An alien landed near me over the weekend. He came out of his flying saucer and had a friendly conversation with me. Since the Weekly World News isn’t printed anymore, I’ll share this momentous news with you on social media.
See the picture? That’s proof enough for anyone — especially if you want to believe.
Unless you’re a very naive small child or have some serious brain damage, you know that I’m not telling the truth. You know it’s a joke or an April Fool’s gag. Or maybe it’s satire. You know that because you apply critical thinking skills. You ask yourself whether it’s more likely this is true or not.
But even though almost everyone would know this claim isn’t true, it’s also true that many people — maybe most people — uncritically accept equally bogus claims on social media.
It happens every single day. And if the idiotic social media post is making a point that supports whatever you already believe, many people — maybe even you — will eagerly share that nonsensical post.
Even if you have the best of intentions, sharing such nonsense — without reasonable and rational evidence — makes you part of someone else’s monumental lie. And the lies are getting bigger and bigger, to the point that scanning a social media feed is now a bit like reading the headlines on the covers of the dumbest old supermarket tabloids.
Are you doing that?

Painful longing is too powerful to express heart’s anguish in words
How would we see the gang war in Texas if the faces had been black?
Our methods of selling politicians seem designed for mental defectives
Donald Trump is an evil man, but his political enemies are evil, too
Change sometimes happens slowly, not in the grand leap that we want
Insanity is part of being human – and we’re all potentially unstable
Without real human connection, we’re just living in a simulation