Whew! I finished.

https://terikanefield.com/invented-narratives-and-the-outrage-industry/

Everything I promised: How to listen (or not listen) to legal pundits.

It's also about what is dangerous about the entire industry of punditry, speculation, and cable talk shows.

For years I was perplexed by what I was seeing on left-leaning Twitter, political blogs, and partisan reporting. I had the feeling that, in its way, what I was seeing was comparable to Fox: Lots of bad information and even unhinged conspiracy theories.

1/

Of course, if I suggested that, I was blasted for "both-sidesing."

Then I discovered an area of scholarship: Communications and the overlap between communications and political science.

I read these books and all the light bulbs went on.

I wrote a series last November called the Misinformation-Outrage-Cycle.

I thought I was finished, but like a book that I finish several times, I wasn't finished.

https://terikanefield.com/invented-narratives-and-the-outrage-industry/

This time, I think I am finished.

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Part 6: Invented Narratives and the Outrage Industry - Teri Kanefield

The Misinformation-Outrage Cycle This is Part 6. It’s generally best to follow the advice given to Alice and the White Rabbit in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland: “Begin at the beginning, go on to the end, and then stop.” But if you must read out of order, here are all the links: Part 1: There are […]

Teri Kanefield

When I get it all connected, the blog post I just wrote will be Part 6.

The post I did earlier this week on the 14th Amendment Section 3 debacle will be Part 7.

I wrote a conclusion: What to Expect from the Rage Machine Going Forward.

I may do a short introduction including the information in this thread.

https://terikanefield.com/invented-narratives-and-the-outrage-industry/

If you read this blog post, and the two that follow (I have links at the bottom going to the next post) you will understand why I have been getting testy.

3/

Part 6: Invented Narratives and the Outrage Industry - Teri Kanefield

The Misinformation-Outrage Cycle This is Part 6. It’s generally best to follow the advice given to Alice and the White Rabbit in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland: “Begin at the beginning, go on to the end, and then stop.” But if you must read out of order, here are all the links: Part 1: There are […]

Teri Kanefield

There is nothing wrong with outrage based on facts.

Outrage about the Supreme Court overturning Roe v Wade will probably keep Biden in the White House.

But manufactured outrage to fuel a for-profit industry is not good for anyone.

It is not good for democracy.

It is not good for the victims.

It is not good for the people trying to put out forest fires of misinformation with a squirt gun of facts.

https://terikanefield.com/invented-narratives-and-the-outrage-industry/

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Part 6: Invented Narratives and the Outrage Industry - Teri Kanefield

The Misinformation-Outrage Cycle This is Part 6. It’s generally best to follow the advice given to Alice and the White Rabbit in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland: “Begin at the beginning, go on to the end, and then stop.” But if you must read out of order, here are all the links: Part 1: There are […]

Teri Kanefield

The solution to a Firehose of Falsehood is not to try to debunk each bit of misinformation.

The fact checkers can never keep up.

The solution is to put raincoats on the populaton.

The same applies to the kind of misinformation that runs rampant in what I've been calling the CNN-MSNBC-left-leaning social media ecosystem.

It is super easy for pundits with cable platofrms or big social media accounts to toss out a rage-inducing simplification.

5/

Debunking each one is difficult and time consuming.

Think how easy it is to say "THE DOJ IS DOING NOTHING."

Now consider how much time went into putting together:
https://terikanefield.com/all-new-doj-investigation-faqs/

I believe the biggest threat to democracy is losing factuality and embracing lies.

Autocracy is based on lies. Democracy is based on the truth.

I wrote this series as I figured out what was going on: https://terikanefield.com/invented-narratives-and-the-outrage-industry/

I hope it helps others understand.

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DOJ Investigation into the January 6 attack FAQs - Teri Kanefield

I initially wrote this in March of 2022 and I have been periodically updating it since. The March 2022 version is here. For some reason, not all the links are showing up as a contrasting color. I stopped updating this after indictments were brought, but please read if you believe any of the following: The […]

Teri Kanefield

@Teri_Kanefield You really need to find an instance that will let you post more than 500 characters at a time. When you post a series of posts, I generally see one or two ot of ten.

Just so you know, infosec.exchange will let you post up to 11,000 characters at a time. Some otrher instances will also let you post more than the Mastodon default of 500 characters, though as far as I know there unfortunately is no list of instances ordered by maximum post length.

@Lunatech

This explains how to see all posts in a thread, and in branches of a thread.

@Teri_Kanefield

https://mastodon.help/#ThreadsAndBranches

Mastodon Help - Guide

A thorough introduction to Mastodon

@EllenJS @Teri_Kanefield Well that is clear as mud. The problem is that in a series of some number of posts, I only see some small subset of those posts, and often it's totally random, for example I might see just posts 3 and post 6 (just as an example). And sure, if I wanted to go clicking around I might be able to see the full thread, but if I don't know what the thread is about then I'm rarely motivated to do that. But also, every so often if you do that then you lose your place in the home timeline, and when you return you have to scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll etc. to get back to where you were, if you can even remember the last post you read and then find it. Since that is SUPER annoying to me I just won't do it; my solution in such a case is to just stop following (or if necessary, mute or block) a person who persists in leaving short serial posts. I don't really feel like I am missing out when I do that, because Mastodon is such a firehose that on most days there are too many posts in my home timeline to begin with.

Teri said she likes making short form posts, but I hate reading them when there are several of them in a series even if they do all appear, which almost never happens. So, the obvious solution is for me to unfollow her. That way, neither of us are annoying each other. Most people who want to make long posts eventually seem to find an instance that allows them. Teri doesn't want to, and that's her right, but it's also my right not to have any of them appear in my home timeline.