Bernie Sanders Could Replace President Trump With Little Known Loophole

Clementine

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Dec 18, 2011
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Here is exactly what we need to do to save our great society. The information here is what we’ve all been waiting for. By doing this we can make Bernie the president on Inauguration day rather than President-elect Donald Trump.

Actually, no we can’t. There is no loophole that allows a random person to assume the office of president. That’s pretty basic common sense but yet you clicked or even shared this article anyway. Now that right there is the real point of this post…

Our social media sites have been flooded with misinformation in the past few months. While this has always been a problem, it now appears to have exploded over this election season. We are seeing post after post stating just plain illogical things and this is not a problem unique to any one side.

Even more dangerous are the posts that don’t appear to be far-fetched until you dig into the details. The big problem with that… People don’t dig for the details.

There will be many people who clicked share on this post because of it’s headline. They may not even click to open the story. They will never actually read these words. Ironically these are the folks who need to hear it the most.

As John Oliver correctly pointed out Sunday night, folks are being fed what they want to hear and they’re eating it up like a starving person. The most important thing in a functional society is a well-informed public. What we have now is not only uninformed but misinformed masses. That’s something that should scare us all.

The most important thing in a functional society is a well-informed public. What we have now is not only uninformed but misinformed masses.

How do we combat this problem? Easy, we have to do some work. While I could give a long dissertation on what exactly that means, no one has the patience to read it all, so here are five quick steps that’ll fit in a meme…

1. Read first. Then share. I myself am guilty of basing comments or even clicking share based on the headline. This is the worst thing any of us could do. Stop being lazy.

2. Check the source (and their sources). In the age of new media true and valid information comes from non-traditional sources but so does a lot of garbage. Any article that posts facts, figures or quotes should provide a source for that information. If there is no backup for their claims, move on.

3. Watch out for recycled stories. One thing that seems to be feeding into the misinformation problem is when old stories are being presented as happening now. Check the date on the story before you read on. You’ll be shocked to see how many are from another time and aren’t applicable to the current event you thought they were talking about.

4. If you care about facts, ignore the blatantly slanted. Having a slant or taking a position on a story is not wrong in itself. What is wrong is when these ideas are taken as unbiased fact. You can avoid all of this by simply avoiding those sites to start with. Any website with the words: Conservative, Liberal, Democrat, Republican, etc. in the title are just advertising how slanted they are. That’s ok if you choose to live in your side’s bubble but please don’t have any delusions that these stories reflect the whole picture.

5. Google it. God (and Sergey) gave us Google for a reason. If you see a story that’s unbelievable or has no sources or even if it does, verify. See if the same facts are reported across multiple outlets. See if anyone disputes these facts. Read these pieces and then make up your mind.

If we could all take these simple steps our society would be a better place."

Bernie Sanders Could Replace President Trump With Little Known Loophole | The Huffington Post
 
Gosh, that was probably mean to get the liberal's hopes up like that.
 
Here is exactly what we need to do to save our great society. The information here is what we’ve all been waiting for. By doing this we can make Bernie the president on Inauguration day rather than President-elect Donald Trump.

Actually, no we can’t. There is no loophole that allows a random person to assume the office of president. That’s pretty basic common sense but yet you clicked or even shared this article anyway. Now that right there is the real point of this post…

Our social media sites have been flooded with misinformation in the past few months. While this has always been a problem, it now appears to have exploded over this election season. We are seeing post after post stating just plain illogical things and this is not a problem unique to any one side.

Even more dangerous are the posts that don’t appear to be far-fetched until you dig into the details. The big problem with that… People don’t dig for the details.

There will be many people who clicked share on this post because of it’s headline. They may not even click to open the story. They will never actually read these words. Ironically these are the folks who need to hear it the most.

As John Oliver correctly pointed out Sunday night, folks are being fed what they want to hear and they’re eating it up like a starving person. The most important thing in a functional society is a well-informed public. What we have now is not only uninformed but misinformed masses. That’s something that should scare us all.

The most important thing in a functional society is a well-informed public. What we have now is not only uninformed but misinformed masses.

How do we combat this problem? Easy, we have to do some work. While I could give a long dissertation on what exactly that means, no one has the patience to read it all, so here are five quick steps that’ll fit in a meme…

1. Read first. Then share. I myself am guilty of basing comments or even clicking share based on the headline. This is the worst thing any of us could do. Stop being lazy.

2. Check the source (and their sources). In the age of new media true and valid information comes from non-traditional sources but so does a lot of garbage. Any article that posts facts, figures or quotes should provide a source for that information. If there is no backup for their claims, move on.

3. Watch out for recycled stories. One thing that seems to be feeding into the misinformation problem is when old stories are being presented as happening now. Check the date on the story before you read on. You’ll be shocked to see how many are from another time and aren’t applicable to the current event you thought they were talking about.

4. If you care about facts, ignore the blatantly slanted. Having a slant or taking a position on a story is not wrong in itself. What is wrong is when these ideas are taken as unbiased fact. You can avoid all of this by simply avoiding those sites to start with. Any website with the words: Conservative, Liberal, Democrat, Republican, etc. in the title are just advertising how slanted they are. That’s ok if you choose to live in your side’s bubble but please don’t have any delusions that these stories reflect the whole picture.

5. Google it. God (and Sergey) gave us Google for a reason. If you see a story that’s unbelievable or has no sources or even if it does, verify. See if the same facts are reported across multiple outlets. See if anyone disputes these facts. Read these pieces and then make up your mind.

If we could all take these simple steps our society would be a better place."

Bernie Sanders Could Replace President Trump With Little Known Loophole | The Huffington Post

This is basic vetting that everybody should be doing anyway. It's exactly the failure to verify one's info that I've been shooting down the entire time I've been on this site. And in the next 30 seconds some cretin in some other thread will once again post a Googly Image meme that is entirely untrue and/or a bogus quote, and it'll be up to somebody else to clean up their shit.
 
That's very good. Steve Crowder made a similar observation a few months ago. Social media, Google, Yahoo and YouTube.... all operate on an algorithm determined by a custom tally of what you've "liked" or your preferences/tendencies. In other words, they are all designed to show you what you want to see. What we want isn't always what is best for us or what we need. But over time, your searches, clicks, likes, etc., all culminate in you only getting information slanted to one perspective.
 
Gosh, that was probably mean to get the liberal's hopes up like that.
Why would you assume we think you're smart enough to know such things?


I bet some libs got all excited at the thought. Maybe, just for a moment, some wiped their tears away enough to read it.

From the responses so far --- nope, doesn't seem so. Looks like everybody read the content. Which is what we should have done.

Don't let that interrupt your fantasy though. You just keep ramming that thing 'til the batteries run out.
 
Gosh, that was probably mean to get the liberal's hopes up like that.
Why would you assume we think you're smart enough to know such things?


I bet some libs got all excited at the thought. Maybe, just for a moment, some wiped their tears away enough to read it.
I think you're putting all this focus on this "the liberals lost" theme because you need to deflect away from the reality of the situation. Deep down you know Trump as president is an awful mistake but you can't bring yourself to admit it.
 
Deep down you know Trump as president is an awful mistake but you can't bring yourself to admit it.

Nobody knows if Trump is an awful mistake. It's obvious these are the sentiments of some, that he WILL BE an awful mistake... but the fact remains, he hasn't even taken office yet and we have to wait and see how things turn out. He might be a pretty damn decent president? He could possibly be a great president! I know that sounds crazy to you but just the idea that he might win the presidency sounded crazy to you a short time ago.

I personally think electing Hillary Clinton would have been an awful mistake... a catastrophic one. To allow someone that corrupt and power-hungry to have control of our country wouldn't have been good.
 
Here is exactly what we need to do to save our great society. The information here is what we’ve all been waiting for. By doing this we can make Bernie the president on Inauguration day rather than President-elect Donald Trump.

Actually, no we can’t. There is no loophole that allows a random person to assume the office of president. That’s pretty basic common sense but yet you clicked or even shared this article anyway. Now that right there is the real point of this post…

Our social media sites have been flooded with misinformation in the past few months. While this has always been a problem, it now appears to have exploded over this election season. We are seeing post after post stating just plain illogical things and this is not a problem unique to any one side.

Even more dangerous are the posts that don’t appear to be far-fetched until you dig into the details. The big problem with that… People don’t dig for the details.

There will be many people who clicked share on this post because of it’s headline. They may not even click to open the story. They will never actually read these words. Ironically these are the folks who need to hear it the most.

As John Oliver correctly pointed out Sunday night, folks are being fed what they want to hear and they’re eating it up like a starving person. The most important thing in a functional society is a well-informed public. What we have now is not only uninformed but misinformed masses. That’s something that should scare us all.

The most important thing in a functional society is a well-informed public. What we have now is not only uninformed but misinformed masses.

How do we combat this problem? Easy, we have to do some work. While I could give a long dissertation on what exactly that means, no one has the patience to read it all, so here are five quick steps that’ll fit in a meme…

1. Read first. Then share. I myself am guilty of basing comments or even clicking share based on the headline. This is the worst thing any of us could do. Stop being lazy.

2. Check the source (and their sources). In the age of new media true and valid information comes from non-traditional sources but so does a lot of garbage. Any article that posts facts, figures or quotes should provide a source for that information. If there is no backup for their claims, move on.

3. Watch out for recycled stories. One thing that seems to be feeding into the misinformation problem is when old stories are being presented as happening now. Check the date on the story before you read on. You’ll be shocked to see how many are from another time and aren’t applicable to the current event you thought they were talking about.

4. If you care about facts, ignore the blatantly slanted. Having a slant or taking a position on a story is not wrong in itself. What is wrong is when these ideas are taken as unbiased fact. You can avoid all of this by simply avoiding those sites to start with. Any website with the words: Conservative, Liberal, Democrat, Republican, etc. in the title are just advertising how slanted they are. That’s ok if you choose to live in your side’s bubble but please don’t have any delusions that these stories reflect the whole picture.

5. Google it. God (and Sergey) gave us Google for a reason. If you see a story that’s unbelievable or has no sources or even if it does, verify. See if the same facts are reported across multiple outlets. See if anyone disputes these facts. Read these pieces and then make up your mind.

If we could all take these simple steps our society would be a better place."

Bernie Sanders Could Replace President Trump With Little Known Loophole | The Huffington Post

yeah...

“Tens of thousands” of fraudulent Clinton votes found in Ohio warehouse
 
Let's not forget to add FOX News to the list of misinformation sources. 75% to 77% lies that are accepted as truth by Trump-bots.
 

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