The excitement is absurd on closer inspection. Because, strictly speaking, every political advertisement is a lie - or an untenable claim. After all, when it comes to elections and votes, we always talk about the future, and as we all know, that is only clear when it has become the past.
Let's take a planned tax increase in a canton. During the referendum campaign, opponents claim that companies will disappear and the canton will earn even less. Supporters believe that there south africa rcs data will be no tax evasion and that the canton will finally get the money it needs. Sorry, but one of them has to be lying. Who? We won't know until a few years later. The rest is pure speculation that is quickly turned into facts during the referendum campaign.
In the specific case involving the SBI, "20 Minuten" dutifully added expert assessments to the editorial section to check the veracity of the matter. It was a kind of compensation. Is the ban on minarets true? The result is not very enlightening. A clear "no" is followed by terms such as "quite possible" and "most likely not". Aha, thanks. You should be a lawyer: several hundred francs an hour for not making a statement.