redo
Senior Member
- Messages
- 874
Freudian slip by Tsouderos
If you take a look at this quote, which many would argue is what's most harmful for our case:
The points the journalist put forward (for Mikovits), is not how Mikovits put it forward.
As I wrote in post 167, I think the journalist made up her mind about how to do the article when she saw that the infection was linked to atypical MS, FMS, CFS and autism.
And I think it's the last of those mentioned that made her do what she did.
What was this article about? Was it mostly about CFS or autism?
If you take a look at how the article is categorized you can see what the journalist thought.
You are here: ChicagoTribune.com>Collections>Autism
I think that says it all. The categorization may very well have been done subconsciously, like a Freudian slip.
If the article is harmful as it is is a different discussion. I think it's obvious that it is. But I think it's the journalist who's to blame, and not Mikovits.
And Mr. Kite, having a Master's degree in Communication I am a little disappointed that you don't see (or point out) that there's something very fishy about how this article is put together.
The journalist keeps referring to emails, and chunk of those are not emails to the journalist. She might like to have it seem that way, but they aren't. It's emails which have been forwarded to the journalist when she did research for her story.
A big difference between Mikovits and other doctors is that she, like I wrote earlier, responds to emails from people she can trust, people who she don't know, and people who she can't trust. And when she does so, emails are begin forwarded, and some come in the hands of a journalist who feels she got a good grip on autism, and doesn't mind doing some below-belt-punches to get her story (and points) out.
If you take a look at this quote, which many would argue is what's most harmful for our case:
You can see the quote is broken up to the left and right of "she wrote". The left was in one context and the right in another.(...) unless we do something now this could be the worst epidemic in U.S. history," she wrote. "Our continent will be like HIV Africa only worse!"
The points the journalist put forward (for Mikovits), is not how Mikovits put it forward.
As I wrote in post 167, I think the journalist made up her mind about how to do the article when she saw that the infection was linked to atypical MS, FMS, CFS and autism.
And I think it's the last of those mentioned that made her do what she did.
What was this article about? Was it mostly about CFS or autism?
If you take a look at how the article is categorized you can see what the journalist thought.
You are here: ChicagoTribune.com>Collections>Autism
I think that says it all. The categorization may very well have been done subconsciously, like a Freudian slip.
If the article is harmful as it is is a different discussion. I think it's obvious that it is. But I think it's the journalist who's to blame, and not Mikovits.
Not really. Saying you have "no recourse" but to "play the autism card" and trying to create hysteria by mentioning AIDS epidemics doesn't seem very responsible from a scientific standpoint. If she keep acting like that she's going to discredit all of us.
And Mr. Kite, having a Master's degree in Communication I am a little disappointed that you don't see (or point out) that there's something very fishy about how this article is put together.
The journalist keeps referring to emails, and chunk of those are not emails to the journalist. She might like to have it seem that way, but they aren't. It's emails which have been forwarded to the journalist when she did research for her story.
A big difference between Mikovits and other doctors is that she, like I wrote earlier, responds to emails from people she can trust, people who she don't know, and people who she can't trust. And when she does so, emails are begin forwarded, and some come in the hands of a journalist who feels she got a good grip on autism, and doesn't mind doing some below-belt-punches to get her story (and points) out.