Excellent point. Fair question. The facts show both of them were misinformed and printed and supported the misinformation as fact until the misinformation was busted. Whereupon they both apologized and corrected their mistakes.What I want to know is why, when Mr. Lane makes an error on his blog, it's an error, but when @carlosp does, it's a lie.
Riddle me that, Batman.
-> Identical <-
The ever more emotionally satisfying explanation in the short term for each point of view is saying those espousing the other point of view are clearly full of s*t.
But I'm absolutely sure the answer to that question is complicated and has much to do with point of view bias confirmation that comes from interpretation of data being influenced by the naturally formed filters each human develops from life experience to support an individual's, um, wait, I think you once called it individual world view?
So Mr. Lane's mistake was a mistake and Carlos' mistake was a lie.
----or------
The defendant perpetrated a fraud to discredit the author collecting the facts in thiswholething that themselves are not refutable.
-----or-------
Bad guys vs Good Guys (works well for each point of view)
It is confirmation bias interpreting data through naturally occurring personal filters formed from life experiences.

Because my own point of view

And learning is half the battle![]()
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