Propaganda

I don ' t reject comments just because I disagree with the commenter ' s opinion. If you actually read the comments, you will see that I often publish comments by people who disagree with me in some way. I do reject comments that are factually ridiculous or illogical. Sometimes I publish them and rebut them, but I can ' t be bothered to do that with all of the nonsense that comes my way. Because I don ' t read Faux News, Newsmax, Onan, or Russian propaganda, half the time I don ' t even know what the bizarre conspiracy theory is that they ' re talking about. But just for example, claiming that NATO broke up Yugoslavia or the U.S. provoked the Syrian civil war by financing IS and Al Qaeda is not worth my time or anybody else ' s to argue with. These claims are as absurd as saying that the United States caused Hitler to attack Poland. Now supposedly CDC is withholding data of some kind, although what that data may be and why it matters is unspecified.If you want to do your own research, go here. They push out data to the public through a firehose.Sorting truth from fiction is apparently harder for some people than it seems to me. But the first piece of advice I can give is to understand what sources are at least trying to proffer truth, and which ones are blatantly lying to you. I have plenty of criticisms of the New York Times, their conventional ways of framing issues, how they treat lying politicians,what they treat as important. (Hillary Clinton ' s e-mails?) You have ...
Source: Stayin' Alive - Category: American Health Source Type: blogs