almaniac27 said:
This thread was started about an article. We are discussing said article. For all we know, this guy could be the tooth fairy, but that's not very likely, is it? In my book, anyone who sends death threats is a weirdo. Perhaps certifiably insane, perhaps not. Sure he could be lying, but so can anyone.
Who is "he?"
Nobody knows who sent the fax, do they?
That's part of the point that means this is more than "said article," it's also about how "said article" is presented, how factual it is, how much information is unknown, and so on and so forth.
If you start questioning every little thing in this article, you'd better start questioning everything. Do we really exist? How many angels can dance upon the head of a pin?
Or I guess you can do the opposite and not question anything before you accept it [depending on the source and content, likely]?
I don't think questioning the integrity of the article is going to lead any one to questioning their own existence or how many angels can dance on a pin, though. People question what people say every minute of every day [less so if it agrees with what they already thought]. I'll give you that you were exaggerating for hyperbole there, but it was overexaggerated.
Also, I didn't have to question "every little thing in this article," just the most glaring, obvious things, then I quit. Tried to come to the simpler answer by the quickest route, and all that. Used to be, most people didn't trust every word "anonymous" "unknown" sources *allegedly* said.
Your line of reasoning is going nowhere.
I was only using the words you said.
From what I can see, the San Francisco Examiner is a well-established newspaper that's been around for 150+ years, and I doubt they would want to weaken their journalistic integrity by doing a little shitstarting. That's my opinion, you can have your own, but let's try to be realistic here.
I didn't say "shitstarting," I am just saying "maybe they need to have more actual information before they accept everything verbatim from anyone."
And, nah, no newspaper, certainly not even in San Francisco, has ever muckraked or exaggerated, I guess?
Why do you have such a hard time accepting the fact that a listener of a radio show might take things too far?
A listener of a radio show can do practically anything his heart wants to do.
So can a politician's spokesman, a false flag operative, or whoever controls the [half-]stories.
Just be wary.