AlBowers1 (@albowers11) 's Twitter Profile
AlBowers1

@albowers11

#Aspergers
#MentalHealth

Retired from the 77th

ID: 1513945243846123523

calendar_today12-04-2022 18:21:26

7,7K Tweet

636 Followers

1,1K Following

IntegralAnswers (@integralanswers) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Misinformation isn’t new — it’s just faster. From the 19th-century Moon Hoax to COVID conspiracies, falsehoods have reshaped science, health, and geopolitics. Here’s a visual timeline of 6 of the most consequential misinformation events—and what they still teach us.

Misinformation isn’t new — it’s just faster.

From the 19th-century Moon Hoax to COVID conspiracies, falsehoods have reshaped science, health, and geopolitics.

Here’s a visual timeline of 6 of the most consequential misinformation events—and what they still teach us.
Richard Higgs 🇿🇦 🗿 77 🎩👾🎼💾 (@higgsri) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If, at this point, you will not distinguish between SV40 and practically meaningless fragments of SV40 promotor, you are most definitely deliberately spreading disinformation.

JusDayDa (@jusdayda) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Sayer Ji Several states have a problem: Too many older people One solution is the MAHA populism agenda to thin the number of retirees The effects should be clear in 3.5 years

<a href="/sayerjigmi/">Sayer Ji</a> Several states have a problem:
Too many older people
One solution is the MAHA populism agenda to thin the number of retirees
The effects should be clear in 3.5 years
Prof Jeffrey S Morris (@jsm2334) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Children’s Health Defense Lied about what? He said that even though the data (clinical trials and real world observational studies) showed 90-95% VE vs. infections, people should have known that given the nature and characteristics of this virus, the protection vs. infection from vaccine AND FROM

Dr. Jonathan N. Stea (@jonathanstea) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Science-of-the-Gaps Fallacy: When a phrase akin to “science doesn’t have all of the answers” is used to justify unsupported claims. It's often used to promote pseudoscience and alternative approaches to health that are clearly and scientifically baseless.

Science-of-the-Gaps Fallacy:

When a phrase akin to “science doesn’t have all of the answers” is used to justify unsupported claims.

It's often used to promote pseudoscience and alternative approaches to health that are clearly and scientifically baseless.
IntegralAnswers (@integralanswers) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1/ A new “McCullough Foundation Report” on Zenodo claims vaccines are the main cause of autism—authored by Andrew Wakefield & Peter McCullough, two long-discredited figures. Let’s unpack how this paper turns framing bias into “evidence.”

1/ A new “McCullough Foundation Report” on Zenodo claims vaccines are the main cause of autism—authored by Andrew Wakefield &amp; Peter McCullough, two long-discredited figures. 

Let’s unpack how this paper turns framing bias into “evidence.”