Difference between revisions of "Truther"
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+ | ==About== | ||
+ | In popular parlance, a [[truther]] is someone who believes in or advocates ideas which are popularly believed to be nonsense. The [[Orwellian]] nature of this usage, and consequently its effectiveness as a tool of [[propaganda]] and [[disinformation]], seems to have escaped the notice of many people. | ||
+ | |||
+ | "Truthers" generally seem to appear as part of "movements", each of which seems to serve one of the two following functions: | ||
+ | * a propaganda campaign to persuade people that a particular belief (typically false) is true -- generally because that belief favors the status quo or supports the establishment agenda in some way | ||
+ | * a disinformation campaign to discredit a particular belief (typically one for which there is substantial but inconclusive evidence) through [[straw-man advocacy]] -- generally because that belief is in some way threatening to the establishment or its agenda | ||
+ | ==History== | ||
+ | The term first gained popularity in reference to the "[[9-11/truth|9/11 Truth]]" movement, which was [[9-11/truth/antipathy|widely derided]] as being ir[[rational]], fact-free, and nothing more than a bunch of crazy "[[conspiracy theory|conspiracy theories]]". | ||
+ | |||
+ | Since then, the term has slowly gained currency in reference to other minority positions, many of them truly unscientific and irrational but not always so. | ||
+ | {{seedling}} |
Latest revision as of 19:36, 26 June 2013
About
In popular parlance, a truther is someone who believes in or advocates ideas which are popularly believed to be nonsense. The Orwellian nature of this usage, and consequently its effectiveness as a tool of propaganda and disinformation, seems to have escaped the notice of many people.
"Truthers" generally seem to appear as part of "movements", each of which seems to serve one of the two following functions:
- a propaganda campaign to persuade people that a particular belief (typically false) is true -- generally because that belief favors the status quo or supports the establishment agenda in some way
- a disinformation campaign to discredit a particular belief (typically one for which there is substantial but inconclusive evidence) through straw-man advocacy -- generally because that belief is in some way threatening to the establishment or its agenda
History
The term first gained popularity in reference to the "9/11 Truth" movement, which was widely derided as being irrational, fact-free, and nothing more than a bunch of crazy "conspiracy theories".
Since then, the term has slowly gained currency in reference to other minority positions, many of them truly unscientific and irrational but not always so.