Can't be. He admitted at 3:50 that scenario #2 didn't happen.
Just because it's hard to get is no reason to make stuff up, though. Just like in the news business, good reporters find a way to expose the truth and have evidence to back them up; others make stuff up.
I haven't called or labeled you anything, have I? You're wrong about past actions having no impact on current events.
What makes you think the government edits aren't legitimate? There are two million government workers. I'm sure at least a few enjoy patrolling Wiki while at work just like other wiki editors. Wiki keeps records of content changes. Incorrect stuff gets added and changed by all kinds of people. Do you have any specific evidence of systemic wrongdoing, or evidence that any government agency has been tasked with altering Wiki to cover stuff up?
Who decides what to look at? Who investigates? Do you expect any agency, private or government, to open its doors and files to anyone who thinks there may be a possible conspiracy or other hard to prove belief?
We're all a little nuts to be wasting our time here.
He is talking about trying to look into how eveything could have been prevented, he is not allowed to do this ie. cover up.
"Just because it's hard to get is no reason to make stuff up, though. Just like in the news business, good reporters find a way to expose the truth and have evidence to back them up; others make stuff up."
If the goverment has a monoply on the hard evidence since we would need to audit them, it is kinda hard to get said evidence. So i guess "good" reporters just shut up and repeat the narrative.
What stuff is being made up? So basicly because you can not get evidence or access to evidence then it is simply "making stuff up" to even question what happened? Sorry I disagree.
No you did not label me, that is true.
I dont mean that the past has no effect on today, I mean that it is a distraction and not relivant that nothing happened in regard to pearl harbor, so lets say nothing ever happens, and? So what?
"What makes you think the government edits aren't legitimate?"
A goveremnt IP address edited abby martins wiki to say something like "russian propganaist" as well as editing snowdens wiki entry to say something like "traitor".
These are not exaclty examples of the goverment editing things to help people because the info is wrong, (like if a goverment IP edited the population of a city that was listed wrong)but instead usnig the internet for propganda.
EVEN IF the edits are "legitimate" it shows that wiki is no way indypendent, but rather able to be edited by the goverment, as long as things are advertised like that on their donation page, fine.
It also shows that it is possible that wiki reflects the goverment narrative and is not an indypendent or subjective source.
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On August 2, 2013, an editor linked to the US senate with the IP
156.33.241.5 edited the Wikipedia page of whistleblower
Edward Snowden to change his description from "dissident" to "traitor".
[14]-
The next screenshots are from the site infowars, I am sure that alone will discredit them, im sure that you can find the info by going through wiki though
So are these the kind of legit edits you are talking about? Are these not policaly fueled edits of a non-goverment website?!
"Who decides what to look at? Who investigates? Do you expect any agency, private or government, to open its doors and files to anyone who thinks there may be a possible conspiracy or other hard to prove belief?"
Of course not
. Do you really think people should be satified with the "investigation" that took place?
Here are the wiki links, we can see if they differ from the infowars ones
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=616945699&oldid=616944246
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=616958230&oldid=616839647