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You can register using your Google, Facebook, or Twitter account, just click here.In this case, those who give them the platform have determined what they say has worth.Interesting.... who decides what speech has value, or is a waste of time? Other than the individual.
Are you suggesting experts are infallible or unlikely to mislead? How would one know if that were the case?In this case, those who give them the platform have determined what they say has worth.
And they're not wrong. The business model wouldn't work if they were.
The problem is that they're judging that worth on profitability, not merit.
I'm not going to get into if/why that's a problem, but I don't personally think that specific content is "important to the discussion in a democracy". Just like I don't think a topic on which 97% of experts agree deserves to be debated on television by 1 person from each side as if each point of view is equal.
I'm not, but that doesn't mean that if (for example) 99.9% of dentists say "you shouldn't chew glass" that it makes sense to host a show where you have 2 dentists, one from each 'side' of the 'argument' and give them equal time to state their case.Are you suggesting experts are infallible or unlikely to mislead? How would one know if that were the case?
I agree. Though I would not agree when 99.9% of dentists say brushing with toothpaste using microbeads is recommended, which was essentially done when the ADA signed off on Crest's use of them. I don't use toothpaste with beads.I'm not, but that doesn't mean that if (for example) 99.9% of dentists say "you shouldn't chew glass" that it makes sense to host a show where you have 2 dentists, one from each 'side' of the 'argument' and give them equal time to state their case.
And now those beads, that are in lotsa things, are showing up in fish and being labeled an environmental hazard.I agree. Though I would not agree when 99.9% of dentists say brushing with toothpaste using microbeads is recommended, which was essentially done when the ADA signed off on Crest's use of them. I don't use toothpaste with beads.
I had a small but deep cut on my hand that became infected. When I reopened the wound to flush out the infection, a little blue bead was flushed out as well and that's why I got rid of my hand soap with little plastic beads!And now those beads, that are in lotsa things, are showing up in fish and being labeled an environmental hazard.