When they say…
2 Canadian Stocks Primed to Surge in 2026
They really mean…
Loaded language like “primed to surge” frames speculative stock picks as near-certainties of explosive growth, assuming investor fears of geopolitics and AI will drive commodity booms without acknowledging market volatility or risks of downturns.
When they say…
Birdwatching could protect against ageing, say scientists (from latest news lessons, Feb 26, 2026)
They really mean…
Euphemism softens tentative research into a protective lifestyle hack, framing correlation as causation while implying birdwatching is a proven anti-aging strategy, downplaying study limitations like sample size or confounding factors.
When they say…
Do you know what the numbers in that headline really mean?
They really mean…
Headlines that bury the lead by questioning statistical literacy obscure the core issue—how repetition turns data into symbolic framing tools that distort public perception—prioritizing reader intrigue over direct revelation of media manipulation tactics.
When they say…
They really mean…
Framing that assumes certain premises presents AI security as a solvable “execution boundary” problem, implying traditional defenses suffice against agentic hacking while shifting blame from systemic vulnerabilities to misplaced trust in data flows.