All the Unconfirmed Rumors Fit to Print
We already have resources for the latest unverified claims. They're called newspapers, magazines, and Broadcasts and Internet media. Encyclopedias are supposed to be reference works that provide people with trustworthy, verified information. Now some people are stretching that word to mean a democratic medium where people can duke it out in real time with no requirements for fact checking.
Unless Wikipedia's policies change for the better, I think it should be required to call itself "margerine," not "butter."
Recent medical research has revealed that the transfatty acids of many margerines may make them a higher -- not lower -- athereosclerosis risk than butter. I think there's a lesson to be learned there.
Books? They have this tendancy to be horibily outdated. I ran across one a few days ago that seemed to think that no one had made a Biaxial nematic liquid crystal. I mean come on they were reported in 2004.]
We already have resources for the latest unverified claims. They're called newspapers, magazines, and Broadcasts and Internet media. Encyclopedias are supposed to be reference works that provide people with trustworthy, verified information. Now some people are stretching that word to mean a democratic medium where people can duke it out in real time with no requirements for fact checking.
Unless Wikipedia's policies change for the better, I think it should be required to call itself "margerine," not "butter."
Recent medical research has revealed that the transfatty acids of many margerines may make them a higher -- not lower -- athereosclerosis risk than butter. I think there's a lesson to be learned there.
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