Tag: media literacy
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The false flag framework and how it migrated from 9/11 to every event since
The false flag template that crystallized after 9/11 has been applied to nearly every major news event since. Here’s how the framework spreads and why it persists.
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Larry Silverstein’s pull it quote, in context
Larry Silverstein’s pull it remark fueled years of speculation about 7 World Trade Center. What he actually said, what he later clarified, and what the record shows.
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Debunking the code words claim: what the Podesta emails actually said
A factual breakdown of the Podesta email language conspiracy theorists reinterpreted, and what cheese pizza, pasta, and handkerchief references actually meant.
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Legitimate questions vs. conspiracy theories: drawing the line
Skepticism is healthy; conspiracy thinking is corrosive. Here’s how to tell genuine institutional critique from the patterns that mark organized conspiracy theories.
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Survival Shows Create Unrealistic Expectations
Reality survival shows make wilderness mastery look attainable in a weekend course. The actual skills take years and the failures kill people.
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Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth: who they are and what they argue
Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth claims controlled demolition felled the towers. Here’s who the group is, what they argue, and what mainstream engineers say.
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Generational divides in 9/11 conspiracy belief
Polling data on 9/11 conspiracy beliefs reveals striking generational patterns. The reasons reflect media exposure, trust gaps, and how memory ages.
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The Loose Change effect: how a 2005 internet documentary shaped a generation
Loose Change wasn’t the first 9/11 conspiracy film, but it was the one that mass internet distribution made unstoppable. Its real legacy is the playbook.
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The hijackers-are-still-alive claim and how the BBC retraction got distorted
A 2001 BBC story said some named 9/11 hijackers were alive. Conspiracy circles cite it constantly. The actual record is more complicated.
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Pizzagate explained: how a debunked conspiracy theory spread from 4chan to the mainstream
A timeline of how misread John Podesta emails in 2016 produced a baseless trafficking conspiracy that ended with a man firing a rifle inside a DC restaurant.