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Neither your, nor my politics have absolutely nothing to do with the accuracy of your information, though if anything, we should hold our own side to a higher standard. There are so so many easily verifiable things to write about, that its beyond pointless to trash our credibility over things that are proven inaccurate with a little bit of fact checking. I mean, Phillips being the wrong age to have been in Vietnam, as he claimed to Vox, would have been trivial to detect with any fact checking at all, and should have raised flags about the rest of his narrative. No one here is even trying to advance narrative high school boys are angels, with a bit a of digging it's pretty easy to find things that Covington Catholic does may well deserve the level of public shaming that this story got. However in this case, the entire narrative has been pretty widely disputed,
Caitlin Flanagan does it much more elegantly than I could. https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/01/media-must... As for the source, why not go to the original, like any responsible journalist should have, copy of the full video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QwNyOD8FIQk Feel free to tell me when you hear them chanting "Build a wall", I haven't heard it. The first widely reported, and easily proven incorrect fact is that Nathan Phillips is a Vietnam Veteran, see fairly through coverage of that here: https://www.businessinsider.com/native-elder-nathan-phillips... So really you're asking me to believe the narrative of someone who is proven to be lying about his military service, with no corroborating video of his claims, which just seems a bit ludicrous. edited: spelling |