This is nothing new to anyone who has had even the remotest contact with the internet, but I'm moved this morning to proclaim just how much I loathe email forwards that supposedly contain outrageous or fascinating "facts". Almost invariably they're a mishmash of exaggerations, skewed statistics, or outright fabrications that have been circulating the internet for the past ten or fifteen years. The gall of these inflammatory lies is irritating... There is always a vague yet recognizable "source" named (CNBC, Oprah, or my personal favorite, "scientists") followed by some hokum editorial statement such as "You won't believe this but it's completely true!" Morons receive these emails and, lacking any natural defenses, quickly become infected, swelling with uninformed emotions until they burst and release duplicate copies of the virus to everyone in their address book, at which point the disease finds a few suckers more and circulates again. If you're unfortunate enough to be in the address books of more than one of the infected, you can have your inbox bombarded with the same ridiculousness two, three, four times a day. Perhaps even worse than the pseudoscience are the email forwards stuffed to capacity with hyper-religious content or patriotic sentiments so grossly intolerant and perverse they'd make Dubya blush (I've been involuntarily subjected to a number of email "stories" that end with a message which can be approximated as "learn how to speak English and love Jesus or else stay out of my country!").
Okay, that's my rant.
4 comments:
You are definitely on the same page as my husband. He researches all these crazy stories, though, and makes it his mission in life to re-educate the sender. It's very amusing.
I am with you on this. On the rare occassion that I do happen to open such an email, if it begins with "I better get this back" or ends with send it to 15 friends and your wish will come true, etc." I immediately delete it. Also, when it comes to those "facts" I've made a habbit of looking it up in snopes.com, then replying to the person who sent it, sometimes to everyone else he or she sent it to and correct them. In my mind I'm doing my part to stop all the nonesense.
Yeah, snopes.com is great. :)
I keep getting these emails that say "I have found out what women do when you leave them alone on the farm." All in the subject line. What utter nonsense...how do these disgusting sites get my name? I don't do Internet porn, and certainly none of that sort. Also, I grew up on a farm, and this is slander! :)
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