[Paleopsych] internet rumors vs. fox news

Steve Hovland shovland at mindspring.com
Sun Jan 16 18:43:44 UTC 2005


I forget the idiom they used, but I once read
that during the days of the old Soviet Union,
the most accurate news that most people
got came through the rumor mill.

The truth about fraud in the last election is
on the web, not on the nightly news.

Steve Hovland
www.stevehovland.net


-----Original Message-----
From:	Michael Christopher [SMTP:anonymous_animus at yahoo.com]
Sent:	Sunday, January 16, 2005 9:28 AM
To:	paleopsych at paleopsych.org
Subject:	[Paleopsych] internet rumors vs. fox news


>>You are correct. I tried www.news.google.com (I 
use news.google because I want actual news stories and
not internet rumors) and I found one story from
Oklahoma (Fox news) where they reported that.<<

--LOL... "I want actual news stories and not internet
rumors so I went to Fox news." 

Just teasing... I wonder how many conservatives ignore
serious problems in the Republican party simply
because they dismiss all liberal criticisms as
"internet rumors"? Scary if that's the case. Of
course, I've seen the same thing on the Left when good
points made by conservatives are dismissed as party
propaganda. Blind spots seem to come in pairs.

Michael


		
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