• @thallamabond
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    32 months ago

    Another great example was CNN and their relationship with weapons manufacturers in the 90s.

    • Snot Flickerman
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      2 months ago

      CNN has a weird history, because there’s been a lot of conspiracies that have been debunked from that period, too.

      https://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/22170/did-cnn-fake-footage-during-the-gulf-war-purporting-a-live-gas-attack

      They were accused of faking a live shot during the Gulf War because of a weird background that seems like it actually is an exterior shot of a building there. I specifically remember Alex Jones claiming 20 years ago it was proof CNN was liars. A lot more evidence that he was the liar.

      But, unlike me (and those in that thread), a lot of people never were willing to keep looking and find more evidence one way or the other and not take the rantings of someone like Alex Jones as gospel.

      (If it isn’t clear, in the early 2000’s I had a coworker/neighbor who was leftist who was into Jones because Jones was against Bush at the time, which he erroneously thought that meant that Jones must be right about something because Bush was so duplicitous. I think he was also smart enough to move on from that, thankfully, of course. Too many aren’t.)

      • @thallamabond
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        22 months ago

        I know this response is way too late, but I remembered the term that mattered. CNN effect. If you look it up you’ll see a lot of old articles about what a 24-hour News Network did to basically change the way people absorbed information and how that changed perceptions.

        • Snot Flickerman
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          22 months ago

          Never too late to share information. Thanks, I hadn’t heard of the term!