• Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
    ·
    1 year ago

    ...as opposed to what or who?

    I’ve posted many links in various parts of this branching-out conversation. You said the ones you witnessed weren’t satisfying and questioned their validity and place here. So I asked based on what criteria should we both go by when considering a source suitable. That brings us to here. Pretend for a moment I’m questioning the validity and place of your own sources. What would you do then, with both of us questioning each others’ sources? If one of our sources are lying while the other’s are truthful, what sign would we go by?

    I could just as easily ask you to list the things I’ve said you want more sources for if they would end up being welcome.

    • Egon
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      edit-2
      1 month ago

      deleted by creator

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
        ·
        1 year ago

        I was simply recapping with the first part is all. No need to react to those.

        Questioning a source isn’t going “well I just don’t trust it”. It’s pointing out why it is untrustworthy - Which you dont do by saying “well I’ve been told they’re untrustworthy.” You do it by highlighting a history of untrustworthiness, clear bias, lies, conflicts of interest, etc.

        My sources so far have included, as you said, a seeming (to you) random missionary-based website, the BBC, Wikipedia, two affiliates of Britannica, and all the American sources you say you denounce. If you truly are not simply saying “I just don’t trust it” as you say one shouldn’t do, what leads you to denounce every last source of mine, case by case?

        I should point out many of your sources weren’t exactly news websites, a few seemed like homemade PSA sites.

        • Egon
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          edit-2
          1 month ago

          deleted by creator

          • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
            ·
            1 year ago

            I’m not saying that, I’ve taken the time to go thru them and illustrate why they are bad sources for backing up your claim.

            There are a few you've yet to say anything about. The rest of them you've basically said it boils down to the trustworthiness of the country it's in (or in Wikipedia's case the supposed Godwin's-law-violating bias) but then when it's asked what the trustworthiness itself boils down to and it becomes a subjective matter.

            Now all you need to do is engage with the content and critique it...

            Haven't I?

            ...based on a factual basis.

            Your true colors are showing. Imagine if this was a court of law. You'd be seen as imperial for not having anymore evidence than the opposing side yet insisting it amounts to more than the opposing side.

            I stopped appealing to authority in the first few comments, then I became ready to adapt to what you wish I appeal to, because based on the lack of clarity about your answer aside from your view on how a source should be critiqued, your stance is not as above mine in being backed up as you make it sound like you believe.