Politico: Federal Employees Are Sweating a Trump Comeback
Kamala Harris Tells Charlamagne tha God There's No Question Reparations Have to Be...
'You Have Lost Your Damn Mind' - Harris Campaign's Desperate Play for Black...
NYT: Donald Trump Spreads His Politics of Grievance to Nonwhite Voters
Bret Baier Should Ask Kamala Harris These Three Questions
Dana Loesch Destroys Tim Walz’s Elmer Fudd Hunting Photo Op
Kamala's Husband Offers a Really Strange Glimpse into Their Very Weird Marriage
WATCH: Tim Walz Makes an Absolute KNUCKLEHEAD of Himself Trying to Dunk on...
CNN: Kamala Harris Said She Might Prosecute Oil Companies for Climate Change
Joe Biden's Cognitive Health Is a Beam in the Left's Eye
One Tweet to Rule Them All! Zeek Arkham Destroys the Kamala Harris Agenda...
Golden Arch Rivals: Donald McDonald to One-Up the Kamburglar
Opportunity Economy: Walgreens to Close 1,200 Locations, Saying 25 Percent of Stores Are...
Michigan Senate Candidate Says Gun Violence Is Top Killer of ‘Children Under 21’
Leftists Who HATE 'Mansplaining' Are Very Quiet About Two MEN Facing Off in...

Washington Post gives nine tips to debunk your family members' conspiracy theories

The Washington Post has already beclowned itself today with Glenn Kessler’s fact-check of “the incendiary claim that George Soros funds Alvin Bragg.” Kessler got buried in Community Notes, which he complained about, resulting in more Community Notes disputing his complaint. It’s no secret Soros bankrolls the campaigns of liberal district attorneys — he even wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal explaining why.

Advertisement

So it’s doubly embarrassing that the Washington Post thought to offer nine tips to fact-check your friends and family when they start spouting conspiracy theories.

Teddy Amenabar writes:

When you’re talking to someone who believes in a conspiracy theory, [professor and political scientist at the University of Wisconsin Mike] Wagner said it can be helpful to ask: Who’s benefiting from your believing this? Who’s raising money or making money because of the audience they’ve built from this?

Wagner said that it can be helpful to remind people that if somebody at a mainstream news outlet such as The Washington Post or NPR reports something that’s false, they can be fired.

“People who work for really ideological talk shows or podcasts don’t have the same worry,” Wagner said. “They don’t get in trouble in the same way.”

Name anyone from the Post who was fired for publishing disinformation about Russia or the coronavirus or Nick Sandmann or the Wuhan lab-leak theory or Hunter Biden’s laptop.

Advertisement

Speaking of the lab-leak theory, remember this?

Advertisement

Advertisement

All of these “experts” WaPo consulted all say pretty much the same thing — ask them where they got their conspiracy theory and then try to steer them to mainstream sources like WaPo.

***

Editor’s Note: Do you enjoy Twitchy’s conservative reporting taking on the radical left and woke media? Support our work so that we can continue to bring you the truth.  Join Twitchy VIP and use the promo code SAVEAMERICA to get 40% off your VIP membership!


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement