Opinions Vs Facts Quotes

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I don't think it's for them to have an opinion, because they don't have the facts'.
Maria Sharapova
when both can’t be true. In 1946, in the days after World War II, presidential advisor Bernard Baruch said, “Every man has a right to his own opinion, but no man has a right to be wrong in his facts.” Variations have been uttered by U.S. Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger, U.S. Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and others. Today this seemingly indisputable truth no longer holds. Propaganda is indistinguishable from fact and we find ourselves living in the frightening pages of a George Orwell novel.
William F. Buckley Jr. (Buckley vs. Vidal: The Historic 1968 ABC News Debates)
Social media is the ultimate soapbox derby...
Nanette L. Avery
Thus far in fact he and most other French people were of the mind that the Lord’s Supper was the only difference of opinion between their and our Churches.
Jakob Andreae (Lutheranism vs. Calvinism: The Classic Debate at the Colloquy of Montbéliard 1586)
An upside-down condition makes it extremely difficult to discern the difference between facts and opinions.
Scott Shumway (The Invisible Four-letter Word: The Secret to Getting What You Really Want in Life.)
you do not get what is the foundation of the very liberty that we breathe, that the people are entitled to have the facts, that the judgment of the government itself is subject to their opinion and to their control, and in order to exercise that, they are entitled to the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, Senator.
H.W. Brands (The General vs. the President: MacArthur and Truman at the Brink of Nuclear War)
The trouble is that many people regard disagreement as unrelated to either teaching or being taught. They think that everything is just a matter of opinion. I have mine, and you have yours; and our right to our opinions is as inviolable as our right to private property. On such a view, communication cannot be profitable if the profit to be gained is an increase in knowledge. Conversation is hardly better than a ping-pong game of opposed opinions, a game in which no one keeps score, no one wins, and everyone is satisfied because he does not lose—that is, he ends up holding the same opinions he started with. (P. 147)
Mortimer J. Adler, Charles Van Doren (How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading)
People love to say, everybody is entitled to their opinions. It is one of the greatest fallacies of human habit. Everybody is not entitled to their opinion, not when their opinion advocates for segregation and discrimination. Freedom of speech doesn't mean saying whatever one wants, it means saying what's non-discriminatory, non-prejudicial and nonbarbarian. Bigots may have the right to say that all Mexicans are drug smugglers, all black and brown people are inferior humans, or all nonmuslims are infidels, inside the narrow bounds of their own house, but they are not entitled to express such opinion, when amidst people, amidst a civilized society. Remember, acceptance of bigotry and discrimination is the same as advocating for bigotry and discrimination.
Abhijit Naskar (Citizens of Peace: Beyond the Savagery of Sovereignty)