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originally posted by: Sargeras
originally posted by: introvert
originally posted by: Sargeras
originally posted by: introvert
originally posted by: Sargeras
originally posted by: introvert
originally posted by: ElectricUniverse
a reply to: introvert
Snopes?... Seriously?... lol...
Could you post a more propagandist website than snopes?
Did you just post a link to infowars...and yet have the audacity to question snopes?
Please.
That's insulting to anyone's intelligence.
Edit:
Snopes addresses the infowar aspect.
Yes because a man and his wife are the absolute end all of debunking....
Plz ATS is at least 20 times better than snopes.....
Not really.
Lot's of BS is spread on ATS.
Sorry to say.
Bs that gets debunked by other members.
Snopes is nothing but a man and his wife in their home, that is it.
# snopes, they are useless!
And they still do a better job than most of the people on ATS when it comes to proper sourcing and verifying claims.
If you can do better, provide proof of what was claimed.
Otherwise, quit deflecting and wasting my time.
I will do whatever the hell I want, and you will be the last person that ever tells me anything, this is an open forum, I am not obliged to answer your demands, and I will be damned before some punk in their parents basement tells me #.
originally posted by: dragonridr
a reply to: ElectricUniverse
Well looks like trump is keeping his word and already creating jobs.
It's not a big secret BLM is paid for by Soros. Started in Ferguson and he's been paying people to protest. I fond it funny that people think people just show up protests are organized. There's a lot of details to be worked out jn a protest starting with when and where. Funniesr part is when he stiffed some of the protestors and y hey went public. Even threating law suits as they say ooooppps lol.
edit on 6/9/16 by dragonridr because: (no reason given)
originally posted by: Vector99
originally posted by: introvert
I thought these craigslist ads were removed from the site and were found to be a hoax/joke.
Is this new?
Oh my god we agree on something!
Seriously, who would advertise something like this on craigslist.
originally posted by: introvert
originally posted by: Sargeras
originally posted by: introvert
originally posted by: Sargeras
originally posted by: introvert
originally posted by: Sargeras
originally posted by: introvert
originally posted by: ElectricUniverse
a reply to: introvert
Snopes?... Seriously?... lol...
Could you post a more propagandist website than snopes?
Did you just post a link to infowars...and yet have the audacity to question snopes?
Please.
That's insulting to anyone's intelligence.
Edit:
Snopes addresses the infowar aspect.
Yes because a man and his wife are the absolute end all of debunking....
Plz ATS is at least 20 times better than snopes.....
Not really.
Lot's of BS is spread on ATS.
Sorry to say.
Bs that gets debunked by other members.
Snopes is nothing but a man and his wife in their home, that is it.
# snopes, they are useless!
And they still do a better job than most of the people on ATS when it comes to proper sourcing and verifying claims.
If you can do better, provide proof of what was claimed.
Otherwise, quit deflecting and wasting my time.
I will do whatever the hell I want, and you will be the last person that ever tells me anything, this is an open forum, I am not obliged to answer your demands, and I will be damned before some punk in their parents basement tells me #.
Can you prove it or not?
I'm not interested in your personal attacks.
By the way, my mother lives in my basement.
originally posted by: introvert
a reply to: Sargeras
So you can't prove it.
Ok.
I'll stop wasting my time.
"Common knowledge" means you cannot backup what you claim.
Donald Trump Protester Speaks Out: “I Was Paid $3,500 To Protest Trump’s Rally”
By abcnews -
June 8, 2016
PHOENIX A.Z. (AP) — For months now, rumors have circulated the Internet that individuals were being paid to protest at rallies held by presidential hopeful Donald Trump. Today a man from Trump’s rally in Fountain Hills, Arizona back in March has come forward to say that he was paid to protest the event.
“I was given $3,500 to protest Donald Trump’s rally in Fountain Hills,” said 37-year-old Paul Horner. “I answered a Craigslist ad about a group needing actors for a political event. I interviewed with them and got the part.”
...
originally posted by: Grambler
I wouldn't be surprised if people were paid to be there on both sides. But I honestly believe the vast majority of Trump supporters and anti trump people really believe in their cause.
Snopes.com /ˈsnoʊps/, also known as the Urban Legends Reference Pages, is a website covering urban legends, Internet rumors, e-mail forwards, and other stories of unknown or questionable origin.[2] It is a well-known resource for validating and debunking such stories in American popular culture,[3] receiving 300,000 visits a day.[4]
Snopes.com was created by Barbara and David Mikkelson, a California couple who met in the alt.folklore.urban newsgroup.[5] The site is organized by topic and includes a message board where stories and pictures of questionable veracity may be posted. The Mikkelsons founded the San Fernando Valley Folklore Society and were credited as the owners of that site until 2005.[6]
Accuracy
Jan Harold Brunvand, a folklorist who has written a number of books on urban legends and modern folklore, considers the site so comprehensive as to obviate launching one of his own.[10]
David Mikkelson has said that the site receives more complaints of liberal bias than conservative bias,[22] but insists that the same debunking standards are applied to all political urban legends. FactCheck reviewed a sample of Snopes' responses to political rumors regarding George W. Bush, Sarah Palin, and Barack Obama, and found them to be free from bias in all cases. FactCheck noted that Barbara Mikkelson was a Canadian citizen (and thus unable to vote in US elections)[clarification needed] and David Mikkelson was an independent who was once registered as a Republican. "You'd be hard-pressed to find two more apolitical people," David Mikkelson told them.[22][23]
Alexander Emerick "Alex" Jones (born February 11, 1974[2]) is an American conspiracy theorist,[3][4][5] radio show host, documentary filmmaker, and writer.[6] His syndicated news/talk show The Alex Jones Show, based in Austin, Texas, airs via the Genesis Communications Network[7] and shortwave station WWCR[8] across the United States, and on the Internet in video form.[9][10]
Jones has been the center of many controversies, including his controversial statements about gun control in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.[11]
He has accused the U.S. government of being involved in the Oklahoma City bombing,[12] the September 11 attacks[13] and the filming of fake Moon landings to hide NASA's secret technology (though he later denounced this accusation).[14][15][16]
He believes that government and big business have colluded to create a New World Order through "manufactured economic crises, sophisticated surveillance tech and—above all—inside-job terror attacks that fuel exploitable hysteria".[17] Jones describes himself as a libertarian, paleoconservative and an "aggressive constitutionalist".[18][19]
Mainstream media sources have described Jones as a conservative, a right-wing conspiracy theorist, and a libertarian.
(born 11 February 1974) is a far right radio entertainer and comedian who specializes in making up conspiracy theories to entertain his audience.[3]
Jones is one of the very few people who can make Glenn Beck look comparatively sane; it gets worse from there.
Alex got his start on Access TV in Austin, peddling basically the same horse#, except on a small-time scale. Y2K was what he really pounded the table over, grunting about the end of money and shilling for his gun and survivalist's shop called "The Hardware Store". They specialized in stuff like guns, ammo, MREs[4] and 8-stage water filtration systems.
He pimped the hell out of these on his show, promising us all that the end was nigh. Then nothing happened.[5][6]
originally posted by: BuzzyWigs
a reply to: Sargeras
[url-en.wikipedia.org...]Snopes[/url]
Snopes.com /ˈsnoʊps/, also known as the Urban Legends Reference Pages, is a website covering urban legends, Internet rumors, e-mail forwards, and other stories of unknown or questionable origin.[2] It is a well-known resource for validating and debunking such stories in American popular culture,[3] receiving 300,000 visits a day.[4]
Snopes.com was created by Barbara and David Mikkelson, a California couple who met in the alt.folklore.urban newsgroup.[5] The site is organized by topic and includes a message board where stories and pictures of questionable veracity may be posted. The Mikkelsons founded the San Fernando Valley Folklore Society and were credited as the owners of that site until 2005.[6]
Accuracy
Jan Harold Brunvand, a folklorist who has written a number of books on urban legends and modern folklore, considers the site so comprehensive as to obviate launching one of his own.[10]
David Mikkelson has said that the site receives more complaints of liberal bias than conservative bias,[22] but insists that the same debunking standards are applied to all political urban legends. FactCheck reviewed a sample of Snopes' responses to political rumors regarding George W. Bush, Sarah Palin, and Barack Obama, and found them to be free from bias in all cases. FactCheck noted that Barbara Mikkelson was a Canadian citizen (and thus unable to vote in US elections)[clarification needed] and David Mikkelson was an independent who was once registered as a Republican. "You'd be hard-pressed to find two more apolitical people," David Mikkelson told them.[22][23]
Whereas
Alex Jones
Alexander Emerick "Alex" Jones (born February 11, 1974[2]) is an American conspiracy theorist,[3][4][5] radio show host, documentary filmmaker, and writer.[6] His syndicated news/talk show The Alex Jones Show, based in Austin, Texas, airs via the Genesis Communications Network[7] and shortwave station WWCR[8] across the United States, and on the Internet in video form.[9][10]
Jones has been the center of many controversies, including his controversial statements about gun control in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.[11]
He has accused the U.S. government of being involved in the Oklahoma City bombing,[12] the September 11 attacks[13] and the filming of fake Moon landings to hide NASA's secret technology (though he later denounced this accusation).[14][15][16]
He believes that government and big business have colluded to create a New World Order through "manufactured economic crises, sophisticated surveillance tech and—above all—inside-job terror attacks that fuel exploitable hysteria".[17] Jones describes himself as a libertarian, paleoconservative and an "aggressive constitutionalist".[18][19]
Mainstream media sources have described Jones as a conservative, a right-wing conspiracy theorist, and a libertarian.
is a nutcase and comedian entertainer who is getting filthy rich off you lot....
[url=http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Alex_Jones]Alex Emerick Jones........
(born 11 February 1974) is a far right radio entertainer and comedian who specializes in making up conspiracy theories to entertain his audience.[3]
Jones is one of the very few people who can make Glenn Beck look comparatively sane; it gets worse from there.
Alex got his start on Access TV in Austin, peddling basically the same horse#, except on a small-time scale. Y2K was what he really pounded the table over, grunting about the end of money and shilling for his gun and survivalist's shop called "The Hardware Store". They specialized in stuff like guns, ammo, MREs[4] and 8-stage water filtration systems.
He pimped the hell out of these on his show, promising us all that the end was nigh. Then nothing happened.[5][6]
(Hope you can see how bamboozled and kerfuffled you have become.)
First of all, Snopes propaganda is clearly obvious. The ads speak for themselves. Yet you need someone else to tell you differently?