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Meant as a cautionary leftwing tale, Report from Iron Mountain had a real-world impact that is still bar out. And AI deepfakes promise to make the situation even worse. This is an amazing story — about the perils of amazing stories. To replace the effects, extreme measures would be required — eugenics, fake alien scares, pollution, gay games.
Even slavery. The report was so incendiary it had been suppressed, but one of the study group leaked it, determined that the public learn the truth. It caused a furore. The worried memos, demanding someone check if this document was real, went all the way up to President Johnson. It was the brainchild of leftwing satirists: Victor Navasky, editor of a magazine called Monoclehis colleagues, and a fellow satirist, Leonard Lewin, who wrote it with the help of luminaries like the famous economist and former US ambassador to India, JK Galbraith.
Their goal was to expose what they saw as the insanity driving the intervention in Vietnam, and snopes whole of the cold war. By presenting their fake report as a real leak, they aimed to make people ask if this insane document might be real — and what that said about the people running the US government.
The ‘Iron Mountain’ hoax: how anti-Vietnam war satire sparked today’s conspiracy theories
And it worked. To young Americans living under the shadow of conscription, Report seemed all too plausible. Once the hoax had its satirical impact, Lewin came clean. But his work was so convincing it began to take on a life of its own. In the late s, Report from Iron Mountain was discovered by the extreme right, which was convinced it was real.
R eport even spawned a secondary hoax: Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars. Cooper also included extracts from Report from Iron Mountain itself and, horrifyingly, another hoax: that snopes antisemitic forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. It could be used to explain everything from why wars end to the real reasons behind lockdown, from environmental regulations and terrorist attacks to the fiery end of a cult in Waco, Texas.
The reasoning at work here is revealing. Rather, it exposes the secret motives that caused that reality. The Observer gay now owned and operated by Tortoise Media. This article is more than 4 months old. View image in fullscreen. AI can change bar in conspiracy theories, study finds.
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