06-29-2020, 05:47 PM
Maybe she should be informed that she forgot to place the Daily Dot to the list.
I think the news should just be the facts, and no responsible and reliable news outlet should be involved in commentary. The news should provide you with the facts so you can determine what to believe. The news should never be involved into telling you what to believe.
For example: Two news stories. Which one is true?
John T. is known by his neighbors as a ornery, crusty old codger. They say he likes to be left alone and is just plain mean. No one was surprised when he shot his neighbor's dog, and the dog did nothing more than walk onto his property. The dog was dearly loved and was a life long companion to his handicapped son. After killing the dog, John T. he called his neighbor, told him he had killed the dog, and told him he better come get it.
John T. said he was left no choice but to shoot his neighbor's dog. He said the dog has come onto his property on several occasions, and has killed several of his chickens. John T. said he has told his neighbor about his dog many times over the years. He said the neighbor always made excuses and apologized for the dog, but was not able to keep the dog off of his property. John T. said he told his neighbor if the dog came onto his property again, he was going to kill the dog. John T. said he had just bought three new laying hens, and when he saw the dog crawl under his fence he shot the dog on Sunday night. He knew that the death of the dog would be hard on his neighbor's handicap son, so he called his neighbor to come get the dog if he wanted to bury it, otherwise he said would dispose of it himself.
As far as fake news is concerned, dealing in facts and truths can be a tricky business. Two stories. Two sets of facts. Two truths.
I think the news should just be the facts, and no responsible and reliable news outlet should be involved in commentary. The news should provide you with the facts so you can determine what to believe. The news should never be involved into telling you what to believe.
For example: Two news stories. Which one is true?
John T. is known by his neighbors as a ornery, crusty old codger. They say he likes to be left alone and is just plain mean. No one was surprised when he shot his neighbor's dog, and the dog did nothing more than walk onto his property. The dog was dearly loved and was a life long companion to his handicapped son. After killing the dog, John T. he called his neighbor, told him he had killed the dog, and told him he better come get it.
John T. said he was left no choice but to shoot his neighbor's dog. He said the dog has come onto his property on several occasions, and has killed several of his chickens. John T. said he has told his neighbor about his dog many times over the years. He said the neighbor always made excuses and apologized for the dog, but was not able to keep the dog off of his property. John T. said he told his neighbor if the dog came onto his property again, he was going to kill the dog. John T. said he had just bought three new laying hens, and when he saw the dog crawl under his fence he shot the dog on Sunday night. He knew that the death of the dog would be hard on his neighbor's handicap son, so he called his neighbor to come get the dog if he wanted to bury it, otherwise he said would dispose of it himself.
As far as fake news is concerned, dealing in facts and truths can be a tricky business. Two stories. Two sets of facts. Two truths.