Anonymous ID: fcd2bd June 20, 2020, 4:29 p.m. No.9687497   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7566 >>7730 >>7740 >>7750 >>7788 >>7903 >>7917 >>8142

Rally might be a bad time to post this, from a visibility standpoint, but…

THIS IS HOW FAKE NEWS WORKS

>About one-third of the people who were exposed to a fake print advertisement that described a visit to Disneyland and how they met and shook hands with Bugs Bunny later said they remembered or knew the event happened to them.

>The scenario described in the ad never occurred because Bugs Bunny is a Warner Bros. cartoon character and wouldn’t be featured in any Walt Disney Co. property, according to University of Washington memory researchers Jacquie Pickrell and Elizabeth Loftus. Pickrell will make two presentations on the topic at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society (APS) on Sunday (June 17) in Toronto and at a satellite session of the Society for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition in Kingston, Ontario, on Wednesday.

>“The frightening thing about this study is that it suggests how easily a false memory can be created,” said Pickrell, UW psychology doctoral student.

>“It’s not only people who go to a therapist who might implant a false memory or those who witness an accident and whose memory can be distorted who can have a false memory. Memory is very vulnerable and malleable. People are not always aware of the choices they make. This study shows the power of subtle association changes on memory.”

 

https://www.washington.edu/news/2001/06/11/i-tawt-i-taw-a-bunny-wabbit-at-disneyland-new-evidence-shows-false-memories-can-be-created/

 

Do you see, Anons? THIS is how false memories are created! Fake news can LITERALLY make you remember something that didn't happen!

By creating a vivid-enough picture of an event, it is possible to implant false memories into unsuspecting minds. Not only does the news employ this technique, Hollywood and entertainment like to retell historical events in order to falsify people's memories surrounding them.

It doesn't matter if your granddad lived through Korea and the Gulf War. If he watches CNN, his memory of those events is not reliable.

Do you see what I'm saying?