Say what you want about the moonies, but you have to admit that no one puts on a mass wedding ceremony like Rev. Moon!Obviously just moonie propaganda. /![]()
Like creating greater awareness of the plight of the mentally ill.There, there. Maybe future generations will appreciate what truthers have done for the world.
That they know the difference between a serious evening news cast and a silly morning show?So what does that say about NBC?
When some REAL science produced by LEGITIMATE scientists, using REAL scientific method and approach, provides some REAL evidence suggesting the 9/11 narrrative as it stands is wrong, then, THEN, perhaps you will see the media move from scorn to something in between.
Would not hold my breath or buy ice skates for a trip to hell.
TAM![]()
Yes, Red Ibis. They're all "hit pieces" when they don't confirm your beliefs, aren't they?
Red, this is easily your worst thread in the history of this forum.
No. The media is not a monolith. If the prevailing attitude used to be one of scorn among the many media reports, this attitude can slowly change, perhaps averaging out the coverage among the many stories that are published.
Here's a good example, this is coverage on a right wing media site of Jesse Ventura's appearance on NBC, discussing his new conspiracy theory book. The point of this example is not Ventura's credibility on this issue (though I'm pretty sure that's what debunkers will want to seize upon), my point is illustrated by a quote in this article:
When the media said the Uri Geller could bend spoons with his mind, it didn't make it real.
When the media said facilitated communication was real, it didn't make it real.
When the media said that "John of God" had magic powers, it didn't make it real.
Enough said.
Do you mean one writer in one article made such claims? Or is there a giant word spewing monster that holds one view and shoots out all news?
Here's the thing: When it comes to wooish claims like this, different media outlets tend to march in lock-step. It's just like carmakers who watch each other and copy each other's styles. If they see one company having success with a certain model, they don't say, "screw that, I'm doing my own thing." They want some of that success, so they try to duplicate what their competitors are doing.
News media outlets do the same thing. If one magazine or network makes a goofy claim, and gets lots of positive response, then it would be foolish, from a business perspective, for its competitors to tell the news consumers that they're idiots by exposing the lie. In the domain of wooish claims, this is apparently seen as fairly harmless, since the claims are unfalsifiable. It would be another story if they published something that was blatantly false, but the lies inherent in wooish claims are subtle and require some education to reveal.
Hence the existence of JREF.
So is the "wooish claim" that the media marches in lock step, or is it your claim?
So is the "wooish claim" that the media marches in lock step, or is it your claim?
Have you ever read of the boxer rebellion, and how it was supposedly triggered by papers trying to outdo each other with the story of the sale of the Chinese wall?
If you want specific examples, I can provide them. The phenomenon is well known among skeptics.
News media outlets do the same thing. If one magazine or network makes a goofy claim, and gets lots of positive response, then it would be foolish, from a business perspective, for its competitors to tell the news consumers that they're idiots by exposing the lie.
So you've succumbed to the woo when you said:
You also think that the media is a monolith that "tend to march in lock step"?
You also think that the media is a monolith that "tend to march in lock step"?