Fiction vs History?

Bekah bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net
Sat Oct 23 12:55:14 CDT 2004


At 6:12 PM +0000 10/22/04, Ghetta Life wrote:
>
>In this present US election cycle an analogy of the difference between history and fiction might be seen in the political coverage of a news journalist.  When Bush says something exaggerated or completely fabricated about Kerry, and in the same news cycle Kerry points to a recorded fact about the Bush’s misdeeds, should the reporter proceed to just parrot both statements in a he-said/he-said manner?  I guess the answer depends on what the journalist’s mission is.  Does he have a responsibility to point out which statements are contrary to fact?  I think so.  Are lies indistinguishable from fact?  No,  Neither is history indistinguishable from fiction.



Thank you, Getta. If it were otherwise we could teach the kids that Columbus was the first woman on the moon and it would be accepted as being as likely as any other story. 

Revisionist thinking has shaken some folks a bit too much and now, out of  disillusionment with their 5th grade history teachers, they're ready to throw the babies out with the bath water.

"History is more or less bunk." (Henry-the-Fascist  Ford) is not necessarily an example to follow. Revisionist thinking is not necessarily a better bet.


Bek




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