Comments by "Aaron Okeanos" (@AaronOkeanos) on "Fox News Humiliates Itself with Trump Fraud Disinformation" video.

  1. Careful. This is tested in the UK for half a year now. Something new from the right-wing. It's called "saying Heads and Tails". The source is saying both things shortly after each other. It creates chaos and undermines trust. It's much more destructable than it seems. On first view it's harmless because 50% of the time they say what you think, but on second view it leaves the viewer more unsure than ever before and forces them to trust nothing and noone. And the source can later say: "It wasn't them" (because they said both) or they say "We were right" (50% of the time). It's a way to be right if it's a success and escape responsibility if it goes wrong at the same time. It's the material to destabilize a country even faster than always lying. Not only incites this heated discussions between viewers about what is true and what is not, the chaos also makes people less confident and unsure of themselves and humans starts to trust only themselves and their own potentially distorted views and beliefs in those cases (Humans prefer a comfortable and/or exciting lie over hard or boring truth). The only known remedies are critical thinking skills, self-confidence and truth and all 3 are treated badly in the US for decades. In this case it may also be designed to encourage Trumpists to go even deeper into social media to potentially reach even more problematic channels than before. Don't think for a second this is accidental. The channel owner holding the reigns at all times. For Trumpists this is also playing with fire. Because they not only destabilize moderate people with not enough critical thinking skills, but they also destabilize themselves with this potentially to a point of no return even for them.
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