A Learning Process
Normally, each morning I can't wait to read the Wall Street Journal's opinion pieces, hoping to learn more about news events that may not be captured in the regular news sources. Or, to get a point of view that you rarely see in mainstream media. This morning, I simply passed it by.
Somehow after the lies and misrepresentations in yesterday's WSJ editorial entitled "Virginia Fracas," I don't trust the WSJ any more. Virtually, every paragraph of the "VF" article was an apparently deliberate attempt to distort what is really happening at UVA to fit a narrow political agenda. Shame on WSJ. I doubt that I will have any interest in perusing the WSJ editorial page in the future. I simply don't think the WSJ can be trusted to be truthful when they have a political point to make.
You live and learn.
Somehow after the lies and misrepresentations in yesterday's WSJ editorial entitled "Virginia Fracas," I don't trust the WSJ any more. Virtually, every paragraph of the "VF" article was an apparently deliberate attempt to distort what is really happening at UVA to fit a narrow political agenda. Shame on WSJ. I doubt that I will have any interest in perusing the WSJ editorial page in the future. I simply don't think the WSJ can be trusted to be truthful when they have a political point to make.
You live and learn.
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