I have noticed the inverted commas too, the change in the narrative, from COVID now the focus is Russia, Russia. After each disaster serves its purposes they look for something new. It's negative MP 101. If it works once, then change the narrative slightly attack from a new angle and then when they get used to that angle move back to one that is similar to the first one. In other words, they zig and then zag but the agenda is the same. Keep the masses in a state of agitation. for happy cows do have time to think but nervous nellies are more open to autosuggestion, the boob tube and the extension of the Boob tube which is social media, which would be referred to as the Arse Tube, but that's a different storyharryg wrote: ↑Mon Feb 21, 2022 9:45 am A propos de nothing really, but can't help noticing that now we are no longer supposed to be scared of Covid (in the UK), there is no shortage of alternatives. 3 main headlines on Yahoo!, as I write:
HEADLINE: Dangerous dog on the loose is 'highly likely to attack'
HEADLINE: 'Significant risk' of Londoners drowning in floods
HEADLINE: Russia 'planning biggest war in Europe since 1945'
I'm sure I'm not the only one to notice that stories online have things in inverted commas nowadays? It seems to mean 'everything between these might be completely made up'.
some stories with the inverted comma syndrome
Mohamed El-Erian details 'fundamental change to the marketplace' as the Fed moves
President Biden is ‘convinced’ Putin has decided to invade Ukraine
Apple store unions could jeopardize its 'caring' reputation
JPMorgan Strategists Say Stock Pessimism Is ‘In Vogue,’ But Wrong
UPDATE 1-Japan says freeing up 'trigger clause' on gasoline tax among options to curb prices
We don't have journalism anymore. What we have is Gossip on steroids and this gossip which is worse than an opinion that originates from a critical mind is what passes for news today