Wednesday, January 7, 2009

BEWARE OF SNOPES.COM!!!

For the past few years www.snopes.com has positioned itself, or others have labeled it, as the 'tell all final word' on any comment, claim and email.

For several years people tried to find out who exactly was behind snopes.com. Only recently did Wikipedia get to the bottom of it - kinda makes you wonder what they were hiding. Well, finally we know. It is run by a husband and wife team - that's right, no big office of investigators and researchers, no team of lawyers. It's just a mom-and-pop operation that began as a hobby.

David and Barbara Mikkelson in the San Fernando Valley of California started the website about 13 years ago - and they have no formal background or experience in investigative research. After a few years it gained popularity believing it to be unbiased and neutral, but over the past couple of years people started asking questions who was behind it and did they have a selfish motivation? The reason for the questions - or skepticisms - is a result of snopes.com claiming to have the bottom line facts to certain questions or issue when in fact they have been proven wrong. Also, there were criticisms the Mikkelsons were not really investigating and getting to the 'true' bottom of various issues.

A few months ago, when State Farm agent Bud Gregg in Mandeville hoisted a political sign referencing Barack Obama and made a big splash across the Internet, 'supposedly' the Mikkelson's claim to have researched this issue before posting their findings on snopes.com. In their statement they claimed the corporate office of State Farm pressured Gregg into taking down the sign, when in fact nothing of the sort ever took place.

After David Mikkelson was contacted, thinking he would want to get to the bottom of this, he was given Bud Gregg's contact phone numbers - and Bud was going to give him phone numbers to the big exec 's at State Farm in Illinois who would have been willing to speak with him about it. He never called Bud. In fact, I learned from Bud Gregg no one from snopes.com ever contacted anyone with State Farm. Yet, snopes.com issued a statement as the 'final factual word' on the issue as if they did all their homework and got to the bottom of things - not!

Then it has been learned the Mikkelson's are - very Democratic (party) and extremely liberal. As we all now know from this presidential election, liberals have a purposed agenda to discredit anything that appears to be conservative. There has been much criticism lately over the Internet with people pointing out the Mikkelson's liberalism revealing itself in their website findings.

So , I say this now to everyone who goes to www.snopes.com to get what they think to be the bottom line facts...'proceed with caution.' Take what it says at face value and nothing more. Use it only to lead you to their references where you can link to and read the sources for yourself. Plus, you can always google a subject and do the research yourself. It now seems apparent that's all the Mikkelson's do.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snopes.com

1 comment:

smokinq72 said...

This is the link that is given to the mirror site is http://snopes.com/%3E.
The actual Snopes site link is: http://www.snopes.com/.
Notice the difference in appearance. Why purposely mislead the public?
The link at the bottom of the phony site is a link to the correct site.
No where on http://www.snopes.com does it give a flash typing box similar to the one on the mirror site.
Know your Facts, REAL FACTS before passing on information:
This is the story on FactCheck.org regarding this claim, follow the link below. Please read the entire post. http://www.factcheck.org/2009/04/snopescom/

And State Farm spokeswoman Molly Quirk-Kirby confirmed in a letter to us the same thing she had told Snopes.com earlier: Oh, and here is the actual letter from State Farm as printed in the TechToday (the local paper in Lousiana where this happened). http://www.techetoday.com/node/7462

Sign did not reflect views of State Farm Ins.
I would like to respond to the article that appeared in the Teche News regarding the political sign displayed at the Bud Gregg insurance agency.
Mr. Gregg is an independent contractor to State Farm®, and his views do not reflect those of State Farm Insurance Companies. Management requested the sign be removed as soon as its presence became known. It was taken down on July 3. Mr. Gregg’s sign was not endorsed by, nor consistent with State Farm’s corporate practices. The company does not endorse candidates, nor take sides in political campaigns.
At State Farm® we take great pride in providing the best service possible to all of our customers, regardless of their political preferences, and take seriously our responsibility to do so. We appreciate your allowing us the opportunity to respond to this circumstance, and clarify our position. We would also appreciate you allowing your readers to know our side of the issue.
Please feel free to contact me if you should have any additional questions or concerns.
Molly Quirk-Kirby
Public Affairs Specialist
State Farm Insurance
Companies

Since this email is using unsubstantiated and unavailable links I deemed it necessary to point our a number of other sites.
http://www.writersontheloose.com/writers/writer629/index.cfm?story=47218
Denial of bias claim is in first sentence. This one is not a “liberal” site, gathered from all of the other columns on this site.
Oh, another site that covers this: http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/40861
Oh, and another: http://effinunsound.com/?p=1279