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by Alan Korwin
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1. Korwin's new superhero alter-ego, Counterintuitive Man, says:
The secret new multi-plan for elections is working swell! The public is getting disgusted with the process, lowering the number of votes! New voting equipment is so faulty and untraceable, more and more people don't trust it at all! Results now take weeks instead of one day, disgusting even die-hard voters! The ballots have gotten so long, people vote by closing their eyes, or voting all "No," or leaving a lot of the choices blank, watering down the result! More than a third of the public casts votes by mail, so they don't even know (or care) if their vote was delivered!
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by Alan Korwin
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1- The lamestream media told you:
The Democrats are getting giddy with hope over their chances for taking over both houses of Congress, and Republicans are terrified at the prospect of Nancy Polosi as Speaker, and other leftists claiming the chair of influential committees that control what Congress does.
The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
The amount of power Democrats gain on Nov. 7, if any, will be directly related to a run on supplies and rapid rise in prices for firearms and ammunition immediately after the election, according to an expert who wishes to remain anonymous to protect his job.
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by Art Merrill, editor
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“What is truth?” Pontius Pilate purportedly asked as he washed his hands of the matter at hand.
While apparently intended then as dismissive rhetoric, that question today is central to how we view our world and to how we try to solve its problems. And it is a question at the very core of every news publication.
All news media want you to believe they are telling the truth. At least one source gives readers a daily reassurance on every front page: while in Central America this summer I saw a Honduran newspaper with the tagline, “La verdad en las manos” - “The truth in your hands.”
Few reputable news media deliberately lie; altruism aside, there are usually independent means of verifying facts. But “facts” are not the same as “truth.” While facts may be as obvious as an elephant in the living room, the “truth” becomes a greased pig when someone smears those facts with bias. Unfortunately, bias can be very hard to detect; it can be as subtle as simply not reporting a fact.
“Truth” is a paradox. Five witnesses to a bank robbery can give police a detailed account of what they saw, each of them believing they are delivering the absolute truth, and yet police will find that their stories contain wild contradictions. This is the fallacy of “truth,” and it is well illustrated by the comment of a fictional TV character. In the X-Files episode titled Jose Chung’s From Outer Space, Detective Scully asks Chung, a writer investigating a UFO incident, how he is going to find the truth among the conflicting stories of the witnesses. He tells her that it is impossible. “The truth,” he said “is as subjective as reality.”
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