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9 Sentences With "disinform"

How to use disinform in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "disinform" and check conjugation/comparative form for "disinform". Mastering all the usages of "disinform" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"It's an attempt to disinform the international community," said Al-Iryani.
"You can actually disinform with no information at all," she said.
You might have fallen for someone's attempt to disinform you about current events.
Propaganda like RT content is circulated far and wide to disinform and worsen polarization, especially during democratic elections.
"It was the consequence of their efforts to disinform that led juries and judges — who are members of the public — to say, 'Wait a minute,'" Frumhoff says.
ADEN (Reuters) - A minister in the Yemeni government backed by Saudi Arabia dismissed on Saturday the Houthi movement's pullout from the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah as a "show" meant to "disinform the international community".
New York: John Wiley. # The state: The state is a key source of information for media outlets, and has the ability to "inform, misinform, or disinform the press and thus the public", a strategy which may be referred to as propaganda, in order to serve a political or economic agenda.
Safer called Ẩn a "dignified and decent man" but also noted the "enigma" and "layers" of the man. Safer also mentions Arnaud de Borchgrave's 1981 testimony before Senator Jeremiah Denton's subcommittee that Ẩn had a "mission" to "disinform the Western press". Ẩn denied the disinformation charge, claiming his superiors felt such tactics would have given him away. Safer and Ẩn also discuss Ẩn's year-long imprisonment in a re- education/lecture camp near Hanoi by the North Vietnamese after the end of the war because of his connection with Americans.
In journalism ethics and media ethics, the term "view from nowhere" refers to a theory about the potential negative effects of neutrality in reporting whereby journalists may disinform their audience by creating the impression that opposing parties to an issue have equal correctness and validity, even when the truth or falsehood of the parties' claims are mutually exclusive and verifiable by a diligent researcher. Media critic and professor of journalism Jay Rosen has been a notable critic of the practice and promoter of the term. Rosen borrowed the term from philosopher Thomas Nagel's 1986 book The View from Nowhere. Writer Elias Isquith argued in an article for Salon that "the view from nowhere not only leads to sloppy thinking but actually leaves the reader less informed than she would be had she simply read an unapologetically ideological source or even, in some cases, nothing at all".

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