People prefer emotionally satisfying stories to truth. Narratives gain power by meeting needs and most people don’t need global truths.
Consider:
The Great Wall from Space
There is a profound sense of pride in the idea that human engineering has reached such a scale that it is visible to the naked eye from the moon. This narrative suggests that our footprints on Earth are permanent and monumental. However, the Great Wall of China is roughly the same color as the surrounding soil and is not particularly wide. Astronauts have confirmed that it is nearly impossible to see from low Earth orbit without aid, and it is certainly invisible from the moon. It is a story about human legacy that ignores the reality of optics.
The Alpha Male in Wolf Packs
The concept of the alpha male has become a cornerstone of modern self-help and social hierarchy discussions. It paints a picture of a world where the strong lead through aggression and the weak submit. This narrative was popularized by studies of captive wolves in the mid 20th century who were forced together in unnatural environments. In the wild, wolf packs are actually family units where the leaders are simply the parents. The supposed alpha is just a dad or a mom, and the hierarchy is based on care and age rather than a constant, violent struggle for dominance.
The 10 Percent Brain Myth
The idea that we only use a small fraction of our brains is incredibly seductive because it implies that we all have latent psychic powers or untapped genius just waiting for a catalyst. It turns the human mind into a vast, unexplored frontier. In reality, neurology shows that we use virtually every part of our brain over the course of a day. Evolution is too stingy to allow a three pound organ that consumes 20 percent of our energy to sit 90 percent idle.
The Bystander Effect and Kitty Genovese
For decades, psychology students were taught the tragic story of Kitty Genovese, who was supposedly murdered while thirty eight neighbors watched and did nothing. This created a narrative of urban apathy and the chilling idea that the more people who witness an atrocity, the less likely anyone is to help. Later investigations revealed that the story was heavily distorted by the press. Many neighbors did not realize what was happening, some did try to help, and one neighbor actually held her as she died. The narrative of the cold, unfeeling city was more marketable than the reality of a confused and dark night.
The Middle Ages as a Dark Age
We often look back at the millennium between the fall of Rome and the Renaissance as a time of pure ignorance, filth, and scientific stagnation. This narrative allows us to feel superior and progressive. However, the Middle Ages saw the birth of the university system, the invention of eyeglasses, and massive leaps in agricultural technology and architecture. While it was certainly a difficult time for many, it was not the intellectual vacuum that popular history suggests.
Survival of the Fittest as Might Makes Right
Charles Darwin’s theory is often twisted into a narrative that justifies cruelty or the crushing of the weak. People interpret fitness as physical strength or aggressive dominance. In biological terms, fitness simply means the ability to survive and reproduce in a specific environment. Often, the fittest organism is the one that is the most cooperative or the most inconspicuous. A moss is frequently more fit than a lion.
The Blood is Blue Inside the Body
Many of us grew up believing that our blood only turns red when it hits the oxygen in the air. It is a colorful way to explain why our veins look blue through the skin. This narrative turns our internal biology into a sort of magic trick. In truth, human blood is always red because of hemoglobin, though the shade changes from a bright cherry red to a dark maroon when it loses oxygen. The blue look of veins is just an optical illusion caused by the way light interacts with our skin and tissue.
The Library of Alexandria as the End of Knowledge
There is a tragic narrative that the burning of the Library of Alexandria set human progress back by a thousand years. It suggests that all the world’s wisdom was lost in a single fire set by an ignorant mob or a conquering army. The reality is much slower and more mundane. The library declined over centuries due to budget cuts, lack of interest, and several different fires. Most of the knowledge was either copied elsewhere or faded away as the scrolls physically rotted over time.
The Safety of the Golden Rule
We are taught that if we treat others as we wish to be treated, the world will respond in kind. This is a beautiful moral narrative that provides a sense of social safety. However, this assumes that everyone shares your values and boundaries. In practice, the narrative often fails because it ignores the complexity of different cultural norms and individual neurodivergence. It is a wise narrative for a vacuum, but it often struggles in the friction of the real world.
The Five Stages of Grief
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross originally developed the stages of denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance to describe the experience of people who were themselves dying. Over time, the narrative shifted to describe how we process the loss of others. People now feel a strange pressure to move through these stages in a linear fashion. Grief is actually far more chaotic and does not follow a predictable map. By trying to fit our pain into a neat narrative, we often end up feeling like we are failing at being sad.
Here are the top ten dubious narratives pushed by influencers:
The Dopamine Detox
The narrative suggests that by abstaining from social media, sugar, and even conversation, you can reset your brain’s dopamine receptors like a computer. Influencers frame dopamine as a finite resource that gets depleted or a toxin that needs to be flushed. In reality, your brain produces dopamine constantly; it is essential for movement, memory, and basic motivation. While taking a break from digital overstimulation is a great behavioral tool, you aren’t actually detoxing your chemistry. You are just practicing discipline.
The Carnivore Diet as a Human Default
A growing number of influencers claim that humans are strictly apex predators and that vegetables are filled with defense toxins that cause chronic inflammation. This narrative promises a return to an ancestral state of peak vitality. However, the archaeological and biological evidence shows that human ancestors were opportunistic omnivores who thrived on a wide variety of plant foods. Cutting out all fiber and phytonutrients might provide short term relief for specific autoimmune issues, but it is not a scientifically supported default for the general population.
Cold Plunges as a Metabolism Miracle
The image of a podcaster in a chest freezer has become the ultimate symbol of discipline. The narrative is that cold exposure significantly boosts metabolism and burns fat through the activation of brown fat. While cold plunges do cause a temporary spike in metabolic rate and can help with acute muscle inflammation, the actual calorie burn is negligible for long term weight loss. Most of the benefit is psychological—you are proving to yourself that you can do something difficult—rather than a physical shortcut to a six pack.
The Seed Oil Disinformation
There is a massive movement claiming that seed oils like canola or soybean oil are the primary cause of almost every modern disease, from heart disease to acne. This narrative often calls them industrial slop. While these oils are often found in highly processed ultra palatable foods that are bad for you, the oils themselves have been shown in numerous high quality human trials to be neutral or even beneficial for heart health when they replace saturated fats. The villainization of the oil often confuses the ingredient with the junk food it happens to be in.
Optimization of Every Second
Modern productivity gurus push the narrative that if you aren’t tracking your sleep, your glucose, and your heart rate variability, you are failing to reach your potential. This creates a state of orthosomnia, where the stress of trying to get a perfect sleep score actually keeps you awake. The human body is remarkably resilient and adaptive; it does not require a dashboard of biometric data to function well. For most people, the obsession with the data causes more anxiety than the insights provide value.
Blue Light as a Sleep Killer
We are told that looking at a smartphone for five minutes at night will shut down our melatonin production and ruin our sleep architecture. This has led to a massive market for blue light blocking glasses. While light exposure does affect circadian rhythms, the amount of blue light coming from a phone screen is relatively small compared to the sun or even standard overhead office lighting. The real reason your phone keeps you awake is usually the stimulating content you are consuming, not the specific wavelength of the light.
The Masculinity Crisis and Testosterone Boosting Supplements
There is a prevailing narrative in the manosphere that male testosterone levels are in a freefall that can only be fixed by specific herbal stacks and lifestyle hacks like testicle tanning. While average testosterone levels have declined slightly over decades due to complex factors like obesity and sedentary lifestyles, most over the counter boosters have little to no clinical evidence of efficacy. They often provide a placebo effect of feeling more aggressive or driven without actually moving the needle on blood chemistry.
Microdosing as a Productivity Cheat Code
The story goes that taking a sub-perceptual amount of a psychedelic will make you a creative genius and a coding god without any of the risks of a full trip. It is framed as the ultimate professional edge. Recent large scale placebo controlled studies suggest that many of the benefits of microdosing are likely due to the expectation of the user. People feel more creative because they believe they have taken a creative enhancer, while the actual cognitive tests show minimal difference between the drug and a sugar pill.
The 5 AM Club for Everyone
Influencers often claim that the secret to the success of the elite is waking up before the sun. This narrative suggests that there is something inherently productive about the early morning hours. Biology, however, recognizes different chronotypes. For a natural night owl, forcing a 5 AM wake up call leads to chronic sleep deprivation and decreased cognitive function. Success is more about consistency and sleep quality than the specific number on the clock when you open your eyes.
Gut Health and the Universal Probiotic
The narrative that every health woe can be solved by a specific probiotic pill or a bottle of kombucha has turned gut health into a multibillion dollar industry. While the microbiome is incredibly important, the science is still in its infancy. Most off the shelf probiotics don’t actually colonize the gut; they just pass through. The idea that we have a one size fits all solution for the microbiome is a massive oversimplification of a system that is as unique to you as your fingerprint.
Here are ten wisdom claims that are popular but dodgy.
The Universal Efficacy of Stoicism
Stoicism has undergone a massive rebranding as a life hack for high performers. The narrative suggests that if you can simply master your internal reaction to external events, you become invincible. For some, this provides a necessary sense of agency. For others, it leads to a dangerous suppression of valid emotions and a detachment from the very empathy that makes us human. By treating life as a series of obstacles to be endured with a stiff upper lip, people often bypass the processing of grief or injustice. It can be a wash because while it builds resilience, it can also build a wall between a person and their own emotional reality.
Follow Your Passion
This is perhaps the most common advice given to young people, suggesting that there is a pre existing spark inside you that will lead to a perfect career. In reality, passion is often the result of mastery rather than the cause of it. People who follow their passion without a plan often end up frustrated and broke. It is usually wiser to follow your contribution—finding what you are good at that the world actually needs—and letting the passion develop as you become more competent.
What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Stronger
This sentiment is often used to find meaning in trauma, but it is biologically and psychologically dubious. While some people experience post traumatic growth, many others experience post traumatic stress, which can lead to a lifetime of hypervigilance and health problems. Trauma often leaves people more fragile and less equipped to handle future stressors. Resilience is a complex trait influenced by support systems and genetics, not a guaranteed byproduct of suffering.
Forgiveness is for You Not the Other Person
We are told that holding onto anger is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die. This narrative puts the burden of emotional labor entirely on the victim. While letting go of rage can be healthy, forced forgiveness can be a form of self gaslighting. Some actions are truly unforgivable, and maintaining a healthy level of indignation can be a vital act of self respect and a protective boundary against further harm.
You Can’t Love Someone Else Until You Love Yourself
This sounds deep and wise, but it is a lonely and often false premise. Many people who struggle with self esteem or mental health are capable of profound, selfless love for others. In fact, it is often through the experience of being loved by someone else that we learn how to value ourselves. Suggesting that self love is a prerequisite for relationship success creates an unnecessary barrier for people who are already feeling vulnerable.
Everything Happens for a Reason
This is a teleological narrative designed to soothe the pain of the inexplicable. It suggests a grand architect or a karmic balance that justifies every tragedy. While it can help people find a narrative arc in their lives, it is fundamentally bogus when applied to the random cruelty of the world. It often serves to silence the sufferer and dismiss the chaos of reality, making it a form of toxic positivity that prevents genuine mourning.
Live Every Day Like It’s Your Last
As a piece of advice, this is functionally impossible and would lead to total societal collapse within forty eight hours. If today were truly your last, you wouldn’t go to work, pay your bills, or visit the dentist. Human life requires a balance between immediate presence and long term planning. True wisdom lies in the tension between the two, not in the abandonment of the future for a hedonistic or desperate present.
The Truth Will Set You Free
This assumes that the truth is always a liberating force and that everyone is prepared to handle it. In many social and political contexts, the truth is heavy, dangerous, and can lead to isolation or ruin. While honesty is a virtue, the narrative that uncovering the truth always leads to a better state of being ignores the utility of certain social fictions and the sheer weight of some realizations.
Trust Your Gut
We are told that our intuition is a mystical, infallible guide that bypasses the limitations of logic. In reality, your gut is often just a bundle of biases, past traumas, and biological impulses. If you have a history of bad relationships, your gut might lead you toward familiar toxicity because it feels like home. Intuition is only reliable in domains where you have significant, high quality experience; otherwise, it is just a guess with a lot of confidence behind it.
Hard Work Always Pays Off
This is the cornerstone of the meritocratic narrative. It suggests a linear relationship between effort and reward. While hard work is usually necessary, it is rarely sufficient. Success is a cocktail of effort, timing, geography, social capital, and raw luck. Perpetuating the idea that work always pays off leads to the conclusion that those who haven’t succeeded simply weren’t working hard enough, which is a convenient way to ignore systemic issues.
Here are the top ten claims of psychology that are more bogus than true.
The Stanford Prison Experiment
Perhaps the most famous study in history, this narrative suggests that humans have an innate, dormant cruelty that will inevitably emerge if they are given power over others. Philip Zimbardo claimed that participants naturally devolved into sadistic guards and submissive prisoners. However, archival footage and interviews revealed that the guards were actively coached by the researchers to act cruelly to ensure the experiment yielded dramatic results. It was less a study on human nature and more a piece of theater directed by the experimenters.
The Power Pose
A massive viral sensation, this claim suggested that holding an expansive, high power physical stance for just two minutes could change your hormone levels and increase your risk tolerance. It promised a biological shortcut to confidence. When other researchers tried to replicate the study with larger groups, they found that while people might feel a bit more confident, there was no measurable change in testosterone or cortisol. The biological claim was entirely bogus, even if the placebo of feeling tall remains.
Ego Depletion
For years, psychology taught that willpower is a finite resource, like a battery that gets drained throughout the day. This narrative suggested that if you spend all day resisting cookies at work, you won’t have the willpower left to go to the gym at night. Massive multi lab replication efforts have failed to find a consistent effect of ego depletion. Willpower seems to be much more about your beliefs, your motivation, and your environment than a chemical fuel that runs out.
The Implicit Association Test (IAT)
This test is widely used in corporate diversity training to measure hidden biases. The narrative is that the test can predict how an individual will actually behave in real world situations based on how quickly they associate certain groups with positive or negative words. However, the test has very low test-retest reliability, meaning you can get different results on different days. More importantly, there is a very weak correlation between a person’s IAT score and their actual discriminatory behavior. It measures a cognitive association, not a personality trait or a behavioral certainty.
Growth Mindset as a Universal Fix
The idea that praising effort rather than intelligence can transform academic performance has become a multi million dollar industry in education. While the core concept has merit, the actual impact of growth mindset interventions on student achievement is remarkably small when studied at scale. The narrative often places the burden of success entirely on the student’s attitude, ignoring the massive roles of socioeconomic status, school funding, and teacher quality. It is a useful tool, but not the academic silver bullet it is marketed to be.
Priming and the Florida Effect
A famous study claimed that if you were given a word search containing words related to the elderly—like Florida, grey, or wrinkle—you would unconsciously start walking slower when you left the room. This narrative suggested that our behavior is constantly being steered by subtle environmental cues. This specific effect, and many other social priming studies, have famously failed to replicate. Human behavior is generally more robust and conscious than these studies implied.
Learning Styles
The claim that people are either visual, auditory, or kinesthetic learners is perhaps the most persistent myth in the classroom. Teachers spend countless hours trying to tailor lessons to these specific styles. Research has shown that there is no evidence that students learn better when the material is presented in their preferred style. Most people learn best when information is presented in multiple ways, and the best medium usually depends on the subject matter itself rather than the individual.
The Marshmallow Test and Success
The narrative of the 1960s marshmallow test was that a child’s ability to delay gratification for a few minutes could predict their SAT scores, health outcomes, and career success decades later. It turned self control into a destiny. Later analysis showed that the child’s ability to wait was largely a reflection of their household wealth and stability. If you grow up in an environment where resources are scarce or promises are often broken, the rational choice is to eat the marshmallow immediately. The test measured the child’s background more than their innate character.
Smiling Makes You Happy (The Facial Feedback Hypothesis)
This claim suggests that the simple physical act of forcing a smile can trick your brain into feeling genuine joy. A famous study involving people holding a pen between their teeth to force a smile seemed to confirm this. However, a massive 2016 replication involving seventeen different labs found no such effect. While your physical state can influence your mood, the idea that you can smile your way out of a bad mood through a mechanical hack is largely a myth.
The Left Brain vs. Right Brain Personality
We are told that people are either logical and analytical left brainers or creative and intuitive right brainers. This has become a popular way to categorize colleagues and partners. In reality, unless you have had surgery to sever the corpus callosum, the two halves of your brain are in constant, lightning fast communication. Almost every complex task, from solving a math problem to painting a picture, requires the integrated work of both hemispheres.
In the realm of elite Mainstream Media (MSM), the pressure to maintain a cohesive editorial “consensus” often leads to narratives that prioritize narrative consistency over messy, evolving facts. These stories are typically more compelling than true because they rely on framing complex systemic issues as morality plays with clear heroes and villains.
The Hunter Biden Laptop as Russian Disinformation
In the weeks leading up to the 2020 election, dozens of former intelligence officials and major news outlets characterized the emergence of Hunter Biden’s laptop as having all the “classic earmarks” of a Russian information operation. Social media platforms suppressed the story based on this framing. Years later, major outlets like the New York Times and Washington Post quietly authenticated the emails. The narrative was a successful attempt to use authority to discredit a politically inconvenient truth by labeling it foreign interference.
The Lab Leak Theory as a Conspiracy
For the first year of the pandemic, elite media outlets almost universally dismissed the possibility that COVID-19 could have originated from a laboratory accident in Wuhan, labeling the idea a “debunked conspiracy theory” or even “racist.” Reporters who suggested otherwise were often marginalized. Later, high-level government agencies like the FBI and the Department of Energy shifted to the view that a lab leak was a plausible, if not likely, scenario. This was a case where the media prioritized political signaling over open scientific inquiry.
The Border Agents “Whipping” Migrants
A viral photograph of Border Patrol agents on horseback in Del Rio, Texas, led to a widespread MSM narrative that agents were using whips on Haitian migrants. President Biden and major anchors condemned the “outrageous” behavior. However, the photographer who took the pictures and multiple subsequent investigations confirmed that the agents were using long reins to control their horses, not whips. The narrative persisted in the public consciousness long after the factual correction proved it bogus.
The “Don’t Say Gay” Bill
The Florida Parental Rights in Education Act was famously branded by major media outlets as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. This narrative suggested the law banned the word “gay” in schools or forbade students from discussing their families. In reality, the text of the bill focused on prohibiting formal classroom instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity for children in kindergarten through third grade. The media’s choice to use an activist-coined nickname over the actual legislative text was a move toward narrative framing over neutral reporting.
The Covington Catholic “Mockery”
In 2019, a short video clip of a high school student in a MAGA hat standing in front of a Native American elder went viral. Elite outlets pushed a narrative of a privileged, aggressive teen mocking a veteran. When the full, unedited video emerged, it showed the students were actually being harassed by a third group and that the elder had approached the student, who stood still in an attempt to de-escalate. The initial narrative was a rush to judgment that fit a specific cultural archetype but ignored the actual sequence of events.
The Russia-Trump Collusion “Smoking Gun”
For several years, major cable news networks and newspapers suggested that a “smoking gun” or “direct evidence” of a criminal conspiracy between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin was just around the corner. The Steele Dossier was treated as a credible intelligence document rather than the opposition research it was. The Mueller Report eventually concluded there was no evidence of a criminal conspiracy, leaving years of breathless “breaking news” segments looking more like wishful thinking than investigative journalism.
The Jussie Smollett “Hate Crime”
When actor Jussie Smollett claimed he was attacked in Chicago by men shouting “MAGA country,” major media figures and politicians immediately accepted the story as an indictment of the American climate. News anchors presented the details with very little skepticism despite several logistical red flags in the account. When the investigation revealed Smollett had staged the attack himself with two acquaintances, the narrative collapsed, proving that the media’s desire for a symbolic story often overrides its duty to verify.
The “Transitionary” Inflation Narrative
Throughout 2021, elite financial and political media pushed the narrative that rising prices were “transitory” and merely a result of post-pandemic supply chain hiccups. This narrative was used to dismiss concerns about massive government spending and loose monetary policy. When inflation reached forty-year highs and remained sticky for years, the “transitory” claim was exposed as a piece of political PR rather than an accurate economic forecast.
The Duke Lacrosse Rape Case
In one of the earliest modern examples of this phenomenon, elite media outlets latched onto a narrative of wealthy white athletes raping a Black woman. The story was used to critique race, class, and gender dynamics at elite universities. However, the lead prosecutor was eventually disbarred for withholding evidence, and the players were declared “innocent” by the state Attorney General. The narrative was so “too good to check” for the media that they ignored the total lack of physical evidence.
The “Unvaccinated” Hospital Overload
During the height of the Omicron wave, several major outlets published stories claiming that hospitals were so overwhelmed by the “unvaccinated” that people with other emergencies were being turned away or dying in hallways. While hospitals were certainly strained, many of the most dramatic stories—such as a viral report of gunshot victims waiting behind COVID patients in Oklahoma—were later found to be based on a single, unverified source and were retracted or heavily caveated. The narrative was designed to create a moral hierarchy of patients rather than accurately describe hospital capacity.
The blind spots of elite Mainstream Media (MSM) are often the result of a profound lack of socioeconomic and geographical diversity within newsrooms. When a majority of journalists are concentrated in a few coastal hubs and share similar educational backgrounds, they tend to develop a collective intuition that is more reflective of their social circle than the broader population. These blind spots lead to a persistent inability to anticipate or accurately interpret cultural and political shifts.
The Working Class and Rural Experience
One of the most significant blind spots is a failure to understand the complexities of life in rural and working class communities. Reporters from elite backgrounds often view these areas through a lens of “place stigma,” reducing millions of people to flat stereotypes of resentment or ignorance. This leads to a shock when these regions act as decisive forces in elections or social movements, as the media has spent years ignoring the erosion of local institutions like hospitals and schools that define daily life there.
The Reality of Social Class
Journalists at national outlets come disproportionately from affluent families and top tier universities, creating a massive class blind spot. This shared socioeconomic background leads to a cultural outlook that prioritizes the concerns of the professional managerial class over those of the laboring class. Issues like the dignity of trade work or the impact of credentialism are often ignored because they do not resonate with the personal experiences of the people writing the news.
Different Groups Have Different Gifts
While the media covers poverty in bursts, it often misses the long term, generational decay in regions like the Southern Black Belt or tribal lands. The focus tends to be on urban poverty, which is more visible to coastal journalists, while the “miasma of hopelessness” in declining rural counties remains largely off the radar. This geographical bias means that the systemic drivers of rural health inequalities and “deaths of despair” are rarely given the sustained attention they require. What gets even less attention is that different groups evolved under different circumstances creating differing predispositions.
The Complexity of Populist Worldviews
Elite media often frames populism as a purely negative force or a psychological aberration rather than a reaction to perceived elite detachment. This binary framing of “good vs. evil” or “efficiency vs. inefficiency” prevents a deeper analysis of why people lose trust in institutions. By labeling dissent as merely “disinformation,” the media creates a blind spot regarding the legitimate grievances that drive anti establishment sentiment.
The Status Closure of the Newsroom
The consolidation of media ownership and the professionalization of journalism have created a form of status closure where only those with specific credentials and social capital can enter the field. This results in a homogenization of content where different outlets frequently quote each other and share the same editorial blind spots. This “echo chamber” effect makes it difficult for dissenting voices or unconventional perspectives to reach a mainstream audience.
The Limits of the Knowledge Economy
There is a prevailing narrative in elite circles that everyone should aspire to a college education and a white collar career. This “knowledge economy” bias leads to a dismissive attitude toward trade schools and vocational training. The media often ignores the fact that a significant portion of the population finds meaning and financial stability in jobs that do not require a liberal arts degree, leading to a disconnect between media narratives and the reality of the labor market.
The Blind Spot of Secularism
Newsrooms are significantly more secular than the general population, which often results in a poor understanding of how religious communities function and why they hold certain values. Religious motivations are often translated into political or economic terms, stripping them of their internal logic. This leads to reporting that feels alien or even hostile to people for whom faith is a primary driver of their identity and community life.
The Impact of Industrial Decline
While global trade and automation are discussed in abstract economic terms, the visceral experience of a community losing its primary industry is a frequent blind spot. The media often focuses on the “efficiency” of a globalized economy while missing the total destruction of social fabric that occurs when a factory or mine closes. This lack of empathy for the “losers” of globalization creates a vacuum that is often filled by more radical political narratives.
The Centrality of Coastal Concerns
The concentration of media in New York, D.C., and Los Angeles creates a geographical bias that treats the “center” of the country as a secondary concern. National news is often just “local news for the coast” that is projected onto the rest of the nation. This leads to an overemphasis on issues that matter to coastal elites—like specific urban zoning debates—while neglecting issues that are vital to the Midwest or the South.
The Trap of Narrative Consistency
Perhaps the most dangerous blind spot is the desire for narrative consistency over messy truth. Once a media consensus has been formed, it becomes very difficult to introduce evidence that contradicts it. This “epistemic bubble” means that reporters are often incentivized to find facts that fit the story they have already decided to tell, leading to a long term erosion of public trust when the reality finally breaks through.
