People are losing trust in mainstream media because of perceived biased coverage of the Gaza genocide. If that erosion of trust is real, why isn’t it prompting wider public re-examination of historical cover-ups and contested narratives — Watergate, Iran–Contra, Iraq, even shifting beliefs about who “beat” the Nazis? If we don’t question how past information was shaped, what’s the point of preserving evidence (e.g., Gaza genocide evidence recently removed from YouTube by Google)? Won’t this all be forgotten in a few years, the same way all those previous events are no longer discussed?

What’s stopping a sustained, constructive public inquiry into these parallels between past cover-ups and current information control? Where are good, constructive places to discuss these issues without falling into unproductive conspiracy spirals?

  • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    10 hours ago

    You know that Watergate, Iran-Contra, and Iraq are settled history at this point, right? They are no longer contested by serious people. A better example might be the JFK assassination & cover-up, or better yet, ongoing events like the astroturfed Mexican “gen-z revolution” or the fake Venezuelan “narco-terrorism” the US made up in an attempt to overthrow president Maduro.

    Where are good, constructive places to discuss these issues without falling into unproductive conspiracy spirals?

    The fediverse, which for the most part currently isn’t run by corporations or by NGOs funded by governments or corporations. There are also a few independent, non-corporate, non-NGO investigative reporting sources. I can name a few good ones if you like. People on lemmy.ml often post articles from them.

  • PumpkinDrama@reddthat.comOP
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    2 days ago

    But you can bet we are going to keep discussing Tian’anmen Square instead of Pinochet’s dictatorship, Jeju Island massacre, Indonesian anti-communist purge, etc. It’s as if the average person believes anything so long as mainstream media says it.

  • FugaziArchivist [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    What’s stopping a re-examination of historical cover-ups? I think you answer your own question when you say: where’s a good place to discuss this without going into conspiracy spirals? I mean that any time topics like this come up, people who are sincerely interested have to constantly militate against the “conspiracy theory” stigma. If you’re hit with that label, you’re persona non grata in academia, news media, and mainstream accounts on social media. That’s what stops people. The places to discuss conspiracy adjacent topics would be alternative platforms like this, until news media slowly come around on accepting anomalies many years after the fact: Jack Ruby did have mob ties; the Saudis did seem to fund hijackers, etc.

  • theneverfox@pawb.social
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    1 day ago

    Because that’s not how people think. Not anyone.

    You can study history, and if you do it right you’ll see how stupid and individually directed most things are. It’s all conspiracies, that’s how the world has worked for millennia

    One realization doesn’t free your mind and make you a scholar… That’s just not how humans work

    • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      10 hours ago

      Wutno. Humans are not genetically doomed to being stupid. They can learn to think analytically, they can learn about known biases and how to mitigate them. They can learn historical materialism.

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        4 hours ago

        No, humans can’t, scholars can. Most humans could learn historical materialism to the level they could pass a course on it, but the vast majority can’t apply this type of analytical lens in practice.

        It’s a matter of disposition, the ability to look at a situation from multiple angles and question your beliefs about it isn’t something that can be taught, only learned. You can walk someone through it step by step over and over, even train them to go through a process when prompted, but without a certain disposition they’ll never actually use this ability without promoting

  • pyria@kbin.melroy.org
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    2 days ago

    Information is about as rapid as money exchanges. There’s so much going around because News is 24/7 and there’s so many outlets that it will burn out anyone’s minds trying to follow it all. It was like with the Hong Kong protests, it got traction for a while, then something else happened and it was dropped within weeks.

    And we have all of these wikis in existence where the legitimacy of the articles written, are constantly challenged through the edits of those that believe differently in how it should be written to the reliable sources conflicting with those beliefs.

    And we have generations of people who do not remember the time of certain events as they’ve happened where previous generations did. So it can be harder for someone who wasn’t born around the time of Pearl Harbor and WWII to relate and take in information as opposed to the one who actually lived it.

    Then we take into account of instances of history being re-written by revisionists, some sections of history is white-washed, censored, redacted .etc

    Top it all off with how incredulous and sensationalist projections the media reports that just shits all over it.

    And we have ourselves one big, informational train-wreck where almost nobody knows what to believe. So what most people do anymore is if a news report aligns with their beliefs, they’re going to take it at face value.

  • limer@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    What’s stopping a sustained, constructive public inquiry into these parallels between past cover-ups and current information control?

    There is no mechanism to promote the investigation. At best there will be queries like you made for the general, and social media reactions to specific events as they unfold.

    A large chunk of government, politics, and press in the USA no longer exists. There are no authorities to turn too, now or later, regardless who gains power in Washington.

    Most of the Anglosphere outside the USA is in a free fall too, a few years behind, maybe 20 years.

  • DeathsEmbrace@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    We never trusted the media either way it goes. History is written by the winners so how do we decide what really is history or propaganda? Without time travel at the end of the day everything is subjective truths

  • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Most of the past ones have been admitted and are out in the open. A few big ones like JFK and 9/11 remain.

    Tucker Carlson did an Interesting 9/11 series recently though (no I don’t endorse Tucker Carlson as a whole)

    • ltxrtquq@lemmy.ml
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      13 hours ago

      1092: Tucker, The Man And His 9/11 Documentary

      The guys at Knowledge Fight went over the first part of the documentary, and my takeaway was there’s nothing new, the primary person being interviewed is a well known liar, and there’s a lot dishonest claims being made and not a lot of evidence being given.

      So what exactly do you think is so interesting about Tucker Carlson’s series? What new things did you learn about 9/11?

      • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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        13 hours ago

        I searched that website for mentions of Gaza or Palestine and there seems to be no episode about it so I’m going to treat it as government propaganda.

        • ltxrtquq@lemmy.ml
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          13 hours ago

          What are you talking about? Why would something be government propaganda just because you can’t find mentions of Gaza or Palestine? It’s a podcast mostly about Alex Jones, not a news agency. Are you always like this?

          • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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            12 hours ago

            If it never debunks any propaganda about Palesestine it’s government propaganda it’s literally that easy. Try reading the post you are in.

            • ltxrtquq@lemmy.ml
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              12 hours ago

              Alright, cool. So what did Tucker Carlson say that you thought was so interesting?

              And I guess follow up question: was it all just government propaganda? Because I doubt he ever debunked any propaganda about Palestine.

              • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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                12 hours ago

                Some fun facts about how the attackers were very obviously recruited by the CIA for a false flag. How they kept getting Saudi visums to the US even when one of the attackers stupidly locked himself out of the US.

                Also yes Tucker has debunked a lot of Israeli propaganda, though just by repeating left wing points.

                • ltxrtquq@lemmy.ml
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                  12 hours ago

                  Starting around 38:30 in the podcast

                  Dan Friesen: So the argument is that the CIA was trying to recruit these hijackers and make them into informants. And that is a theory. It is not established. It is not proven. But they start to just treat it as if they have proven it.

                  Mark Rossini: You have the CIA then following one man and then two men all over the planet and then eventually even to America, right? Landing in Los Angeles, California, and you don’t tell the FBI.

                  Tucker Carlson: But why would the CIA want to hide the highly relevant and potentially dangerous fact that two known al-Qaeda terrorists had just landed in California? According to a recently released court filing, former White House counterterrorism star Richard Clark told government investigators that the quote: “CIA was running a false flag operation to recruit the hijackers.”

                  Richard Clark: When Cofer Black became the head of the counterterrorism center at CIA, he was aghast that they had no sources in Al-Qaeda. So he told me, I’m going to try to get sources in Al-Qaeda. I can understand them possibly saying we need to develop sources inside Al-Qaeda. When we do that, we can’t tell anybody about it.

                  Dan Friesen: So it’s important to pay attention to the way that information is used by people like Tucker and notice the little tweaks that they make in order to push their narratives. In this case, Tucker is setting up his clip of Richard Clark, and he says that Clark revealed that the CIA was engaged in a false flag to recruit these hijackers.

                  Then he plays the clip of Clark that does not say that. But instead is Clark saying that he could understand the intelligence folks trying to secretly turn the future hijackers into informants. He wasn’t saying that the CIA was doing this, but he understood how it was possible.

                  Yeah, one of the conspiracy theorists’ main tricks is equating proving that something is possible with proving that it’s true. Richard Clark saying that it’s possible that the CIA was trying to recruit the hijackers as informants is not the same thing as him saying that is what happened. But Tucker knows that to his audience, it is the same.

                  I don’t know man, maybe you need to work on your media literacy a little more. Or maybe just as a rule, you shouldn’t be taking anything Tucker Carlson says seriously.