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A simple historical fact explains why boomers are more likely to fall for misinformation

Not true for this Boomer but I have seen it in action.

A simple historical fact explains why boomers are more likely to fall for misinformation

There’s more to the generational divide than age.

A simple historical fact explains why boomers are more likely to fall for misinformation

“They never had to learn to fact check, thanks to the Mayflower and Fairness Doctrine. Not only did they not need to fact check news sources, they didn’t have to critically think about the information that was presented to them when it came from places of authority. This isn’t because they were blindly trusting. It’s because the information provided by news stations or radio broadcasts no matter how controversial were not allowed to contain any bias or misinformation. They could literally trust everything a newscaster said.

That type of fair and unbiased news reporting was the result of an FCC ruling called the Mayflower Decision (also known as the Mayflower Doctrine) that preceded the Fairness Doctrine. In 1938 a former Yankee’s employee Lawrence J. Flynn accused two radio stations of airing one-sided political views, editorials and attacks against politicians the owner of the network didn’t like.”

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Posted on: March 1, 2026, 6:43 am Category: Uncategorized

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