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[–] Rahav 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

I read all of my news from many different sources online.

I don't listen to state sanctioned, propaganda sources on TV or radio.

Does that make me less informed!

Or does that make me less programmed?

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[–] ilikeskittles 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Is that a conspiracy?

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[–] Not_Spartacus 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

I like that it says "...exposed to more conspiracies." In stead of 'conspiracy theories'.

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[–] derram 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

https://archive.ph/wip/95lXf :

2020-07-30 | Study: US adults who mostly rely on social media for news are less informed, exposed to more conspiracies – TechCrunch

'The firm’s research also found that social media news consumers skewed young — 48% of those who mostly used social media for news were between 18 and 29, for example. '

'The social media group, on this topic, was closer to the local TV group (11%). '

'Pew’s conclusion from its research is that social media users are less informed, which seems fairly accurate on these specific topics. '

'And yet, the same social media group reported they’re less concerned about the impact of made-up news. '

'Among those social media news consumers aware of the COVID-19 conspiracy, 44% who used social media to often get COVID-19 news said the theory was at least “probably true.” Only 33% of those who relied less on social media for COVID-19 news said the same. '


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[–] moderator99 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

As though being a conspiracy automatically makes it false.

They slip the falsehood into the statement and hope people are going to just accept it as fact.

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[–] corrbrick ago 

As if conspiracies don't exist: laws on the books against them; anti-trust laws to fight them; checks and balances in our republic to minimize them; many examples of them throughout history -- yet, for some reason being exposed to the possibility of a conspiracy makes you less informed.