An example of how news and information is mangled, misinterpreted and turned into untruth.
Someone talking about the current 'top-up' scandal in Ireland was criticising the 'head man' in St Vincent de Paul for giving himself a 'top-up' of €200,000. The man went on to say he'd give none of them a penny.
But of course he got the story completely wrong from A to Z. The story had nothing to do with the St Vincent de Pau Society. The 'top-up' concerned St Vincent's Hospital.
It was his own certainty, his own sureness that makes it all so scary.
How much do we all get wrong? How do large organisations, PR companies, governments go about in trying to misconstrue the truth?
Is that the job of the spin doctor?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Featured Post
Clinton's nailing of JD Vance’s plans is fake news
[Note: In an earlier posting this morning an incorrect link was posted. The correct link is now at the end of this post, apologies.] [Note n...
-
In the current edition of the Irish Catholic David Quin writes about the controversy happening between US Catholic politicians and the US hi...
-
The story below is from The Irish Times of yesterday. The article is written by Arthur Beesley. On face value this is a shocking story and i...
-
A week down. I am 'working' here as a chaplain in a Caritas-run hospital in Berlin Hermsdorf. The stories, the faces, the smiles...
1 comment:
Indeed.
Pediatricians beware.
Post a Comment