You argued that it made denials by Hamas "ring hollow", which amounts to the same thing [...]
As positive evidence? No, it categorically doesn't. You might notice that in the same exchange, when you said this "doesn't mean it happened", I responded, "obviously".
There is nothing whatsoever inconsistent about analyzing the motives of and pressures acting on a news outlet and seeing that all its information is suspect on one hand and on the other distinguishing between two different articles made by a more generally credible outlet when someone tries to make the argument that treating some information as credible requires treating other information as credible (which is ridiculous). Sometimes a whole institution is not credible. Sometimes a particular guy isn't. Sometimes a particular claim is made in haste or to avoid flak from certain quarters. Sometimes an outlet is generally credible but still has certain biases that make particular information suspect. All of these are possible. All of these can be true at the same time.
Indeed, they can! Nuances that you never consider when griping about "western media" as a monolithic stand-in for military propaganda, or automatically dismiss anything produced by western sources-- independent or not-- if it doesn't accord.
And yet they still give us all the information we need to see how that is ridiculous.
If you
extrapolate something from what they say (which they didn't actually say), that's not the same thing as them acknowledging it.
Not so much as you are characterizing it.
Let's return to
the post that attracted your particular ire. The initial statement is that Iran bombed 12 other countries, and it's that claim that you characterised as "libbing out".
That Iran attacked its neighbours, that much is directly acknowledged in Pezeshkian's statement.
Masoud Pezeshkian: "The armed forces have so far acted with a kind of ‘fire at will’ authority, but they have now been notified that from now on they must not attack neighboring countries or target them with missiles. I personally apologize to the neighboring countries that were affected by Iran's action".
Fairmont, DIFC, ICD Brookfield Place, & Creek Harbour neighbourhood in UAE; Era View, Crowne Plaza Hotel, & Millenium Tower in Bahrain. Dhubai international airport & Zayed international airport, Kuwait International airport.
But that has nothing to do with what I was saying: your media environment is structured to get you to believe certain things. You should be more skeptical of the things that your media environment is trying to get you to believe in order to accomplish its desired outcome. Disagreeing with the desired outcome does not make you immune to the propaganda justifying it, nor does it mean you should participate in the normalization of that propaganda. Your unwillingness to recognize when you are being sold a bill of goods is not principled.
And nor does disagreeing with one violent state actor mean that
other violent state actors must be innocent.
You also exist within a media environment. One in which you are healthily sceptical of narratives used to justify your own country's foreign policies. Yet, also one in which you are credulous towards insubstantial twitter talking-heads or anything positioning itself as 'anti-establishment', even when they advance the lines of other countries' (equally dubious, equally violent) foreign policies.