First off I believe these "priceless" lines (as in this type of spin from the credit card commercial) are intended as a hyperbole of a situation. The picture IMO was spun this way NOT to denigrate the very John Doe in the photo but rather to shine a big spotlight on situations like this that DO exist.
That's a good excuse. Is it hyperbole to call a man a convicted felon with time served in prison when he was arrested and released without being charged? Is it hyperbole to say a man cannot hold an office because he isn't a Natural Citizen when he was born in Hawaii?
No...that's not hyperbole...it's lying. There is a difference.
The snopes link speculates just as much as the OP picture. They only succeed in the semantic argument and that is a stretch. So he wasn't "receiving a meal" he was only standing in line where the meals were being served. It may not be a Blackberry it could be a 7-11 prepaid phone that looks just like a Blackberry Curve right down to where his thumb is to push the trackball and take the pic. It wasn't outright gov funded but my guess would be that as a charity they are granted tax exemption and the private funding was probably claimed as a donation which in turn would be tax exempt so yes by omission they are in a way gov funded.
This is ridiculous. The snopes link spedculates. The photograph states, as if fact, assumptions. The snopes link is not saying what IS going on the photo, it is merely pointing out the millions of possibilities OTHER than the photograph's assumptions.
In the end, the person that created this, specifically made up "facts" to support a preconcieved idea, and used that idea to stir up an emotional response in citizen's that are not interested in seeing anything more than the surface. That's the definition of propoganda...
...It wasn't outright gov funded but my guess would be that as a charity they are granted tax exemption and the private funding was probably claimed as a donation which in turn would be tax exempt so yes by omission they are in a way gov funded.
"Government funded" means they recieve funds to operate from the government. Being tax exempt and being government funded are two completely and wholly different things. Otherwise, every Christian church in this country is "government funded", and that, my friend, is unConstitutional.
Saying something is known to be government funded when it is NOT, in fact, government funded, is lying. It's not hyperbole, it's not simile, it's not metaphor...it's lying.
Really?!?! The race card?!?! I don't care if he is purple. It's not about the man it's about the situation!
Really? Then why is it so wrong for the guy in front to have a camera, but it's perfectly OK for the guy behind him taking a picture to have a camera? The way I see it, there are at least 2 different cameras being used to take photographs in the exact same place. Why are you only mad about the guy in front?:shrugs:
How many other people do you think showed up in this cafe at some point during the day with a camera, cell phone, or other photographic device? Why is it the photo of the black guy in black clothes makes you so angry when there was
most likely at least 10 other cameras there that daytaking pictures?:shrugs:
Again IMHO the photo was intended as a hyperbole directed at the abuse of the social programs in this country. If any of you wish to deny the existence, strike that, the prominence of that abuse we must live on different planets. :shrugs: :headbang:
I don't deny the abuse of social programs in this country. But that isn't Michelle Obama's fault, and this photograph isn't addressing the REAL abuses of aocial programs. It is taking a perfectly innocuous situation and
creating an
assumed abuse, and using it as media propoganda.
You want to discuss the real reforms needed in social welfare, I'm all for it. I'm sure we would agree on easily as many issues as we would disagree on. But this photograph isn't remotely accurate. Let's call a spade a spade. This is propoganda. And for people like the fatman to be insulting towards those of us able to look past the shiny surface is...well...insulting.