good point, except...
True Story: My department chair at a university in the midwest had a meeting with the president of the university. The president started lying to his face during the meeting. The department chair KNEW he was lying. However, he happen to also know that the president KNEW that the department chair KNEW he was lying. That's life in a dysfunctional world.
A rival GM is talking to a reporter during a time period where lying to a reporter is considered standard practice. Are things said in these situations legitimate rumors? Are discussions based on these "rumors" legit? It sounds like it's all baseless speculation.
So, what ISN'T baseless speculation? Well, if a rumor has multiply sources, one tend to lend more credence to it. In this article two sources disagree, and JClown emphasizes the more outrageous one.
#notsurprised