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7 Comments

  1. Newspapers are toxic and so is their newsprint formula as many still use solvent based ink and if the newspaper is rolled up and burned or smoked the solvent can damage our brain or nervous system as much as reading their lies written.

  2. New Zealand MSM always pushing an agenda.
    Newspapers in NZ good for fish & chips, nothing much else. The truth? bah humbug.

  3. Hew Lewis is in the news, learning it’s hipper to be square?

    O_o i must be trippin on the fluoride again

  4. You’d think after reading newspapers and watching telly that the only people on the roads causing accidents are day dreaming millenials drinking milkshakes having head-ons after a few cones. I’ve read studies that show weed is not the primary cause of road accidents (less than 5% drivers had cannabis in their system) but herb is grouped in with the alcohol statistics if both are found in blood samples (alcohol accounting for more than 20% of crashes). Inattention and speed appear to be much more of a factor in road crashes than marijuana. There has been a concerted campaign to demonize ganja for a while now which has ramped up recently with the discussions of decriminalisation.

  5. The headings of articles invariably bear no relevance to the information presented below.
    More often than not, the article starts off dealing with one issue (which may or may not relate to the heading) then ‘leads in’ to something completely different within the text of the article.
    This I believe is a tactic known as ‘click-bait’.
    Add to this the terribly poor standard of grammar and spelling by many of today’s editorial staff and you have articles which not only mislead, but are impossible to read as they’re littered with spelling errors and grammar faux pas.
    I’m nowhere near old enough to quote the line “back in my day” but I remember a time when editors could spell, knew how to construct proper sentences and above all, could proof-read an article for accuracy before publishing it.
    Now it seems that ‘anything goes’ and just bang out as much editorial content as you can, do your best with the wording and “she’ll be right mate”.
    Standards have fallen by the wayside. It is now apparent that as long as “most people can understand what we mean” then that is good enough.
    I much prefer to listen to radio services which broadcast comprehensive news bulletins (i.e not the networks that give you a 30 second ’round-up’ in brief) – at least I don’t have to deal with these editorial buffoons who are asleep at the wheel churning out unreadable crap.

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