Journalists and the Spread of Illiteracy

CNN reported at the time that the footwear rule came into play after the local mountain rescue crews became exacerbated by having to rescue so many people tripping over their own feet. "These are difficult paths, in some cases, similar to mountain paths,” Patrizio Scarpellini, director of the Cinque Terre National Park, told CNN Travel. “Essential to have proper shoes!”

 

11 thoughts on “Journalists and the Spread of Illiteracy”

  1. If the rescue crews became exacerbated, perhaps they should be changed along with all the shoes, since the crews became worse by having to rescue so many people. Apparently, for these crews, practice does not make perfect.
    Change the shoes and the crews! Don’t trip on your Italian trip!
    But it looks like someone updated the CNN report with ‘exasperated.’

  2. Elliot,
    Are you telling me that the CCN fake-newsers removed the cynosure of my implied mockery? The bastards!

  3. Elliot,
    Speaking of temporal locations and the the philosophy of time, are you familiar with John Bigelow’s Lucretian defense of presentism?
    https://philpapers.org/rec/BIGPAP
    As for leftist journalists — journos as I call them — I would have no objection to their existence as long as said existence is tenseless and every single journo occupied a temporal location earlier than the ones we pick out with our uses of ‘now.’

  4. Bro Joe,
    I would call it a limited, generic execration inasmuch as it is limited to leftist journalists, and is consistent with allowing that some few of the journos are sometimes honest and professional.
    I should also add that I have very high respect for journalists who put themselves in harm’s way to get the story, this includes some journos: some of these men and women, as otherwise benighted and despicable as they are, do manifest a high degree of courage. Courage is a virtue regardless of what one is courageous about.

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