Thanks for stopping by, today I am releasing "The Secret" of deciphering News! It is a helpful tool to get a grasp of what is real news and what is fake news. First off, I would like to state that this only works on news that has a predictive notion or might lack physical proven evidence. This secret will not work with a pothole on your street that appeared on your local news. This is more for deciphering financial or political manipulative news. The first thing you must look for are the words "may," "might," or "possibly" or different derivatives of iffy words. I orignally learned this tactic by reading Zerohedge and Business Insider daily. You can join along by reading their posts daily. The crazy thing you must know when reading these two publications is, in reality, the total opposite of what they print is happening in the real world! Other sites have different formulas. This formula mainly works for Business Insider and Zerohedge. You must take all of their stories and twist them a perfect 180 degrees to find the truth. Basically when Zerohedge posts the market will crash. You should then know that the market is about to go up. When business insider posted, "If Brexit votes to leave the EU, the market will crash." After this headline, you should immediately play the market to go up. For example, today Zerohedge has a headline "Visa begins bribing (literally, this is what it says) merchants to stop taking cash." I am so trained that I immediately know that Visa is not bribing merchants. I am not lying, you can read it here:
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-07-13/visa-begins-bribing-merchants-stop-taking-cash.
If you are looking for formulas and secrets, ZeroHedge is the worst and it is a lot easier for the worst to stay the worst, rather than find the perfect that will remain perfect. Crazy thing is that this article is a x2, what I like to call a two timer, which means Business Insider also posted a version.
There is also a site called x22 which lists stories that are actually 22 timers, which means they are the falsest, and most fake stories online now. These stories can be read and interpreted as exactly and perfectly wrong.
Here is the link to the two timer fake story:
http://www.businessinsider.com/visa-unveils-new-incentive-plan-to-push-cashless-transactions-2017-7
Now some people will say the Visa story is real news. The way to decipher if it really is genuine news is to keep a research journal or calendar and write the story down. Then, every week or so for 2-10 years, check back and see the stories progress and rate the validity. You need to use a long time line to see if their story ever comes to fruition to give them a chance. You can also check for future updates and reposts after the story goes cold (which eventually happens to every story.) This is how I figured all this out over the last ten years. I am like Russel Crow in "A Beautiful Mind," I have paper and charts and computers everywhere with news stories all being tracked daily. The number one mistake that people tend to make is that they forget about the past stories too quickly. This is why it is optimum to keep good research notes and charts. if you are wondering, I am going to start our journey on these two sites and later show formulas for other sites.
For example, do you remember how many news feeds were wrong about Brexit? Do you remember how many polls were wrong about the US election? Wow! There was an exaggerated 1,000,000 to 1 ratio with wrong as the favorite. There are many more stories that people quickly forget. Those two are just the biggest. The market crash story is the most wrong story ever published. It is more wrong than both the US election and Brexit, and it has been printed the most out of any story in history! I have the staggering data to prove it! I am working on making this a series with new charts and info-graphics on the way. Let's start our journey by keeping tabs on this Visa bribe story and see how it transpires weekly and whether it will fizzle out or remain truthful. Until next time thanks for joining me on "The Secret!"
I was going to suggest stop watching it.
I actually like watching it so I can know what isn't really happening. It comes with age.
I was being halfway sarcastic and I agree with you. I stick with my news sources and watch and read them daily.
Good!