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  2. Debunker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debunker

    A debunker is a person or organization that exposes or discredits claims believed to be false, exaggerated, or pretentious. [1] The term is often associated with skeptical investigation of controversial topics such as UFOs, claimed paranormal phenomena, cryptids, conspiracy theories, alternative medicine, religion, exploratory or fringe areas of scientific, or pseudoscientific research.

  3. Ignorantia juris non excusat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignorantia_juris_non_excusat

    In law, ignorantia juris non excusat (Latin for "ignorance of the law excuses not"), [1] or ignorantia legis neminem excusat ("ignorance of law excuses no one"), [2] is a legal principle holding that a person who is unaware of a law may not escape liability for violating that law merely by being unaware of its content.

  4. Fake news in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fake_news_in_the_United_States

    In 1762, the Grand Assembly of Virginia enacted the following law to punish "divulgers of false news.". Be it enacted, That what person or persons soever shall forge and divulge such false reports, tending to the trouble of the country, shall be, by next Justice of the Peace, sent for, and bound over to the next County Court, where, if he produce not the author, he shall be fined two thousand ...

  5. Knowledge (legal construct) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_(legal_construct)

    In law, knowledge is one of the degrees of mens rea that constitute part of a crime.For example, in English law, the offence of knowingly being a passenger in a vehicle taken without consent requires that the prosecution prove not only that the defendant was a passenger in a vehicle and that it was taken by the driver without consent, but also that the defendant knew that it was taken without ...

  6. Skepticism in law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skepticism_in_law

    Skepticism in law is a school of jurisprudence that was a reaction against the idea of natural law, and a response to the formalism of legal positivists.

  7. United States defamation law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_defamation_law

    The 1964 case New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, however, radically changed the nature of libel law in the United States by establishing that public officials could win a suit for libel only when they could prove the media outlet in question knew either that the information was wholly and patently false or that it was published "with reckless ...

  8. WADA explains reasons for different doping bans for Sinner ...

    www.aol.com/wada-explains-reasons-different...

    The World Anti-Doping Agency on Monday offered an explanation for why top-ranked tennis player Jannik Sinner received a much shorter doping ban than the six-year suspension it handed to a Spanish ...

  9. Pseudolaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudolaw

    Donald J. Netolitzky has identified six core concepts in what he calls the "Pseudolaw Memeplex": . The "everything is a contract" theory: as conceptualized by freeman on the land "guru" Robert Arthur Menard, governments have no special inherent authority via legislation or other means, unless one agrees to be subject to said authority.