Factoid Spinning By Instant Experts

Factoid Spinning By Instant Experts

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The word, factoid, was coined by Norman Mailer in 1973. According to Wiki, its meaning has evolved over the decades and two distinct definitions have appeared in the dictionary:

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Definition of factoid

1: an invented fact believed to be true because it appears in print

2: a briefly stated and usually trivial fact

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Mailer was writing about Marilyn Monroe, perhaps the most iconic celebrity of all time who remains to this day at the center of the controversy over what sort of human beings were the Kennedy Brothers. Merriam Webster adds this bit of historical perspective to the term: “Mailer explains that factoids are ‘facts which have no existence before appearing in a magazine or newspaper, creations which are not so much lies as a product to manipulate emotion in the Silent Majority.’”

That term was coined by Richard Nixon to describe his constituency, people who did not protest anything because they were busy leading the contented lives of free American citizens. Mailer contended that such people were conned by manufactured emotional cues embedded in “news” accounts to support disastrous policies like the Vietnam War.

The subtle distinction between a “lie” and a “product” is vital to understanding mass communications and power today in the Digital Era. A manufactured factoid is of course a lie, but it is far more than a lie and it has a much more ambitious purpose than a mere lie — which is simply an intentionally false assertion of “fact.” As Mailer grasped, and we see much more clearly now on the internet, manipulating emotion has almost nothing to do with facts or reality. It is infinitely more powerful than a simple lie, which can be countered. A factoid cannot be “disproved” if it seems true and if the assertion is trivial enough.

The most important aspect of both definitions of factoid is the triviality of the “fact” in question.

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My first experience with internet factoid spinning came in 2004 with the controversy surrounding Dan Rather and a 60 Minutes report about George W. Bush’s military record. Instead of going to Vietnam, the son of the ex-director of the CIA served in the Texas Air National Guard. Rather alleged that Bush did not live up to his National Guard contract and was, in effect, AWOL for much of his time in service.

One aspect of the evidence was a memo allegedly written by his squadron commander, named Killian.

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The “Killian documents” were initially claimed by CBS to have come from the “personal files” of the late Lt. Col. Jerry B. Killian, Bush’s squadron commander during Bush’s Air National Guard service.[50] They describe preferential treatment during Bush’s service, including pressure on Killian to “sugar coat” an annual officer rating report for the then 1st Lt. Bush. CBS aired the story on September 8, 2004, amid more releases of Bush’s official records by the Department of Defense, including one just the day before as the result of a FOIA lawsuit by the Associated Press.[51]

The Killian documents are widely considered to be fake. Starting with a Free Republic web posting by Harry MacDougald, a conservative Republican lawyer posting under the blogger name, “Buckhead.” MacDougald and multiple fellow bloggers claimed that the formatting shown in the documents used proportional fonts that did not come into common use until the mid-to-late 1990s and alleged that the documents were therefore likely forgeries. [52][53] While the widely publicized rationale of “Buckhead” was technically inaccurate, both related and unrelated serious challenges to the authenticity of the documents nonetheless exist. For instance, it is unlikely that the typewriters available to Killian’s secretary could have produced such a document, and the documents contained U.S. Army, rather than U.S. Air Force, jargon.[54][55][56][57][58]

The forgery allegations subsequently came to the attention of the mainstream media, especially after experts also questioned the documents’ authenticity and lack of a chain of custody.[59][60][61] The original documents have never been submitted for authentication. The man who delivered the copies, Lt. Col. Bill Burkett, a former officer in the Texas Army National Guard and outspoken Bush critic, claimed that he burned the originals. Burkett admitted lying to CBS and USA Today about where he had obtained the papers and eventually expressed doubts of his own about their authenticity.[62]

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Some Freeper calling himself Buckhead somehow wigged out that forensic factoid about electric typewriter fonts, and, as if by magic, every wingnut on the internet began a sustained campaign of invective against the fraudulent memo produced by Liberal Dan Rather on the Liberal CBS television network. The themes evoked by Rather and his opponents were very heavy. On one side of the dispute, this raised the question of rich sons from powerful families and how they avoided the draft. It also raised the issue of Shrub’s character — which had been celebrated after September 11 as greatness personified. On the other side, Bush supporters viewed the alleged forged document as proof of the fundamental dishonesty of Rather and “the media.”

What united both sides in this weird affair was a partisan resort to factoid spinning. Fierce arguments raged across message boards and comment threads all over the internet. What kind of fonts were available three decades earlier? Wingnuts blanketed the internet with documentation of the Font Question.

The fate of the Bush Presidency turned on this incredibly trivial detail. I argued at the time as did many other Rather defenders that there was plenty of other evidence to support the claim of special treatment for Dubya, but the onslaught of indignant wingnut whinging was relentless. Rather left CBS in a state of semi-disgrace and semi-heroism, all because of a font.

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Sixteen years later, we see furious debates over factoids. They come from all points on the political compass and they are always disputed by the opposite political orientation. As of this summer, the two biggest issues to hit our country in decades are disrupting everything – the pandemic and the various demonstrations that keep raging as millions of people are out of work and have nothing better to do than raise hell about how full of shit our society remains.

Invariably these factoid arguments are snarky and insulting, filled with demands to “document” assertions — even as the topic at hand is often the unreliability of “documentation” as Rather found out the hard way. Everything about the public health crisis is subject to intense internet debate from Instant Experts who know precisely what has been done wrong in the struggle against a plague.

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1. The disease – where did it come from? Nobody really knows, but there are lots of theories, often expounded as fact.

2. The disease – is it just one thing? I have seen assertions that it is five distinct things.

3. Testing – is there one or many different tests? How does a test work?

4. Testing – are the tests accurate? Are there false positives or negatives reported?

5. Cases – what does that mean? Hospitalization, non-life threatening complaints treated at the patient’s home? Any positive test?

6. Cases – how are those “cases” reported and to whom?

7. Cases -- should all those subcategories be lumped together?

8. Treatment – are there any effective treatments of infected patients? What are they? How are successful therapies communicated to other health care providers?

9. Herd Immunity – what is it?

10. Individual immunity – can one catch the disease twice? Or can you catch each of five varieties?

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I have a Bachelors degree and I graduated from the University of Texas School of Law. I have been a politics junky my whole life and I am the obnoxious kind of guy who shouts out the correct answers while watching Jeopardy. I confess I never gave any one of those questions a second of thought before March 11, 2020 when the National Basketball Association decided to shut down.

Yet I am surrounded on the internet by hundreds and hundreds of epidemiology experts who know all the numbers, what they mean, which numbers are reliable and which ones aren’t. Threads on this board run to dozens of Comments, furiously debating the direction in which numbers are “moving.” (Talk about reifying a metaphor!)

Totally separate from the substance of the Pandemic Debates, ever since Buckhead set the internet on fire with his typeface factoid, I have been suspicious of such Instant Expertise Of The Moment. We live in the Era of Fake News and Brockian Sock Puppets.

On the other hand, on this board and others I have seen a few superb yet modestly argued discussions of the various problems we are facing. Such pieces acknowledge that this is a novel phenomenon. There is no “scientific” answer to the challenge it poses because real science is struggling with it. Amid the flotsam and jetsam of “data” collected in unverifiable ways, such articles try to illuminate rather than condemn the allegedly ignorant or malevolent characters who do not support the favored way to fight the disease.

What distinguishes Buckhead and other programmed internet manipulators is that their factoids are tools as they employ lawyer’s logic. You start with the conclusion and then you assemble what facts and factoids you can muster in support of that conclusion and then you go to digital war – mainly accusing everybody who contradicts the agenda you are pushing of being liars, immoral, fascistic, murderous, heartless and otherwise contemptable.

It seems to me that factoids are such a popular internet topic of discussion because they absolve us all of debating the underlying issues with each other. Since we are all novices with respect to the novel disease tormenting us now, we really don't have much of anything intelligent to say to one another. Instead we can wax indignant about how “brainwashed” our opponents are, without ever having to make a coherent political argument.

There is no democracy or transparency in making the decisions that rule our lives now. It is all presented to us for our cheerleading or booing pleasure, with us having nothing whatsoever to do with whether we shut down or open up or anywhere in between. Just like the perpetual wars all over the world, we are told what to think about those decisions, but we have no say -- direct or indirect -- on anything.

How convenient for the existing decision makers that we spend our energy arguing with each other about utterly non-political questions like how do we calculate the number of people infected. Just like the typeface that kept Bush in office, this organized factoid spinning suggests to me that "numbers" are going to be the cause of Trump's defenestration. Good riddance to bad rubbish -- which is exactly what the donor class wants us to think.

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I don’t care if factoid spinning is pro or con, left or right, religious or atheistic, carnivore or vegetarian. I get the feeling of wanting to counter bogus factoids — I did it myself in the Rather Case. But it is yet another example of the incomprehensible shallowness of our political culture.

And, it is a sure tell of a troll. Anybody who posts mainly factoid spin is definitely a troll, probably paid by David Brock.

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Anja Geitz's picture

There is no democracy or transparency in making the decisions that rule our lives now.

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

@Anja Geitz A good argument for eschewing "democracy" in the face of the pandemic is by analogy to war. You really can't have the public making uninformed decisions about when and where to stage D-Day or how long to keep bombing Hanoi. Hell, my essay argues that we don't know shit about how to fight the virus.

Yet people still invest a significant amount of energy into "proving" all manner of conclusions about how Trump or Cuomo have handled the crisis. Almost all of this is Factoid Spinning.

In a larger sense your very good question has an answer. Whereas "democracy" has no role in the daily operations of government in our supposed democracy, among the culture of politicians, top bureaucrats and big money political donors, there used to be a lot more fear of going "too far" than you see today. The Eisenhower Presidency would be my best example -- he was a Republican who accepted the premise of The New Deal. In a letter to his brother, he explained how the old time conservatism opposing social welfare programs was not tenable politically. Ike's stance was democratic with a small d, without necessarily following democratic procedures.

My point in this essay is to show how fraudulent is much of our political culture, especially the shuck and jive concerning the "movement" of "numbers."

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I cried when I wrote this song. Sue me if I play too long.

Anja Geitz's picture

@fire with fire

there used to be a lot more fear of going "too far" than you see today.

Part of me is tempted to compare the progression sociopaths take to the same ones used by heroin addicts, since for all intents and purposes we are being run by “heroin addicted” power hungry sociopaths. While the other part of me is very aware that they know they are going too far. Hence the progression in militarizing the police force, the subversion of habeas corpus, and turning over the entire electoral system to the authority of DHS.

Maybe we should stock up on strait jackets for our political leaders? Blue and red? Or at that point, does it even matter?

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

@fire with fire @fire with fire

my essay argues that we don't know shit about how to fight the virus.

Kind of a broad statement.

Not sure just who "we" is in this context - the frontline doctors giving this press conference don't sound inclined to include themselves - as they are strongly contending that both prophylaxis and cures exist for COVID-19.

This was concerning enough to our benevolent protectors at social media to disappear the content - not until it had gotten 17 million views on Facebook within 12 hours or so, though.

It's still up elsewhere, but the benevolent(?) C-99 system does not allow embedding videos
from Brighteon, it seems...

"The reason so many people misunderstand so many issues is not that these issues are so complex, but that people do not want a factual or analytical explanation that leaves them emotionally unsatisfied. They want villains to hate and heroes to cheer - and they don't want explanations that do not give them that."

~ Thomas Sowell

Update: so what do I find as the lead article on Zero Hedge?

Twitter Locks Trump Jr Account For Posting Press Conference By Pro-Hydroxychloroquine Doctors

Feel safer now?

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@Blue Republic When I said we don't know how to fight the virus I was referring to the "We" from "We the People." I was acknowledging a problem with my own argument about democracy and public health policy.

The management and suppression of "information" about the lockdown orders and other enforced limitations on liberty is an entirely separate question. We probably agree about there being a lot of obvious manipulation in the Alone Together Regime -- and that is a major tell that something extraordinarily ugly is going on.

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I cried when I wrote this song. Sue me if I play too long.

Anja Geitz's picture

@Blue Republic

Are a mix that sets off red flags for anyone sensitive to language. While the medication mentioned in the article may indeed have benefits, the hyperbolic message saturating the entire article undermines the credibility of the piece for anyone with a discerning mind.

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

Anja Geitz's picture

As of this summer, the two biggest issues to hit our country in decades are disrupting everything – the pandemic and the various demonstrations that keep raging as millions of people are out of work and have nothing better to do than raise hell about how full of shit our society remains.

Just a quibble but it caught my eye; the friends I know who live in Portland right now and are protesting against our corrupt political system do not consider their time spent protesting as “nothing better to do”.

Which then begs the question: what “better” thing might they be doing with their time?

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

@Anja Geitz I did hesitate about phrasing it that way, but I stuck with it -- not to denigrate anybody who is protesting how full of shit our country remains, but to put in perspective how the lockdown has collateral effects.

Back when there was such a thing as travel, I did a lot of business in Portland, OR. I know the community pretty well and I am impressed at the determination, depth and breadth of the street action going on there now. But I do not kid myself about how this played out in Portland and Seattle in prior years. Plenty of examples -- but nothing like this.

Not having to get up to go to work in the morning makes it a lot easier to raise hell.

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I cried when I wrote this song. Sue me if I play too long.

Anja Geitz's picture

@fire with fire

Not having to get up to go to work in the morning makes it a lot easier to raise hell.

Having no job or economic stability does make a lot of things easier. Losing weight and sleeping in the great outdoors is two of the benefits that I can think of, in addition to being afforded the opportunity of protesting against a system of greed and criminal negligence.

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

Lookout's picture

...is worthy of conversation. We are indeed caught in a vortex of spin.

It is my opinion that we have managed this pandemic for profit and have reaped the same rewards as you would expect from our for profit illness management system....lousy...world's worse in fact.

COVID is the number one item on people's minds based on most polls. So I don't mind the conversation nor debate. I do mind personal attacks and insinuation which this topic has elicited on occasion. Let's keep the discussion on the validity of the data and not the person. Just my two cents... speaking to us all.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Mailer was writing about Marilyn Monroe, perhaps the most iconic celebrity of all time who remains to this day at the center of the controversy over what sort of human beings were the Kennedy Brothers.

I've never read Mailer on Monroe (any of the 3 books he wrote, 2 from his own imagination), but I wonder if you are using some of Mailer's "factoids" (in the fictitious sense) for your above statement. Just the simple wiki entry on Mailer and Monroe gives an insight into what kind of human being Mailer was:

Critical reception was mixed. While the photographs were praised, critics gave Mailer's text a critical drubbing, particularly his then-novel assertion that government agents murdered Monroe, an assertion that later became a staple of many subsequent Monroe biographies[citation needed].

In a 60 Minutes interview broadcast on 13 July 1973, Mailer asked his interlocutor Mike Wallace if he gave his thesis about Monroe's "murder" any credence. Wallace said he did not. Mailer admitted to Wallace that he wrote the book for money and that the Kennedy murder scenario made the book more salable.

Mailer probably owed a lot in alimony and also back taxes in 1973. My speculation -- not asserted as a fact or factoid.

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@wokkamile @wokkamile @wokkamile Mailer was a jerk in a hundred different ways. His novels are pretty much forgotten and I have not the slightest doubt that his crimes against what today we call Wokeness have banished him from serous consideration in 21st Century English Departments.

All that said, Factoid was an excellent coinage. I offer it on its own terms.

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I cried when I wrote this song. Sue me if I play too long.

edg's picture

I spent the early years of my career working on computers and computer printers. Daisy wheel printers were invented in 1970 and commercially available from 1972 on. An early example was the Diablo printer from DEC. From WikiPedia: "The Diablo 630 could produce letter quality output as good as that produced by an IBM Selectric or Selectric-based printer, but at lower cost and double the speed. A further advantage was that it supported the entire ASCII printing character set. Its servo-controlled carriage also permitted the use of proportional spaced fonts, where characters occupy a different amount of horizontal space according to their width."

I repaired Diablo and similar printers from other companies from the mid-70s thru early 80s. The Air Force had a long association with DEC and used PDP-11 minicomputers and Diablo printers in the 1970s, although I doubt Bush's unit did.

The secretary at the time said she didn't type them on her IBM Selectric, which wasn't proportional. The memos themselves don't have the typical convention when typing for someone else -- smallcase initials near the signature line. The memos are likely fake but
anybody that claimed proportional fonts and Times Roman typeface weren't available until the 1990s was lying.

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TheOtherMaven's picture

@edg

maybe "true in essence", perhaps even verbatim from the originals. But without a clear chain of possession, there's no way to tell them from outright fakes. (I have very little doubt that Shrub was the goldbrickiest goldbrick in the history of the Texas Air National Guard, and probably got away with all kinds of crap because of who his daddy was.)

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.