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Elle's avatar

There's a phenomena that I think is related, which is for a lot of people it's really hard to say "I don't know" even though, of course, nobody knows the answer to everything.

Similarly, everyone will mistake something false for being true at least on rare occasion, and it's important to be intellectually honest about those mistakes. The ivermectin tweet was one that momentarily got through my filters, granted only for about a minute, as it was retweeted by someone I don't expect to share misinformation. But I quickly caught it, and corrected myself, and hopefully it will improve my filters in the future.

Because how else can you learn? I guess that's the problem. A lot of people don't, and it's making things pretty bad.

Unrelated I wonder if the "quotetweet your friends, screenshot your enemies" thing might be a problem with regard to this as of course you can fabricate a screenshot, but not a tweet (aside from impersonating an account).

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Christen's avatar

I was just thinking last night about how in college I read a completely wild article on Snopes claiming that Mister Ed was actually played by a zebra (it's still up and was a deliberate joke by the Snopes team back when they mostly focused on urban legends: https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/mister-ed-zebra/). It was Snopes so I totally bought it! For, like, several years! Until I enthusiastically mentioned this fun bit of trivia at a party and my friends looked at me like I'd lost my mind and we looked it up. I get viscerally embarrassed whenever I think about it but now I think I'm going to try to blame society instead

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