barmar, on 2017-September-11, 14:04, said:
Some schools now have classes on how to distinguish fake news.
This could be very interesting. I would love to be a fly on the wall, or wherever it is that flies make their observations from.
I will mention a few things from my childhood of varying degrees of plausibility.
1. The John Birch Society. The JBS claimed that "the government" was putting fluoride in our water. This was true. They also claimed that fluoridation was a communist plot to do something, I am not sure what, to us.
I knew nobody who believed this.
2. Joe McCarthy (a story I love to tell since it makes me look good, or maybe so). In 1952 Adlai Stevenson was running against Dwight Eisenhower for president. I was 13 and I was interested. I read some about each of them and decided Adlai was my guy. I liked Ike, everyone liked Ike, but I would have voted for Stevenson. I got home from Boy Scouts one evening, my parents were watching tv. It was the first I had even heard of Joe McCarthy. There he was, explaining that in the 1930s Stevenson had belonged to some organizations that were now "on the Attorney General's list of subversive organizations". Or words to that extent. Now I think it was in fact true that Stevenson had belonged to at least one r two fo the organizations and perhaps they were on a list. A lot of organizations and a lot of people were on some list in 1952. Of course Stevenson was not a Communist. Or anything remotely like a Communist. I rejected McCarthy's claims as hogwash. Good for me? Sure, but I can't say that I could have defended my position in a debate.
McCarthy had a far larger following than did The John Birch Society.
3.
Bridey Murphy I never bought into this "past life" story but many did. I did write a paper in my high school psychology class about parapsychology. My conclusion was that the evidence for it was weak, noting in particular that the experiments of Rhine at Duke university had not been repeated elsewhere.(I had some guidance on this.) I did not dismiss it entirely. Same with others. A friend in graduate school, on his Ph.D. orals, was asked to explain the parapsychology experiments at Duke in terms of quantum mechanics. He was unable to do so. I did, and do, believe in quantum mechanics. But not in parapsychology.
4. When I was 15 or so, I and my classmates were given an interesting assignment. We were to choose a topic in the news, and then we were to read reports about it in three different magazines. I do not remember the topic I chose, but I am pretty sure the magazines I chose were Time, Newsweek and US News and Word Report. It was a revelation. The descriptions were quite different. Not contradictory as I recall, but definitely different.
I was a mentally active but unsophisticated adolescent. I have mentioned before that when my high school psychology teacher suggested that I write a term paper on Freud I asked "Who's Freud?". I had vast areas of total ignorance. Still do, for that matter. And while I was interested in politics, I was far more interested in cars.
All in all, I think that they have their work cut out for them if they are going to address fake news. The road to success with me would have been to encourage thought and skepticism. Requiring me to believe that story A is fake because the teacher says so and story B is real because the teacher says so would not have gone over well with me. Handing me the reasons and having me memorize them would have made it worse. I really enjoyed the assignment where we read three different news magazines and I would have happily read others had I known of their existence.
It is an important task. I wish them well.