Why do you keep bringing up the newspaper ad?
The theguardian(dot)com link in #1,391. I know this article is 9+ years old, but I was replying to what was posted.
This is a quote from the article:
"But Trump’s intervention – he signed full-page newspaper advertisements
implicitly calling for the boys to die –..."
I see the use of "implicitly" to be evidence of the author's bias. Most people who get their news from The Guardian probably cannot provide an accurate definition of 'implicitly', and most people don't read all of the words. They see 'implicitly', but think 'explicitly'. On the basis of that misunderstanding, a click-bait headline: "
Donald Trump and the Central Park Five: the racially charged rise of a demagogue and a lurid paragraph header: ‘He poisoned the minds of New York’ readers form and express opinions based on emotion and an incomplete understanding of the truths.
from Wikipedia, re: The Guardian:
"The paper's readership is generally on the mainstream left of British political opinion, and the term "
Guardian reader" is used to imply a stereotype of a person with modern progressive, left-wing or "politically correct" views. Frequent typographical errors during the age of manual typesetting led
Private Eye magazine to dub the paper the "Grauniad" in the 1970s, a nickname still occasionally used by the editors for self-mockery. "
I'm immediately skeptical of any journalism in which a political bias is explicit, regardless of whether the opinions are Left, Right or Centrist.
Merriam-Webster defines implicit as "capable of being understood from something else though unexpressed".
You can't win a civil damages suit based on non-explicit statements.
If I said 'Tom Cruise is a homosexual', stated as a fact, I could potentially be sued, and potentially lose.
"Maverick" has been known to take milk in his tea, if you'll pardon my inuendo , states this implicitly, so the sentiment is capable of being understood, but reasonable doubt exists.