matriculated wrote:VMI77 wrote: To clear up your confusion...VMI77 wrote:Great job of completely missing the point of the person you are responding to. Also, yeah, "wrong" reporting is ok, just as long as it's not "completely wrong."It's clear you're being sarcastic in that last one, so you just called me a fool. Just in the interest of keeping the tone around here civil, it might not be the best idea to claim other people here are confused, do a great job of completely missing missing the point, stuffing words in their mouth that they didn't actually say, and calling them names. Just a suggestion.VMI77 wrote:It's heartening to learn that you're not one of those fools who follow all the 24/7 media sensationalism.
I give what I get. Here's what you selectively quoted from my remarks:
Of course, you ignored the three reasons I gave for questioning the accuracy of the news coverage, then you selected this part of my response:matriculated wrote:VMI77 wrote:matriculated wrote:Miami Herald says they got the info about what Zimmerman told the police on the scene from Sanford PD, hence the "police said." If Miami Herald is blatantly making that up for some reason, that shouldn't be hard to prove. I see no reason to question the veracity of that claim. The Sanford PD isn't.
Here is your snide, dismissive, and insulting reply:matriculated wrote:VMI77 wrote:I've just read generalities in this story....and I don't plan to follow it in detail...
If you want to ride around on your high horse you have to actually stay in the saddle. And you DID say the reporting wasn't "completely wrong," AND you "see no reason to question the veracity of the claim," which coupled together amounts to you accepting reports that aren't "completely wrong," or in other words, reports that are partially wrong --so I put no words in your mouth.matriculated wrote:I figured.