The roads to understanding misinformation....

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  • čas přidán 2. 11. 2021
  • Beau of The Fifth Column main channel: / beauofthefifthcolumn
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Komentáře • 554

  • @comfortablynumb9342
    @comfortablynumb9342 Před 2 lety +264

    I recently saw a clip of Tucker saying "we haven't confirmed this but it just feels right". Talk about spreading misinformation, his audience just accepts his "feels right" as a set in stone fact.

    • @ChrisPage68
      @ChrisPage68 Před 2 lety +47

      If it feels right to Tucker, you know it's bad.

    • @annebruce5135
      @annebruce5135 Před 2 lety +20

      Faux TV appeals to lazy brains, saves them getting off the couch and looking up stuff.

    • @Andrea.1tree
      @Andrea.1tree Před 2 lety +21

      👋🏼 Hola amigo. Covering his ass, while at the same time suggesting a false narrative is the same thing as outright lying. Or should be anyway. The intent is there anyway. I wish creeps like him, and the orange toddler would see justice. We need to curb the direction our country is going fast. It looks like it’s in the middle of a flush.

    • @julianahamouz212
      @julianahamouz212 Před 2 lety +15

      I have no evidence to support this but it feels like (see what I did there?) Tucker consistently uses most of the techniques Beau talks about in this video.

    • @ExkupidsMom
      @ExkupidsMom Před 2 lety +19

      It used to be that i fully supported the statement "trust your gut." If I felt unsafe in a situation, I didn't question it, I just left. Now, the same statement makes me twitchy, because it has been so misused, and people now "trust their gut," even in the face of factual evidence to the contrary.

  • @FrankBenlin
    @FrankBenlin Před 2 lety +109

    The brash statement followed by a question mark is very common here on CZcams. A very big posthumous thank you to my 7th grade English teacher, Mr. Burton, for teaching all us little peckerwoods about all the different forms of propaganda and thought manipulation. Wasn't in the curriculum, he just thought it was important. A real teacher.

  • @Oxios
    @Oxios Před 2 lety +112

    I always ask myself who benefits from me hearing what they're saying.

    • @FrankLemonjello
      @FrankLemonjello Před 2 lety +5

      Cui bono

    • @bryonkidder6199
      @bryonkidder6199 Před 2 lety +4

      I try to explain to people that I don't want their money from them because I'm not trying to sell them anything...lol
      If somebody is trying to get you to give them your money it's probably wise not to believe everything they selling.

    • @karenjohannessen8987
      @karenjohannessen8987 Před 2 lety +2

      @@FrankLemonjello Cui bono = "To whose benefit?" / : [noun] a principle that probable responsibility for an act or event lies with one having something to gain.

    • @ethimself5064
      @ethimself5064 Před 2 měsíci

      @@karenjohannessen8987 Translation says - Which is good

  • @adamsherman3655
    @adamsherman3655 Před 2 lety +31

    I had a professor who gave a great demonstration about why statistics should be treated with some caution. She asked, “How many of you smoke?” About a third of the class raised a hand. “How many of you drink?” About half the class raised a hand.
    “Interesting… so how do you folks in the second group stay hydrated?”
    If you collect your data in the right way, you can prove damn near anything.

    • @briansmutti
      @briansmutti Před 2 lety +4

      that is a good one,
      i need to remember it

    • @adamsbja
      @adamsbja Před rokem +1

      My brother's high school statistics class had an assignment to fake a conclusion. Having people do something wrong on purpose can be eye-opening, it stuck with us and I wasn't even in the class.
      The one I remember was a positive correlation between teachers' salaries and alcohol sales implying they spent it all on booze. Jokingly marked down because the assignment was supposed to be fake.

  • @GeeksandGrub
    @GeeksandGrub Před 2 lety +76

    Another common tactic used to attempting to change the denotations and connotations of words through consistent misuse. A recent example is CRT. Most people cannot define it and those that can often do so incorrectly. Communism and Socialism are also used in this manner. Most people can no longer define these words accurately because they are used inaccurately so frequently.
    This is especially insidious because it prevents actual discourse from happening. After all, if I said water and you think I mean milk, we will never be in agreement and most of the time won't be able to figure out we are using different definitions.

    • @Callimo
      @Callimo Před 2 lety +11

      It's why I've learned to ask people what they personally mean by certain terms, because they might have NO idea besides "someone told me it was bad"

    • @Taladar2003
      @Taladar2003 Před 2 lety +1

      In terms of misuse of words there is also the Motte & Bailey fallacy of using a very broad definition of a word in one context and a very narrow one in another, e.g. religious people saying God is that person who made that and that rule to follow and who personally hears prayers and who talked to Moses on the mountain,... and then when they are cornered in an argument about the existence of God suddenly God is just a vague prime cause.

    • @GrumpyOldFart2
      @GrumpyOldFart2 Před 2 měsíci

      Your post reminds me of a meme I saved. I can’t relate to the first part because I’m too old to have played anything….
      “You know how your parents used to call every console a “Nintendo”? Well, that’s how conservatives use the word “socialist” to describe anything to left of hunting the homeless for sport.”

  • @heman5954
    @heman5954 Před 2 lety +48

    Most any poll without context, no matter how scientific, can be skewed to forward the narrative you want.

  • @mainely8007
    @mainely8007 Před 2 lety +348

    Spot on Beau! Years ago in the Army we had training on Soviet disinformation/misinformation tactics and you laid it out beautifully. Thank you!

    • @ChrisPage68
      @ChrisPage68 Před 2 lety +34

      Did they have classes on the American equivalent? 😜

    • @beverlycastricone6900
      @beverlycastricone6900 Před 2 lety +8

      Thank you for your valuable contributions to Beau's sites. I always appreciate your insights. You rock!!

    • @olivergrayhoundII
      @olivergrayhoundII Před 2 lety +12

      Coincidence that you mention Soviet Disinformation.
      Used to be subscribed and avid viewer of RT (a Kremlin owned news network that has had many connections with Alex Jones and Info Wars and inflammatory disinformation that is geared towards disunity in Europe).
      Seems a lot of disinformation outlets and RT are pretty darn similar.

    • @Holobrine
      @Holobrine Před 2 lety +8

      @@olivergrayhoundII Russia Today, not Russia Times 🙂

    • @The0ldg0at
      @The0ldg0at Před 2 lety +13

      @@ChrisPage68 I'm pretty sure the soviet soldiers had the same kind of trainings about Western disinformation/misinformation tactics. Nowadays it's official and you just have to look at which NGOs are funded by the National Endowment for Democracy and make the correlation anytime they are mention in our media as the source of informations about the other side.

  • @Maja-Danmark
    @Maja-Danmark Před 2 lety +155

    Beau is the wisest Florida Man.

    • @forrestl5597
      @forrestl5597 Před 2 lety +3

      Tell me, fellow internet person, who is wiser? I must know!

    • @Gimpygladiator
      @Gimpygladiator Před 2 lety +6

      @@forrestl5597 Uh, informed people who make critical evaluations of the most basic information, duh. Did you not watch the whole video?

    • @forrestl5597
      @forrestl5597 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Gimpygladiator I guess I don't understand. You're saying that would make me wiser than Beau?

    • @davidhlnda
      @davidhlnda Před 2 lety

      What, not a deSantis fan?

    • @shouldhavenotshouldof2031
      @shouldhavenotshouldof2031 Před rokem

      Worlds dumbest conversation

  • @ExkupidsMom
    @ExkupidsMom Před 2 lety +146

    I taught my kids media literacy before they ever got to it at school. It's so important! And a lot of adults need remedial training. I'll be sharing this all over the place. I am SO grateful for this channel and its deeper dives into subject matter. Thank you!

    • @NoName-OG1
      @NoName-OG1 Před 2 lety +4

      @@suzygirl1843 media of all kinds have been at war with each other for decades. Predates social media.

    • @jacquelinecallejas1390
      @jacquelinecallejas1390 Před 2 lety +7

      Reminds me of an interview in the 80's with a guy explaining how a Soviet newspaper could mislead without actually lying. Example he gave was if Reagan and (I think)Gorbachev were in a car race and they were the only 2 in the race and Reagan won, the Soviet newspaper would report that there was a race and Gorbachev came in just behind the first place but Reagan only managed to come in just ahead of the last place position.

    • @tenofivelips
      @tenofivelips Před 2 lety +4

      I once had a boss come in all excited he just saw a picture of the biggest dog he'd ever seen. He couldn't believe how large Irish wolf hounds grow to be. I told him they had protected Kings and Queens back in the day. Then he made a comment about them being bigger than people. I told him to bring up the picture. He was referring to a photoshopped of a woman and her dog, the dog being enlarge to Clifford like size. I had to walk away. This 35 yo rejected the evidence of his entire life to believe a picture on FB.

    • @eileennovak1656
      @eileennovak1656 Před 2 lety +1

      @@tenofivelips Amazing gullibility!

    • @eileennovak1656
      @eileennovak1656 Před 2 lety +6

      Bravo! More parents need to arm their kids with internal lie-detectors so they sort the crap they will be bombarded with forever.

  • @eileennovak1656
    @eileennovak1656 Před 2 lety +156

    Grateful for having taken a Hermeneutics course, which got me into critical thinking. It's done more to elevate my existence than any knowledge gleaned from all my "fancy book learnin' before and after. Reason matters.
    ps. Was told about a study...researched it and founds it had 23 participants and lasted three days. Phuleeese. That's an Irish dinner party, not a study.🍻

    • @englishsteve1465
      @englishsteve1465 Před 2 lety +14

      Gotta love those "studies" that say "412 people out of 523 asked, said their hair looked better after useing........." or the classic "eliminates dandruff" (no visible flakes at a distance of 2 feet,- in small print at bottom of screen) heck, people are still sending money to Nigerian princes ! - facepalm smh etc : )

    • @GrumpyOldFart2
      @GrumpyOldFart2 Před 2 lety +5

      Unfortunately, it also happens with serious scientific papers. I am hypothyroid, and I read a study that concluded that no need to add Y thyroid hormone to X thyroid hormone protocol because it makes no difference.
      Then I looked closely at the actual numbers. There were about 85 people in the study (hypothyroidism affects anywhere between 2-8% of the American population, so we’re talking millions of people), and they replaced “5%” of the dose (100ug) of one with the other
      (5ug+95ug). The standard combo dose is 25%:75%.

    • @jacquelinecallejas1390
      @jacquelinecallejas1390 Před 2 lety +15

      @@GrumpyOldFart2 Want to hear a WORSE "study"? When I was in college to give an example of how NOT to do a study, they brought up one done I believe in the 1950's. Long story short they reported that 50 % of rapes didn't have a negative outcome. Why? Because they asked both the victims and the perpetrators and about a hundred percent of the rapists felt fine about it. The people who did that study should have been jailed as accessories after the fact.

    • @eileennovak1656
      @eileennovak1656 Před 2 lety +4

      @@GrumpyOldFart2 Whoah.🤔 Granted, had to read it a couple of times, because it shot over my head, but there's 'wonkey' all over those figures. LOL on the protocol not mattering, but I wonder if others caught that snafu. Good on you for picking up the numbers play. Bravo.
      ps. I used to think "peer review" was the Holy Grail, but not so much now. Seen some oddities come out of "legit" publications. Takes work to dig out the truth, but it's worth it.

    • @eileennovak1656
      @eileennovak1656 Před 2 lety +6

      @@GrumpyOldFart2 ps. Hope you're doing well with the hypothyroidism. Best to you.

  • @timothyball3144
    @timothyball3144 Před 2 lety +104

    Most excellent video that can be shown in schools. I can picture a teacher showing this video, then asking the students to find examples of each tactic. The teacher could also play the video and at each example, write it on the chalk board, showing students how to consume THIS information. Additionally, the teacher could put examples on a paper and each student can write how each one makes them feel and how they would react after seeing them. I hope that there are teachers here that use this video in some way.

    • @eileennovak1656
      @eileennovak1656 Před 2 lety +12

      💯👍

    • @ChrisPage68
      @ChrisPage68 Před 2 lety +12

      Basic Media Studies.

    • @diamondkharness
      @diamondkharness Před 2 lety +9

      Great idea but how long until a certain political faction starts yelling that this will make all students distrust all journalists? As if CRT = BMS. Soon they’ll be burning books. We’re in trouble America.

    • @timothyball3144
      @timothyball3144 Před 2 lety +6

      @@diamondkharness I don't blindly trust any journalist, even Beau. I feel it's important for journalists to cite source information rather than news articles about source information. One example is when media was saying that Cadet Bonespurs called Mexicans animals. I read the transcript and listened to that part of the speech and it was clear he was talking about MS-13. Of course his cult was thinking Mexicans, not MS-13 because they were looking for someone to hate on, but the source means so much more than someone's opinion on it and Beau touched on that.

    • @heman5954
      @heman5954 Před 2 lety +4

      @@timothyball3144 and ms-13 is a 🇺🇸 born gang used to villainize people south of the border. Besides that, the gang is El Salvador immigrant based, not Mexican.

  • @alexward9686
    @alexward9686 Před 2 lety +33

    I remember Stephen Colbert asking a guest “George Bush, great president or the greatest president?” 😂

    • @ajchapeliere
      @ajchapeliere Před 2 lety +1

      Prior to 45: "he is, without a doubt, the worst president I've ever heard of"

    • @DoubleThinkTwice
      @DoubleThinkTwice Před 2 lety

      I miss the old Colbert Report... the late-night show meatgrinder has not been nice to him

    • @brookechang4942
      @brookechang4942 Před rokem

      Jon Stewart turned the tables on him during a guest-host spot using 45 as the pres in question. Colbert's discomfort was hilarious.

  • @cobrachicken07
    @cobrachicken07 Před 2 lety +6

    I find it very troubling that any human finds entertainment in being outraged. Seems like a terrible waste of energy.

  • @scottspa74
    @scottspa74 Před 2 lety +6

    I love the Ben & Jerry/drowning correlation lol. Fun example.

  • @junerussell6972
    @junerussell6972 Před 2 lety +12

    One of our local news is having an ongoing "special report" that they call "Is Portland Over?" And every time I see that, I think "well, let's just have a self fulfilling prophesy."

  • @victor_venema
    @victor_venema Před 2 lety +21

    Misinformation in the video on misinformation!! :-)
    There are also commercial pollination companies working with wild bees, not just honey bees. Not sure they use bumble bees, but they use a variety of other wild bees for pollination. For some crops this even lead to better yields. It is still a quite small industry compared to honey bees, but it may be the future given the bad shape honey bees are in.

    • @WJV9
      @WJV9 Před rokem +1

      Actually commercial beekeeping operations are doing just fine, it's the wild bees and most other insects that are in serious decline. Just think back to the last long auto trip you took in the summertime and consider how many insects were splattered on your windshield. Now think back to 20 years ago to other summer trips that you took and remember how often you stopped to clean the windshield. Most everyone I have asked this reports a big drop in dirty windshields.

  • @50shefli
    @50shefli Před 2 lety +18

    Geez, I'm old 🙂 Teachers and parents back in the day, taught us this. You did an awesome job of laying it all out.

  • @JayJaytheScrub
    @JayJaytheScrub Před 2 lety +80

    Lol the first half of this is what I was taught to do in my college writing courses. Of course they assume you're actually telling the truth which is why they kinda teach how to find trusted sources.
    Ultimately why I advocate for education reform, if you know how it's made then you'll more likely be able to catch when others are using tricks like these.

    • @annebruce5135
      @annebruce5135 Před 2 lety +7

      It's also why in college you have to note your sources of info understandably.

    • @NoName-OG1
      @NoName-OG1 Před 2 lety +1

      I have a propaganda playlist.

  • @KetsuekiRose
    @KetsuekiRose Před 2 lety +42

    the question on Faux News would be, "What got Beau into kicking puppies?" or "How long has Beau been kicking puppies?"

    • @timothyball3144
      @timothyball3144 Před 2 lety +12

      "Has Beau stopped kicking puppies?"

    • @safe-keeper1042
      @safe-keeper1042 Před 2 lety +14

      "People are saying..."

    • @Sableagle
      @Sableagle Před 2 lety +11

      "Has Tucker Carlson stopped beating his wife?"

    • @carissahowell
      @carissahowell Před 2 lety +4

      "Are WE to assume that Beau believes that we should all kick puppies, simply because he does?"

    • @Nembula
      @Nembula Před 2 lety +2

      The critical question is; Does Beau still kick puppies.

  • @Nembula
    @Nembula Před 2 lety +36

    Self taught means self correct constantly. Beau is catching me up with the college kids, like it or not. I actually really like the learning. This vid. Told me things about myself I did not know. Next challenge, use it to improve my communication skills. Well I'm going to try,. Lol.

  • @lynneperg6853
    @lynneperg6853 Před 2 lety +9

    A favorite old timey saying, "figures don't lie but liars still figure."

  • @dannyd-rockmahaffey3087
    @dannyd-rockmahaffey3087 Před 2 lety +2

    A dog had his chain reduced one link at a time, every few days, until his chain was so short he could barely move. He never resisted because he was conditioned to the loss of his freedom slowly, over time. It's happening to Americans.

  • @fabriziocaccia
    @fabriziocaccia Před 2 lety +38

    Love the video and everything you said with one exception: there is indeed something outrageous happening everyday.

    • @ExkupidsMom
      @ExkupidsMom Před 2 lety +5

      True! I'm trying to find a balance between not becoming inured to the outrageous and not being angry all of the time. It's tough nuggets.

    • @lindahoganson8721
      @lindahoganson8721 Před 2 lety +3

      Worlds end everyday.

  • @Gbindel
    @Gbindel Před 4 měsíci +3

    Thank you for this, explaining click bait to my husband is difficult because he's already emotionally committed

  • @grannypeacock
    @grannypeacock Před 2 lety +3

    I live in Kenosha WI. We're an unwilling media circus right now. Last year one of our journalists quit his job because of how the paper headlined one of his articles. There was a daylong event with many speakers, one of whom was pretty radical. The headline spoke to this one guy, presenting the entire movement against police brutality as well outside our cultural norms.

  • @railroad7401
    @railroad7401 Před 2 lety +6

    On a different note, Virginia went Rep. Booooo!

    • @briangarrow448
      @briangarrow448 Před 2 lety +1

      Republicans did a better job engaging their base. The issue for Dems is what will they learn from this loss? And will they take this knowledge and tailor their campaign strategies to ensure their base is energized?
      I’ve been involved with politics over 25 years and only one thing is permanent- that media will shape the narrative to increase readership, viewership or clicks.

    • @Andrea.1tree
      @Andrea.1tree Před 2 lety +2

      @Railroad. I was so disappointed when I saw that. I keep wondering where will it end? 👋🏼😊

  • @Alphqwe
    @Alphqwe Před 2 lety +12

    Well Howdy there Beau, internet people here

    • @briansmutti
      @briansmutti Před 2 lety +3

      😊🥉

    • @daisyelmir1289
      @daisyelmir1289 Před 2 lety +3

      Howdy fellow internet people.
      🙋‍♀️🏜🌼🏜🙋‍♀️

    • @daisyelmir1289
      @daisyelmir1289 Před 2 lety +3

      @@briansmutti
      Morning ma!
      🌼🙋‍♀️🌼🦋🌼

    • @briansmutti
      @briansmutti Před 2 lety +1

      @@daisyelmir1289
      morning
      🌼🙋‍♀️🌼☕️🌼

  • @marc21256
    @marc21256 Před 2 lety +3

    When I was taking a university class on publishing scientific papers, we were ordered to get a result for a survey. Then poll students in a public place and get the targeted results.
    We were given two opposite results to "find".
    Like "80% of people support abortion" and "80% of people oppose abortion"
    There were many techniques to skew results, and we were expected to use all of them. And every group was able to hit their targets. The point wasn't unattainable targets to see how well you execute the manipulation of stats, but to prove to the students that manipulating "surveys" is trivial, and expect all surveys to be flawed, until you've read the details of how it was collected (and maybe after that, if you can spot flaws).

  • @redced510
    @redced510 Před 2 lety +3

    Misinformation is really democracy's kryptonite. Developing critical thinking should be thought in school... But then maybe the Church wouldn't like the outcome...

  • @allyson87
    @allyson87 Před 2 lety +9

    Since I’ve seen a few misinformed anti-psychiatry/mental health things recently (shared by people all over the political spectrum), phrases like “seems to” and “appears” are normal and professional in clinical writing. This isn’t to mislead but to acknowledge limitations of knowledge. Only people outside mental healthcare think psych isn’t hyper aware of it’s limitations (ethics, individual differences, funding/resources, ethics…)
    Before anyone comes at me, I’m not saying psych is perfect by any means; there are plenty of issues (healthcare shouldn’t be a business). However most of these critiques are based off things that have been outside mainstream belief/teaching/practice for 40 years and very misleading

  • @lindac7146
    @lindac7146 Před 2 lety +18

    Thanks for the information. I understand better, why I'm so suspicious of some narratives and so accepting of others.

  • @denisemcdougal6445
    @denisemcdougal6445 Před 4 měsíci +2

    As my dad always said “ question everything “ !!!!

  • @IndiBrony
    @IndiBrony Před 2 lety +2

    "Does Beau kick puppies?"
    "Yes!" is absolutely the answer if the 'there's no smoke without fire' crowd give the answer.
    Like, it's no good if someone is acquitted of the allegations held against them, the suggestion is already there and it's shaping people's opinions about them.
    It's damning when you see that - in a societal sense, not yet a lawful sense - we've strayed far away from 'innocent until proven guilty'. I wouldn't even say we're at 'guilty until proven innocent' in certain circles.
    We're at 'guilty regardless of evidence', because we're so stoked up on outrage and it's all fed back into the system because outrage is the strongest emotion to sell.

  • @MrJonsonville5
    @MrJonsonville5 Před 2 lety +61

    Also with polling: Sample Size! Most polls have a sample size of less than a thousand people, yet people interpret them as "X% of Americans think Y." No, X% of 879 people who responded to the poll think Y. Small sample sizes aren't exactly statistically significant, especially when you throw in the other factors.

    • @ChrisPage68
      @ChrisPage68 Před 2 lety +11

      Who commissioned and carries out the poll is a clue to the answers they're after.

    • @MrJonsonville5
      @MrJonsonville5 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ChrisPage68 right, but everything else can be thrown out the window if the sample size is less than 1000 people, which the vast majority of polls have. You can have the least biased questions asked in the most neutral way that are in no way designed to evoke a certain answer, but none of it matters if the sample size is small. Nothing can make up for a poll that only reaches 0.0003% of the population, and there is no way to make a poll that small statically significant. 99.999999+% of polls conducted in America are statically insignificant and way too many people don't pay attention to that fact.

    • @Andrea.1tree
      @Andrea.1tree Před 2 lety +3

      @@MrJonsonville5 I worked as a phone operator for an “information research facility” while waiting for my disability to hit. The operators are highly monitored, and follow a script, word for word from whichever party is seeking the poll. However, the questions are skewed towards whatever political point they’re after. Tricky or unclear questions, and multiple choice answers designed to trap the unwary. The 1,000 people statistic is not always true. More often than not, the poll is taken by state, or certain districts across the U.S. Like east coast vs west coast. The party paying for the poll is 100% responsible for the questions, and closely monitor the monitors. They even listen in on certain calls, with interruptions from the monitors to inject specifics to the operator. I couldn’t get out of that job fast enough. It’s most definitely a corruption, and more specifically from the party purchasing the poll. The cleanest poll I worked on was the Marist poll.

    • @zzzzzzzzzzzspaf
      @zzzzzzzzzzzspaf Před 2 lety

      actually, IF you can select people at random, then a sample size of 1000 is perfectly fine. it's a wierd fact but the precision of polling does not depend on the total population, only on the number of people you poll.
      What we need to be carefull is how we select people, because true random is hard

    • @MrJonsonville5
      @MrJonsonville5 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zzzzzzzzzzzspaf randomness does help mitigate the problem, but there's still no way to accurately extrapolate the answers of less than a thousand people out to be an accurately representation of the views of 331 million people. Maybe if Americans were a monolith then polling a million people would have a chance of being a representative sample, but even then you're talking about 1/331th of the population. No amount of randomness can can cancel out the fact that 331 million individuals each have their own unique upbringings, genetics, experiences, world views, ideologies, etc. It's still statistically meaningless.

  • @Jaffa_MD
    @Jaffa_MD Před 2 lety +14

    Damn, dude. Not only is this an exceptional video on critical thinking and properly digesting news items, but the section on polls and statistics is basically a masterclass on critical appraisal of scientific studies. I might actually bookmark this and give it to all of my med students and residents in the future when we start talking about evidence based medicine. Seriously incredible job!

  • @jbriggsiv
    @jbriggsiv Před 2 lety +3

    A good rule of thumb handed down to me: If a headline asks a question, don't bother reading the article, the answer is "No."

  • @DoloresJNurss
    @DoloresJNurss Před 2 lety +3

    One to be on guard against that I've seen crop up a lot lately is to take an historical event and present it as though it happened this year. So people go to google it, see a bunch of articles with headlines about it, and believe that it's going on now. Two examples I've seen were, during the BIA protests, claims that miles and miles of buildings burned down in Portland Oregon due to rioting. Yes, this happened--a century ago. Something that also happened a century ago was that food riots took place during a quarantine in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but I've known people who were convinced that it happened in 2020.

  • @ArthurGraham-vy1ze
    @ArthurGraham-vy1ze Před 10 měsíci +1

    Each question you have to ask exponentially increases the likelihood that your compadre is unready to follow thru, or worse yet he's a put-on artist.

  • @lambbrainz709
    @lambbrainz709 Před 2 lety +11

    A great book that covers some of these and a lot of other great things including how to be a better critical thinker and consumer is "Weaponized Lies" by Daniel Levitin

    • @briansmutti
      @briansmutti Před 2 lety +2

      i will order it today 🙂ty

    • @lambbrainz709
      @lambbrainz709 Před 2 lety +4

      @@briansmutti hey, that's awesome! I promise you will not regret it. It's my number one required reading and you'll honestly be amazed at how helpful it is and how prevalent a lot of misleading tactics are. Please hit me up when you finish it. Would love to hear your thoughts!

  • @cariwaldick4898
    @cariwaldick4898 Před 2 lety +6

    Over the years, I've cultivated a healthy skepticism of the media. It started back in the late 80's when I'd listen to Rush Limbaugh on talk radio. He was funny, had some insights, and it was easy to go along with what he said. But over time, it became clear that he hated EVERYTHING Democrat. If Democrats discovered the cure for cancer, Limbaugh would lament the cancer doctors being out of work. Once the skew showed itself, I started to question everything he said. I looked up the stories on my own, and discovered he was all mostly bluster and making mountains out of dust bunnies. (He ranted a whole show about Bill Clinton getting a haircut on Air Force One, while delaying airport traffic.)
    I don't understand why people don't question when media shows its bias. I question my favorites--such as The Young Turks. They're informative, but yeah, they're reactionary and biased.
    Another thing to watch online: Who's holding the camera. When there are videos that just seem crazy, ask yourself who's holding the camera--and why. "This illegal tried to break into my garage!" Yeah....and you just happened to be recording with a camera that's not stationary.

    • @ChrisBV
      @ChrisBV Před 2 lety

      Clinton didn't just get a haircut. He closed the air port for 4 hours. Afterwards Hillary beaned him with a lamp, so he had to wear a bandaid in public.

  • @anarchisttechsupport6644
    @anarchisttechsupport6644 Před 2 lety +8

    Welcome to Beau's course on Yellow Journalism! Lesson 1.

  • @jopjop9400
    @jopjop9400 Před 2 lety +7

    i still think we should investigate this ben and jeries personel drowning people story

  • @lynnlytton8244
    @lynnlytton8244 Před 8 měsíci +1

    My favorite false image was of "liberals keeping supplies from getting into Houston after Harvey!" The picture was of people holding hands and blocking cars on a highway--wearing jackets, with snow on the ground. Harvey was in August in Houston, not a prime season or location for snow,

  • @VanessaVaile
    @VanessaVaile Před 2 lety +1

    Jane McAlevey, "If nothing else, it's called inoculation in union campaigns: putting out a little of the poison before the boss so the base has antibodies."

  • @timothyball3144
    @timothyball3144 Před 2 lety +9

    On the road again and I'm here for it.

  • @timothyball3144
    @timothyball3144 Před 2 lety +18

    The part about headlines used to inflame is why I have stopped watching videos from people that I mostly agree with. When I see them, I know that they are trying to get people to have a reaction rather than understand the topic and I would see that in the comment section. Time after time, the comments are about that headline, rather the information put out there.

    • @MusicMissionary
      @MusicMissionary Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah I'm getting tired of video headlines about people I don't like being "destroyed." They're still online fooling people and making money. Nobody got destroyed.

  • @aylbdrmadison1051
    @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 2 lety +6

    Part of the problem is because we live in a conservative-capitalist society (for those who didn't notice, it's not working btw). Media is already intrinsically prone to showing us all of the negatives that happen infrequently, and very rarely show the everyday kindnesses, acts of love, and you know, normal everyday life. Good things happen on such a far more massive scale, this is not newsworthy. Add the intrinsic greed of conservative-capitalism, and the problem is far greater.

  • @gatedoctor8636
    @gatedoctor8636 Před 2 lety +2

    My daughter picked up on the bees and schooled me on the subject
    I was so proud of her

  • @SynchroScore
    @SynchroScore Před 5 měsíci

    Reminds me of something I read a while back, about a good rule to follow: Almost every newspaper headline that ends in a question mark can be correctly answered with "No".

  • @kranzonguam
    @kranzonguam Před 2 lety +4

    This goes to the top of my extra credit viewing list for students!
    Thank you, Beau!!

  • @rdean150
    @rdean150 Před 2 lety +1

    Rasmussen still conducts the vast majority of their polling via landline.
    I have not had a landline telephone in at least 15 years. I'm surprised stores even still sell them.

  • @darksun3003
    @darksun3003 Před 2 lety +10

    Thank you for your time, energy, and wisdom you share when making these videos.

  • @albertkelly1013
    @albertkelly1013 Před 2 lety +1

    Guilty of being manipulated. Good video brother.

  • @LambieSamba
    @LambieSamba Před 2 lety +1

    Good stuff Beau! Most people would never think of these methods of manipulation by the news!

  • @zaaz1471
    @zaaz1471 Před 2 lety +13

    FANTASTIC vid. Basic education on interpreting _news._ Well done and thank you!

  • @karenjohannessen8987
    @karenjohannessen8987 Před 2 lety +14

    Saving this valuable video, and sharing it out - "How to do Critical Thinking" FTW!
    Thank you Beau ~ 💗

  • @silubr1
    @silubr1 Před rokem +1

    21:52 "If you’re outraged just by the headline, it’s on purpose."

  • @AILIT1
    @AILIT1 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This video needs way more views. Linked back from a more recent question sent in. It's a great breakdown on the subject for sure. Media literacy is one of the key ingredients to saving our democracy.

  • @beverlyhughes1697
    @beverlyhughes1697 Před 2 lety +4

    I discounted the information about bumblebees entirely once honey was mentioned.

  • @CaptEoNinja83
    @CaptEoNinja83 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Reminds me of this 80s tv show episode where the main guy was a reporter for a tabloid that was working on a article about aliens and Elvis and tried to contact Carl Sagan for a response. Carl Sagan's people said he was confused by what the reporter was talking about. So Reporter puts in article "Elvis may have been an alien? Carl Sagan quoted, 'I'm baffled by this!'" The tabloid people applauded him for that.
    Wasn't technically wrong, but wasn't right either.

  • @chris714n83yh1
    @chris714n83yh1 Před 2 lety

    Respect (for all the people who fight for a clear, solid reality.)

  • @fluuufffffy1514
    @fluuufffffy1514 Před 2 lety +1

    News articles saying "what do you think?" is a pet peeve if mine. It's like, what do I think?? Nothing! Obviously I need more information--that's why I'm here! ... And that's when I go look elsewhere

  • @KarlaElaine100
    @KarlaElaine100 Před rokem +1

    One of my favorite videos! I periodically rewatch it.

  • @yarnpower
    @yarnpower Před 2 lety +1

    Love this! I wish every Fox viewer would watch it!

  • @laurajarrell6187
    @laurajarrell6187 Před 2 lety +6

    Beau, lol, second comment, couldn't resist. I saw the honey, but because I know of your intelligence, I 'assumed' you knew honey bees aren't bumble, and just took it as part of the importance of saving ALL pollinators, and truly, ecology. And, more on climate change. No need to correct it, in comments it seemed most got the real message! Your integrity is not questioned, by most of us. Ever. Sanity, maybe a little, lol. Integrity, nah. 👍🥰💖😅✌

  • @doloresreynolds8145
    @doloresreynolds8145 Před rokem

    Way back when I was in junior high, in the early 1970’s, we had a mandatory class called “Communications”. One of the focal points of this class was teaching you how marketing and advertising was used as a tool of manipulation, to have an effect on your behavior. This was decades before the internet. We need this concept to be taught today, in a big way. Your Cliff’s notes version here is very insightful.

  • @pamplachte5089
    @pamplachte5089 Před 2 lety

    We watch local news. Some of us are born with discernment.

  • @patrickgilmore4602
    @patrickgilmore4602 Před 7 měsíci

    Great show. I have a 93 year old mother that watches CZcams meidas touch, but she gets sucked into the NBC rabbit hole because she has trouble changing the program. Im always amazed at the rhetoric.

  • @williamroop451
    @williamroop451 Před rokem +2

    My favorite non-math example of statistical bias was a joke.
    Sam was talking with Bob...
    "I was out drinking last Friday and drank rum and Coke... Boy did I wake up hung over.
    Saturday I tried Jack and Coke and the same thing happened.
    Sunday it was vodka and Coke... Same.
    Bob: I guess you need to give up Coke.
    It's funny, as a math guy I grasped it through that lens, but just now realized that it covers polling too.

    • @Skeloric
      @Skeloric Před rokem +1

      Comedy duo I saw had the bit:
      "I read about the evils of alcohol so I gave it up."
      "Alcohol?"
      "No, reading. Haven't touched a book since."
      So, yeah.

  • @stiltongruyere9691
    @stiltongruyere9691 Před 2 lety +1

    Every 9th grade history class should show this video.
    Also, that image rotation thing is new to me!
    [Reverse image searches are also a great tool to see if you’re being catfished.]

  • @wiggie2gone
    @wiggie2gone Před 2 lety

    As my College Professor always said. "Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics"

  • @aaa8509
    @aaa8509 Před 2 lety +2

    The best example I can think of that represents this is the side by side pictures of people in Iraq tearing down a huge Saddam statue. I've side is Fox news and the other was the full picture taken from the sky. The Fox picture darned to show the people willingly getting help from a tank to rip the statue down. The full picture showed US troops and tanks guns pointed at the crowd forcing them to pull the statues down.

  • @pamplachte5089
    @pamplachte5089 Před 2 lety

    Putting a picture of cutting down a tree is fact. No words. A calendar helps. We see kids working in schools.

  • @7Katherine1
    @7Katherine1 Před rokem

    I once saw a headline, front page, about the Jonestown Massacre that read, ‘WE ARE ALL GOING TO DIE NOW’ . The paper sold out of the street boxes quickly.

  • @ROYALPRIX
    @ROYALPRIX Před 2 lety +1

    I've learned many cannot differentiate between straight news, and then the 45 min afterwards TALKING about the news.

  • @JoshuaKA02
    @JoshuaKA02 Před 2 lety

    "Congress's most recent proposals, and how they may affect you"

  • @velvetandchester
    @velvetandchester Před 2 lety +29

    I am in Australia and someone I care about has attached himself to the belief that he is Conservative/ Republican(we don't have that in Aus) and it pains me to say he would stop listening to someone like Bo who presents examples the first time he uses, say for example Trump in a negative light. It wouldn't matter if the previous 6 examples were Democratic or non political. He seems like he has been conditioned or brainwashed or something to switch off at that point thereby learning nothing, least of all that he should question all actors in his environment.

    • @annebruce5135
      @annebruce5135 Před 2 lety +6

      I'm I Scotland and I have a brother exactly like that. He stops listening when he doesn't want to hear.

    • @NoName-OG1
      @NoName-OG1 Před 2 lety +5

      These people are constantly told they are being lied to. And then consumed by the marketplace of conspiracies. And once in a while, a conspiracy is found to be actually true - they do exist. And every time an actual conspiracy is for mind to be true - it’s used to justify all of the conspiracies that are not true. So that the sources of media are deemed un-trustable.
      And that un-trustable media is dead to them - for everything. The one that supposedly told them the “truth” can then lie to them about everything - EVERYTHING.
      Is it conditioning or brainwashing? Yep!

    • @erincaitlin1655
      @erincaitlin1655 Před 2 lety +5

      Unfortunately, many people want someone to make decisions for them and are content to live their lives like sheep. That explains why they voted for a lifelong conman and unstable wackjob in 2016, and still appear to believe his lies even to this day ... VERY SCARY !!

    • @NoName-OG1
      @NoName-OG1 Před 2 lety +5

      And all three of the countries mentioned territory as one specific common denominator. And that is Rupert Murdoch, and his family at the stage.
      He at one point in time was single-handedly shifting all narratives to the right. But now he has competition in that effort. He has made it an industry of its own. Destabilizing nations….

    • @velvetandchester
      @velvetandchester Před 2 lety +4

      @@NoName-OG1 that murdojerkhas a freakin lot to answer for

  • @gertrudelaronge6864
    @gertrudelaronge6864 Před 2 lety +1

    This information is so needed by our Nation right now.
    Thank you.

  • @laurajarrell6187
    @laurajarrell6187 Před 2 lety +12

    Beau. This is great. When you were talking about poles, I was thinking of how this was similar to statistics, then you said it! I learned in the 90s, as a Humane Officer just how easily stats get skewed! And that wasn't on purpose!👍🥰💖✌

  • @helenmurphree3434
    @helenmurphree3434 Před 2 lety +1

    I saw that actual poll, about is Trump a good president, on Facebook a few years ago and Yup you got it right I didn’t/couldn’t answer since there was no option for me. SMH 🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @miditrax
    @miditrax Před 10 měsíci

    Thanks for doing this. My pet peeve is hearing 'Trump' or 'Obama' or others' appointed judges, who don't always rule in agreement with them.

  • @7Katherine1
    @7Katherine1 Před rokem +1

    These info-judging videos are wonderful.

  • @redbengoesroadtripping
    @redbengoesroadtripping Před 2 lety +1

    The one that gets me is the big blurry line between a fact and opinion, too many people take an op-ed as if it is gospel fact. Even so much of the "mainstream" news sources seem to have swung towards op-ed as controversy is good for ratings

  • @SimonSozzi7258
    @SimonSozzi7258 Před 2 lety

    I'm always wondering, "What does Maxine Waters have to do with any of this!?

  • @ginac7235
    @ginac7235 Před 2 lety +3

    Tactics and techniques used to manipulate
    Be on guard when:
    1. If headlines elicit an emotional reaction
    A headline should inform you, not inflame you. They should pique your curiosity and not encourage you to form an opinion right away
    - Inflame through confirmation bias , encouraging team mentality
    - Technique: inserting a politically-divisive name (association creates first impression)
    - Technique: Insert a question 3:45- used to shape a narrative, an allegation
    - Technique: use a quote (plays into confirmation bias)
    - Personification- Sometimes valid and fair. 6:18 - Sometimes, tho, names are thrown in to be politically divisive when not directly connected
    - Example at 7:00. Tucker Carlson (Fox News) famous for using questions to shape a narrative but doesn’t answer the questions
    2. Polls 7:10 - They are only as good as the way they were collected
    3. Statistics 9:05 - Can be good when used to provide context (rarely used). Be cautious when being used to imply cause-and-effect. They may appear linked but don’t necessarily have a cause-and-affect relationship
    4. False links (12:10) - A false sense of security is created when there are a several links. People assume they are true.
    5. Image out of context (13:10) - Used to create outrage and misinformation. You can save an image in question and go to tineye and upload image to learn history and true context of photo. Note: Those spreading misinformation have learned to get around tineye by rotating the image. If no results come up on a questionable photo, try rotating it
    6. Factual yet misleading statements (15:15) especially when taken out of context. This technique is often combined with the question technique to manufacture a narrative.
    7. Misinformation from people being unclear (16:23) whether intentional or not. 18:45 When it’s intentional, it’s often combined with the question technique to manufacture a narrative. They play into a perceived lack of information
    8. Assigning intent without context nor evidence (19:25) - Be aware when opinions are being given rather than facts. For example, when you hear these words, these are clues you are getting an opinion about someone else’s intent: “seems,” “appears,” “apparently.” Even when those specific words aren’t used, be leery and look for context and proof...not just opinions
    “If your favorite commentator makes you feel angry and outraged everyday, they are doing it on purpose, and they are probably creating false narratives in the process.”

  • @curtisjackson4282
    @curtisjackson4282 Před 2 lety +1

    I strongly agree with this,however people are lazy and refuse to search articles for themselves. I debunk talking points all the time. I love when I shut them down with proof. The next day they come back with something else they have heard from a pundit

  • @aylbdrmadison1051
    @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 2 lety +5

    Bigotry: the great divider. With no bigotry there would be no war, no homelessness, funds would reach their intended destination resulting in people getting much needed food and medical supplies, and there would be far less violence and crime overall. I think if we attend to bigotry in general, then we can get more people on board than if we continue to just put our focus on one or a few particular forms at a time. Most people have been the subject of bigotry in some form other.

    • @jimcrelm9478
      @jimcrelm9478 Před 2 lety +1

      Bigotry is something that people develop to justify economic privilege and exploitation. They need to explain away man-made differences like they are natural. Bigotry will exist as long as inequality and privilege exist, and as long as class society exists. Divisions arise not out of bigotry in and of itself, but out of material reality: qualitatively differing relations to property. A landlord and a tenant have mutually opposing economic interests. Rents go up, the tenant suffers and the landlord prospers; rents go down and the tenant breathes easier. Same for a worker and an owner. Sometimes to the point of life and death, especially in the global south; frequently to the point of ill health and misery. The owning class not only creates a justifying ideology for itself, but it creates propaganda to divide working class people against each other. An ideal society would not contain the economic antagonisms that create bigoted thinking. Cooperatives instead of corporations, housing co-ops instead of landlords, localism and confederation instead of governments, and community networks instead of states.
      Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

  • @ChadJonesAYelpInTheDark
    @ChadJonesAYelpInTheDark Před 2 lety +1

    100% of murderers and rapists drank water in their youth and continued to abuse it their entire life. Where’s the outrage?

  • @wordsmithgmxch
    @wordsmithgmxch Před 2 lety +3

    ... any headline with the word "slams" in it ...

  • @rl318
    @rl318 Před 2 lety

    The problem with the steps Beau is giving people is that it takes base reading comprehension skills that many people are purposely not taught.

  • @Paul_I_S
    @Paul_I_S Před 2 lety +6

    👍
    PS. Misrepresenting without lying is an "art form". I got interested in it back in day when I read law. It's closely related to seduction. All great orators master these technics. They both lead their audience down their path and seduce them to agree with their point of view.

  • @tomahawkchunker
    @tomahawkchunker Před rokem +1

    Beau acknowledges allegations of puppy kicking scandal. Is the Paw Patrol safe? The answer may surprise you!

  • @johnpagejr.7628
    @johnpagejr.7628 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Beau!

  • @bobmudge4836
    @bobmudge4836 Před 2 lety

    One goal is to separate you from something: money, other people, rational thought.

  • @Maureen1
    @Maureen1 Před 2 lety +1

    What a mine of true information you are, Beau. Thank you yet again.

  • @ScuzzyForPrez
    @ScuzzyForPrez Před 2 lety +2

    The ad I got for this vid is a lady talking about so.e forgotten secret as she pours salt into half a cored out onion... couldn't have been more appropriate

  • @Bozeman42
    @Bozeman42 Před 2 lety +2

    Facebook specifically shows you comments that will make you angry / are absolute brain dead takes.
    "People engage with this comment. It's engaging! That means it's good!" - Facebook's algorithm

  • @alexhopkins8831
    @alexhopkins8831 Před 2 lety +1

    "Straight & crooked thinking " great book wonderful presentation.

  • @lushoberg8052
    @lushoberg8052 Před 2 lety +1

    Good information. Thank you.

  • @intrepidadventurer1932
    @intrepidadventurer1932 Před 2 lety +6

    Beau brilliant as always; I actually think, irrespective of the length of the video, that you should upload this to your other channel! More THIS message gets out to educate, the better!