
TRUTH vs FICTION~SOME FOLKS
Smell It-See It-Feel It Kwow It-But Still Don't Want To Believe It TRUTH
What's Up America? Why Let A Few Extremists Steal Your Peace And Happiness *Search* Find The Truth Then Decide YOUR Position
What's Up America? Why Let A Few Extremists Steal Your Peace And Happiness *Search* Find The Truth Then Decide YOUR Position
GREED-MONEY-POLITICS-RACE-RELIGION-MANY WILL TRIGGER YOUR FEARS FOR THEIR MONEY-POWER-INFLUENCE THEY DON'T KNOW YOU-DON'T CARE ABOUT YOU-BUT KNOW YOUR VULNERABLE FOR DONATIONS & KEEP LISTENING & KEEP GIVING-WAKEUP THINK
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LIES are SPOKEN for SELF INTEREST-HATE-MONEY-IGNORANCE-NOT for PUBLIC GOOD-NOT for ME or YOU
Intentionally Created in Many Cases by People Intent on Nothing More than Creating Click Bait-TV SHOWS PODCASTS to GENARATE PROFITS>MONEY FOR THEM Truth be Damned
THEY JUST DON'T CARE
> WELL KING DOES!
definition of freedom of speech in the constitution
The right to freedom of speech allows individuals to express themselves without government interference or regulation. The Supreme Court requires the government to provide substantial justification for the interference with the right of free speech where it attempts to regulate the content of the speech.
What are the 3 restrictions to freedom of speech? Time, Place, and Manner. Limitations based on time, place, and manner apply to all speech, regardless of the view expressed. They are generally restrictions that are intended to balance other rights or a legitimate government interest.
“Doctors take the Hippocratic Oath when they leave medical school. What if we had a Politician-Journalist’s Oath?”
“The speed of communications is wondrous to behold. It is also true that speed can multiply the distribution of information that we know to be untrue.”
What he saw in his era of radio and TV broadcasts has been multiplied by several orders of magnitude with the disinformation and blatant propaganda found on the emerging social media platforms that have displaced traditional newsrooms.
We saw this in the incredible Fake News sites, intentionally created in many cases by people intent on nothing more than creating click bait to generate profits for themselves, truth be damned.
There is growing pressure on social media platforms to finally accept that they are in fact publishers and must take responsibility for what appears in their medium. However those in favor of their own propaganda will fight hard to prevent such platforms from cracking down on their opinions masquerading as facts.
For now, the only recourse for the news consumer is to try and “sort the wheat from he chaff”, but what if we as media creators would voluntarily hold ourselves to a higher standard and in turn increase our credibility with our audiences?
All of us, professional journalists and citizen journalists alike could claim our allegiance to the qualities of fairness, accuracy and objectivity that the best journalism aspires to.
Doctors take the Hippocratic Oath when they leave medical school, what if we had a Journalist’s Oath?
Ideally, it would provide the same moral force that the Hippocratic Oath does for patients who know their doctors have vowed “first, do no harm.”
The shape of such an “oath” is something I’ve thought about for several years and I’ve come to a number of conclusions.
Most news organizations already have codes of ethics, editorial policies and style guides to determine how the news should be written or presented. An oath couldn’t encompass all of those factors and would have to be adjusted for every news organization and medium (radio, TV, print, online). It’s best then to let individual news organizations and academic institutions grapple with the details to determine best practices, editorial decision making policies and ethical positions for given challenges.
The use of the term “oath” may not be the most appropriate either. It implies a pact with God or some supernatural force. Obviously, that could be offensive to both people of faith and nonbelievers alike.
Instead of an oath I propose a compact, “an agreement between equals”.
The Media Compact wouldn’t be administered by some organization, rather it would be akin to crowdsourcing where individuals come together to accomplish a goal, in this case to abide by the agreement to serve their audience “in concord with all journalists of goodwill and integrity”.
People or organizations adhering to this Media Compact would instead state that they are abiding by this pact, perhaps placing a symbol or statement on their media platform.
If the idea was widely adopted, it could give working journalists a sense of common purpose and connection, while providing citizen journalists a set of values to rally around and hopefully give greater credibility to their work.
The public would also have a set of values to help them judge the news they’re consuming and to hold journalists of all stripes to a higher standard.
.
So, here’s my thought experiment for a Media Compact:
“I __________ In obedience to the dictates of my own conscience vow to serve the public with news and information as free of bias and distortion as is within my skill to execute.
I will strive to bring balance, depth and perspective to the work I offer, so it may enlighten and inform.
I will at all times remain mindful of the distinction between opinion and journalism and make it clear which voice I am speaking in.
I will honor the public trust by refusing to use my journalist voice to advance the propaganda of governments, organizations or advertisers.
I will protect the secrecy of my confidential sources to ensure the public’s right to know is not thwarted by conspiracies of silence.
I vow not to libelously harm another person’s character, reputation or legacy.
I affirm my commitment to this noble public trust in concord with all journalists of goodwill and integrity, for the betterment of the communities that I serve.”
I’m by no means the first person to propose a journalist’s oath.
In 1914, Walter Williams created the Journalist’s Creed. He founded the world’s first journalism school at the University of Missouri, and later served as the university’s president.
Watch Dog City acts as a broker for the work of professional journalists with “a press corps loyal to you, not to big media conglomerates, Wall Street investors or political parties”. They require their contributors to agree to their Journalist’s Oath.
For Citizen Journalists, the Constitutional First Amendment Press Association created it’s own Constitutional Journalist’s Pledge. Citizen journalists who are willing to take the pledge are given credentials by the organization to help them prove that they are working as journalists. A right of access normally limited to professional journalists working for known media organizations.
In whatever form these and other oaths, pledges or compacts take the idea is simple enough, to remind anyone doing journalism and their audiences, that they are providing a vital function for democracy, by holding those in power to account for their actions and for people to be informed with the facts about the world around them.
As we engage in the work of journalism or public commentary, another reminder to remain humble: “Just because your voice reaches halfway around the world doesn’t mean you are wiser than when it reached only to the end of the bar.
” Edward R. Murrow.
Where When What The Eyes See Is Real<>HOW<>The Heart and Brain Interpret May Be In Question
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If customers can’t find it, it doesn’t exist. Clearly list and describe the services you offer. Also, be sure to showcase a premium service.
If customers can’t find it, it doesn’t exist. Clearly list and describe the services you offer. Also, be sure to showcase a premium service.
Having a big sale, on-site celebrity, or other event? Be sure to announce it so everybody knows and gets excited about it.
Having a big sale, on-site celebrity, or other event? Be sure to announce it so everybody knows and gets excited about it.
If customers can’t find it, it doesn’t exist. Clearly list and describe the services you offer. Also, be sure to showcase a premium service.
Having a big sale, on-site celebrity, or other event? Be sure to announce it so everybody knows and gets excited about it.
If customers can’t find it, it doesn’t exist. Clearly list and describe the services you offer. Also, be sure to showcase a premium service.
Having a big sale, on-site celebrity, or other event? Be sure to announce it so everybody knows and gets excited about it.
If customers can’t find it, it doesn’t exist. Clearly list and describe the services you offer. Also, be sure to showcase a premium service.
Having a big sale, on-site celebrity, or other event? Be sure to announce it so everybody knows and gets excited about it.
If customers can’t find it, it doesn’t exist. Clearly list and describe the services you offer. Also, be sure to showcase a premium service.
Having a big sale, on-site celebrity, or other event? Be sure to announce it so everybody knows and gets excited about it.
This is a long form text area designed for your content that you can fill up with as many words as your heart desires. You can write articles, long mission statements, company policies, executive profiles, company awards/distinctions, office locations, shareholder reports, whitepapers, media mentions and other pieces of content that don’t fit into a shorter, more succinct space.
Articles – Good topics for articles include anything related to your company – recent changes to operations, the latest company softball game – or the industry you’re in. General business trends (think national and even international) are great article fodder, too.
Mission statements – You can tell a lot about a company by its mission statement. Don’t have one? Now might be a good time to create one and post it here. A good mission statement tells you what drives a company to do what it does.
Company policies – Are there company policies that are particularly important to your business? Perhaps your unlimited paternity/maternity leave policy has endeared you to employees across the company. This is a good place to talk about that.
Executive profiles – A company is only as strong as its executive leadership. This is a good place to show off who’s occupying the corner offices. Write a nice bio about each executive that includes what they do, how long they’ve been at it, and what got them to where they are.
This is a content preview space you can use to get your audience interested in what you have to say so they can’t wait to learn and read more. Pull out the most interesting detail that appears on the page and write it here.
Facebook: Mark Zuckerberg's Definition Of Freedom
Published: 21 October 2019Written by Patrick Burkholder
Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg says Facebook stands for freedom of speech, as stated in his speech at Georgetown last week. The social media giant, however, seems to be only an amplifier for whatever the Facebook algorithm deems worthy to be displayed on the News Feed post.
How does the algorithm really work? What is amplified? In a report by TechCrunch, two forms of content. Native content is optimized by the algorithm for engagement. This makes people spend more time on Facebook, therefore "in the company" of the other form of content which is amplified – paid advertising.
This is not a black and white affair. The algorithm doesn't practice this amplification absolutely. Facebook does work to stop things like hoaxes and medical misinformation from going viral, even if they have already been deemed "post worthy" by the algorithm. However, Zuckerberg has personally decided that Facebook will not attempt to stop paid political misinformation from going viral.
Many disagree with this decision, whilst many also agree with it. But is it really true that it somehow defends freedom of speech? If a political ad shows up on a News Feed that is obviously false, would anyone seriously consider a decision not to run the ad, considering its not being run as a violation of freedom of speech?
The larger issue at play here is that Facebook thinks that, if their algorithm doesn't discriminate against any content, it is therefore fair. When Zuckerberg says he wants to give everyone a voice, what he is really saying is that Facebook give those selected by its algorithm a voice. The "opinion" of the algorithm, for better or worse, is calling the shots, functioning just like a censor.
Almost nobody condones hate speech, discrimination, warmongering or abuse of any kind, but Facebook allowing political ads regardless of content is basically an extension of how their algorithm optimizes engagement. Facebook's belief that, as long as they withhold judgement based on content, their ongoing, never-ending editing of what people see and don't see (censorship for better OR worse) is fair, can spread a lot of good information. But that doesn't stop extremes, conspiracy theories, histrionics, mistrust, suspicion and conflict across the globe.
Facebook's business model – optimizing for engagement – is not going to change so the social media platform can be a force of good. That would disturb the relentless assault of ads.his is a long form text area designed for your content that you can fill up with as many words as your heart desires. You can write articles, long mission statements, company policies, executive profiles, company awards/distinctions, office locations, shareholder reports, whitepapers, media mentions and other pieces of content that don’t fit into a shorter, more succinct space.
Articles – Good topics for articles include anything related to your company – recent changes to operations, the latest company softball game – or the industry you’re in. General business trends (think national and even international) are great article fodder, too.
Mission statements – You can tell a lot about a company by its mission statement. Don’t have one? Now might be a good time to create one and post it here. A good mission statement tells you what drives a company to do what it does.
Company policies – Are there company policies that are particularly important to your business? Perhaps your unlimited paternity/maternity leave policy has endeared you to employees across the company. This is a good place to talk about that.
Executive profiles – A company is only as strong as its executive leadership. This is a good place to show off who’s occupying the corner offices. Write a nice bio about each executive that includes what they do, how long they’ve been at it, and what got them to where they are.
The Quality of Your Life How You Formulate Your Opinions Depends On the Accuracy of the Information You Digest
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