> In any case I'm assuming you don't believe in sports reporters
I'm not much of a spectator sport guy, but sports reporters are easy to trust: for the most part, they aren't reporting anything important enough to care too much about the accuracy, and you can just go to the games and see for yourself if you do.
That doesn't work as easily with say foreign policy reporters, who could tell you it rained skittles in Kiev on Monday, and you just have to take their word unless you want to step into a warzone.
Hard to argue with that.
> In any case I'm assuming you don't believe in sports reporters
I'm not much of a spectator sport guy, but sports reporters are easy to trust: for the most part, they aren't reporting anything important enough to care too much about the accuracy, and you can just go to the games and see for yourself if you do.
That doesn't work as easily with say foreign policy reporters, who could tell you it rained skittles in Kiev on Monday, and you just have to take their word unless you want to step into a warzone.