No to either of those thing vs Gilligan's Island. But our government and news sources have put out some comparably nasty propaganda.wayfriend wrote:Do you consider people believing Gilligan's Island was real to be of the same class of problem as, for example, Russia publishing a fake news story that the Ukrainian army publicly crucified a small child in the square in Slovyansk, which they published in order to provoke anti-Ukrainian sentiment among Russians while Russia was invading Ukraine? Or is it the same kind of problem as a story, at one point one the top 4 stories passed around on Facebook, that a CDC doctor was claiming the flu vaccine was causing a deadly flu outbreak?
I'm saying regardless of the media source -TV, newspaper, or town cryer - people have always believed inaccurate information to be true - whether the source was knowingly lying, simply wrong, or people took it the wrong way. At no time has this not been a problem. People have always lied, people have always been ignorant, and people have always been stupid. And at no time have we been able to find a solution.
Yes, the problem now goes farther, faster. But the same is true of accurate information.