Film, Media & TV3 mins ago
Does The Daily Mail Need Better Lawyers?
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No best answer has yet been selected by jake-the-peg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.jake, a person may believe in the possibility of psychic powers (several threads on AB have showed this) while being cautious about whether any given individual has them or is a con artist. The Mail's article would have misinformed them about this particular woman, and it's perfectly possible she would have lost a good deal of income over it.
I think the point is that the DM was accusing Psychic Sally of a particular type of con that has turned out to have no basis. I'm not happy with the decision but it's understandable to some extent. Now she can go on conning people more subtly, by claiming to have powers that she does not -- and charging people for the lie, but it's their money...
jake, my request for proof was directed at baz, who knows better than the Daily Mail, as don't we all. As for the rest - yep, the Mail made a claim it couldn't prove, and is paying the price, not for the first time.
Judging by the number of deleted comments on this blog, lots of people think the same but can't prove it either:
http:// www.gua rdian.c o.uk/me dia/201 3/jun/2 1/sally -morgan -tv-psy chic-li bel-pay out
Judging by the number of deleted comments on this blog, lots of people think the same but can't prove it either:
http://
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