Quote:
Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield
It is a fact that is undetermined and cannot be determined. Lying requires intent.
past tense lied
past participle lied
to deliberately say something that is not true
So if you say something about it, that statement would fall into the categories of argument or opinion.
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Thank you! This explains so much of what you write here! You say things that are untrue, but cling to the fact there is some metaphysical doubt as to whether you are lying or just unable to discern the truth. The problem for you is, most of us have a pretty good idea which is which. For example, when you stated that nobody branded Hillary as shrill, I'm pretty darn sure you were just inexplicably clueless about this phenomenon. When you said that a Google search producing dozens of articles discussing how Hillary was branded as shrill did not have any bearing on the truth of your statement that Hillary was never branded as shrill, you were lying to us. Does this help?