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Frequently asked

Honest answers to the questions we hear most.

If your question isn't here, we'd genuinely like to hear it — please drop us a note.

Are you affiliated with any political party or PAC?

No. Always Seek Truth accepts no funding from political parties, political action committees, candidates, or campaigns. We are an independent practice supported by workshop fees and reader contributions only.

Do you fact-check specific claims on request?

We don't operate as a real-time fact-checking service. We teach the methods that journalists and librarians use so you can evaluate claims yourself. For urgent fact-checks, we recommend long-standing organizations such as PolitiFact, FactCheck.org, AP Fact Check, and Snopes.

How much do workshops cost?

Group workshops range from $250 to $850 depending on length, group size, and travel. We offer sliding-scale pricing for libraries, schools, and small nonprofits. One-on-one consultations are $95 per hour. Free public sessions are held quarterly in Kalispell.

Do you travel for workshops?

Yes, within reason. Most of our in-person work happens within northwest Montana. We're available for travel elsewhere in the United States when expenses are covered. Remote workshops over video are available anywhere.

Can I use your materials in my classroom?

Yes — our free resources are released under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license. You may copy, adapt, and share them in non-commercial educational settings as long as you credit Always Seek Truth.

How can I support the practice financially?

The most useful support is hiring us for a workshop or consultation. We don't currently accept tax-deductible donations, but we're exploring that option for 2026. Subscribing to our monthly letter and sharing our resources are also genuinely helpful.

Do you publish corrections?

Yes. When we get something wrong, we update the page, mark the correction clearly with a date, and explain what changed. A running list of corrections is maintained in our monthly letter.

Will you debate me publicly about media bias?

Probably not. We try to avoid adversarial public debate because it tends to harden positions rather than clarify thinking. If you have a substantive disagreement with something we've published, please email — we read every message and frequently update our work in response.