Hillary Clinton is mastermind of a criminal gang exploiting children
that's based in a pizza joint in Washington DC. Left-wingers planned to
initiate a new American Civil War on November 4, 2017. There is no such
nation as Finland, only empty ocean where everyone thinks Finland is.
All of these statements are palpable nonsense, yet all of them were
presented as genuine news and believed by many thousands if not hundreds
of thousands of people.
The phenomenon of fake news isn't new. In 1903 Russian anti-Semites
prepared and published The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a supposed
exposé of Jewish plans to take over the world through committing
atrocities. No one can tell how many innocent people were slaughtered as
a result of this piece of fake news, which was widely believed not just
in Russia but in Nazi Germany, and is still believed to this day by some
people. A little later, and all through the twentieth century, the
Russian secret services made widespread use of "disinformation," both at
home and abroad, in order to manipulate people into believing
falsehoods. And it was the Russians, too, who widely disseminated,
through social media and otherwise, much of the fake news that attempted
to influence the 2016 US presidential election.
But it's not just the Russians who spread fake news, and it's not just
the likes of Facebook and Twitter that are used as the platforms. In the
lead-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, for example, the august New York
Times was fooled into publishing a series of articles that presented
completely false information about the military plans and capabilities
of the Iraqi government. Commercial enterprises, too, promote fake news,
such as all those false reports claiming there's no evidence that
smoking is bad for your health.
Fake news has proved itself effective as a political tool for getting
people to make stupid decisions, and so it's almost certainly here to
stay. Fighting back against it is a task for each and every one of us.
In this exciting new book, John Grant, author of the groundbreaking
Debunk It! How to Stay Sane in a World of Misinformation, traces the
history of fake news and looks at the patterns it exploits and the
routes it takes to persuade people to believe things that are contrary
to their own interests. He then explores the ways you can tell fake news
for what it is and counter its pernicious effects. Full of obscure and
startling information, Fake News will have you full of outrage in one
moment and laughing aloud in the next at the absurdity of what otherwise
perfectly intelligent people have been induced to believe. And you'll
come away from the book armed with what you need to make sure you don't
fall into the same trap.