Quote:
Originally Posted by fw102807
OK here's a "fact" for you:
In his tell-all book Trust Me: I’m Lying, Media Manipulator Ryan Holiday writes:
“I’m paid to deceive. My job is to lie to the media so they can lie to you. I cheat, bribe, and connive...I orchestrate these deceptions for...high-profile clients... I create and shape the news for them. Usually it’s a simple hustle. Someone pays me, I manufacture a story for them, and we trade it up the chain – from a tiny blog...to cable news and back again, until the unreal becomes real.
I am a born skeptic and worked in IT long enough to know how easy this is to do and how often it is done. Believe whatever you want but remember it is just your interpretation of what you choose to believe and not necessarily the absolute truth.
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LOL
Of course some media attempt to skew what they purport to be facts...as we've seen on a national scale of late.
Which is why those who actually care as to what the truth is, will do their own
'fact checking' from a myriad of sources...taking into account the overall veracity of those sources.
Back to the point though, the
'fact' that Consumer Reports refuses ads from any industry/company and are transparent and go into detail as to how they test something, makes your original statement that
"I don't believe anything that Consumer Reports has to say about anything"...quite interesting to say the least.
While I may not always agree with them, I do so with the recognition that I'm looking from a very small and limited perspective...that being only my own experience(s).
Which can be very misleading and limiting...for anyone
But hey, everyone is entitled to their own
opinions...just not their own
facts.