Opinion: Twitter and rumors and nonsense, oh my
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Somehow, the straightforward Los Angeles Times story about an increase in the number of magnitude 4-plus earthquakes in our neck of the woods this year got turned on its head and twisted into some nutty Twitter/Facebook rumor that seismologists were predicting a major quake, and that the Caltech campus was being evacuated
I burst out laughing when I heard about that evacuation bit on KPCC – and about how many people received messages about it, people across the country
Then I got mad at how gullible and credulous we are
And here I thought technology was supposed to make us smarter
Instead we are buying into any gossipy, snarky, stupefyingly half-baked notion that people wouldn’t believe if it came over the back fence but take it as gospel if it comes over the computer
This one had all the hallmarks of classic conspiracy thinking, with the usual dark, sinister trappings that get piled onto this nonsense:
That some powerful elite knows something you don’t, and doesn’t want you to know it
Check
That it’s got to be true because a friend of my cousin’s next-door neighbor swears he heard it from someone who knows someone who knows someone who was almost actually right there
Check
That if you actually try to find out whether it’s true, the Powerful Forces will deny it, which of course just proves that it really is true and it is a conspiracy, and that they’re in on it too
Check
Seriously, people
Like the truth that nobody -- not Caltech, nobody -- can reliably predict earthquakes
Part of this ever-expanding uber-conspiracy thinking is that news reporters are in on it too
Are you out of your ever-texting mind? If there were a hint that rumors like this Caltech prediction and evacuation were true, every reporter I know would be fighting and competing to get the story first
Conspiracy? What a joke
People love conspiracy theories in part because they make them feel like ‘insiders’ without the rigors of having to study or train or practice the disciplines that true experts have to work to acquire
And I suppose some people love these theories because they feel powerless in a complex society
Folks, it’s their job to listen to you and represent you, and they can’t do the latter unless you make the former happen by contacting them
Oh, I almost forgot – did you hear about that girl who had violin spiders nesting in her hair extensions? I swear it’s true – my uncle’s mechanic’s ex-wife heard it from the hairdresser who trained the woman who runs the salon that …
-- Patt Morrison