or "close" in that context, and none of them would ever say that there was no reason for there to anonymity. Nobody would ask for explanation as to how someone not party to a phone call came to be familiar with its contents, etc.
How do you know that they aren't vetting/corroborating their sources?Forty Two wrote: Yes, they have to protect their sources, but they are also supposed to "vet" their sources, and when a reporter asks you to believe their anymous source, the reporter is telling you "I have done the work, and I believe the source is credible." That doesn't mean a guarantee of truth, but it means that the reporter is not being used as a mouthpiece. And, the reporter is supposed to explain why the source needs anonymity. You see that in the case of national security issues - they at least say that the source needs to be confidential to protect "sources and methods" or to guard against retaliaiton or the like
How do you know the source didn't hear what was said?And, it's the media's job to be reporters and journalists. When they write a news article, i want some substance. And, for the love of fucking Pete - "a source familiar with the phone call" (who is not the person ON the phone call) telling us not only what the President said (which he did not hear)
It depends on what sort of vetting and corroboration went on. If the journalists did their job properly, then I don't think it's weak at all. You think it's weak, as you have a preconceived view of what Trump et al did or didn't do. This is just more lame rhetoric from you, as it's the only way you can discount what's being said in these articles.but also what the President was thinking and feeling at the time -- without even telling us anything about the person doing the reporting and how that person got their info is, well, a bit weak, i think anyone should be able to agree with that.
Trump has offered to give them a path to citizenship - 1.8 million people (three times the number that would have been covered under Obama's proposal).Seabass wrote:These motherfuckers are sociopaths.
LOL, what's with the spittle and vaseline on his lips. LOL. His speech was just emotional claptrap with no specifics at all. It's just more Bernie-esque we can have everything all at the same time, and we don't have to make any tough choices, and look, I can pander by speaking a couple lines in Spanish.Tero wrote:After Shithead in chief, Joe Kennedy (4 year congressman) gave a super rebuttal. Hecis a little early for 2020, but some day....
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Kennedy_III
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