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by supercanuck 2150 days ago
Could you explain why you think having the word "may" in a title implies that it is referencing a fact?

I've added the definitions for you, because I am genuinly confused:

may /mā/ verb 1.expressing possibility. "that may be true"

--

fact /fakt/noun a thing that is known or proved to be true.

1 comments

Sure, but anything that can happen, may happen. The world may end tomorrow. That's entirely within the realm of universal possibility, but it is also entirely unlikely and therefore clickbait.
but this article didn't say anything can happen, it is measuring a shift in the opinions of those who became unemployed during the pandemic, and the context of this is congress is currently negotiating a stimulus package to help those in need.

My question to the OP, and maybe you, is why does that not matter to you?

I don't see how that is deceptive, sensationalized or misleading to be considered clickbait

Here's a proper, non-clickbaity title for that description: "Many fear permanent job loss" or "Job loss anxiety grows" or "Nearly half of all workers fear permanent job loss". There's a difference between statistical probability based on economic analysis and sentimental analysis based on current mood. Sentiment does matter, but it's also easy to be unrealistically pessimistic in the midst of a trough.
Sorry I find your suggestions unacceptable because the point of the article, and I think this is the root of your where your misinterpretation stems from, is there is a measurable change in the opinions of those who lost their job. Before they felt like the jobs would come back, now they think they are permanent.

That is a loss in confidence. your alternative titles contain no such information and aren't accurately describing what is happening.

I'm just going to ignore the rest of your analysis because it doesn't seem to be relevant and distracts from the point.

The loss of confidence is the story. That is not reflected in the headline. The story is about sentiment. The headline implies a more serious undertone. It's not irrelevant. Clickbait and sensationalism is a big problem these days, if you haven't noticed. In fact, it may lead to the collapse of Western civilization. At least, that's my feelings on the matter anyways.