>1. State a scientific fact that is obviously false but believable enough to be spread by idiots on facebook >2. Put source which will be checked by all of the "smart people" >3. Source points to redpilled, real scientific information unrelated to fake scientific fact
In this case I link to CDC's murder rate per race per capita.
I'm a bit shit at making pictures, but figure the format is solid enough to run with.
>Did you know rattlesnakes not only give birth to live young, but they are birthed from the mouth? >Did you know that mosquito's account for nearly 5% of the worlds total living mass? >Did you know that algea grows in the cracks and scales of alligator skin to protect from harmful UV rays?
etc....
Gabriel Campbell
This has potential
Tyler Cook
Then each is linked to a separate topic regarding immigration, gun control, violent crime, IQ, etc..
Jacob Cooper
>attach scientific truth to scientific falsehoods, making us look like retards great idea OP
Isaac Stewart
Bump good
Christian Adams
Did you know?
>OPs mom's cunt is bigger than the sun
Levi Baker
Point is for them to be released in the wild and spread by apolitical idiots.
The people spreading them would look retarded, meanwhile the link to the information has gotten around a lot of social media filtration.
Think of this like the blacks can't read cursive meme's, but changed up a bit.
Jack Sanchez
Like the idea. It has to be something controversial, so that normies feel the need to refute the source. Maybe something conspiracy-related.
Caleb Butler
IMO it would probably be better if the initial image was leftist meme bullshit, and the source for it was what you described. For example, "A study by bagelstein and yarmulkberg found that humans have at lease 49 distinct genders, and that for some mammals that number can be as high as 97" and then the link is what you described.
I could see these as spins on the same bait and switch idea.
Shouldn't make it 100% obvious or everyone of them political in my opinion (though pretty much any "fact" would work).
Get some of them to travel (so need variety), then have the source discovery discussed in the comment sections on social media.
Jaxson Lopez
>Maybe something conspiracy-related.
No way, conspiracies get ignored as nonsense. It should be something that could have been based on real science.
Jaxson Rivera
Yeah I get what you mean. I was thinking something about "racists have been found to have a smaller brain on average" and then a link to twin studies comparing white and black IQ, but that might be too obvious.
Benjamin Lopez
Did you know that once the earth's magnetic poles switch, toilets will flush in opposite directions due to the magnetic field's influence on the Coriolis effect?
William Thomas
The idea was that they want to disprove the image. Could also be non-conspiracy-stuff.
I fear that leftists blindly accept everything that fits their worldview and nobody clicks the source.