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Doctors Are Tweeting About Coronavirus To Make Facts Go Viral (wsj.com) 98

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Wall Street Journal: Bob Wachter, the chairman of the department of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, has had a front-row seat to the coronavirus pandemic. Dr. Wachter's job, at least in part, is to keep the department's 3,000 or so faculty, trainees and staff current on developments in research, education and clinical care. But most days he sets aside at least two hours to keep another group informed: his Twitter followers. Dr. Wachter, 62 years old, is part of a growing group of scientists and public-health officials who are increasingly active and drawing large audiences on social media. They say they feel a moral obligation to provide credible information online and steer the conversation away from dubious claims, such as those in "Plandemic," a video espousing Covid-19 conspiracy theories that drew millions of views last week. [...]

Dr. Wachter typically writes his tweets in threads, long strings of posts on a single topic or idea; on Wednesday, he posted about masks. [...] To compose his tweets, Dr. Wachter keeps a document open throughout the day, where he drops in material he believes could be relevant to his followers. He starts writing posts between 4 and 6 p.m.; his wife, a journalist, often proofreads them, he says. His tweets post between 7 and 8 p.m.
The doctors feel like they "have an obligation to put out information that is as correct as it can be," says Dr. Wachter. This is important during amidst a pandemic, especially after a new paper in the journal Nature this week found that antivaccination views are drowning out the more mainstream voices online, "partly due to the ways antivaccination advocates interact with some users of social media platforms," reports the WSJ.

"As a result, researchers predict, antivaccination views 'will dominate in a decade.'"
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Doctors Are Tweeting About Coronavirus To Make Facts Go Viral

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  • Make a video and use the proper inflammatory promotion it takes to get it banned on Facebook and YouTube. Nobody will realize it contains facts they have already downloaded it from the "above top secret" torrent and leaks sites you steered them to.

  • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Friday May 15, 2020 @07:49PM (#60065970) Journal

    If you want people to believe the truth, you have to explain it to them. If you want people to believe in science, scientists, or at lest science popularizers, must explain it to the masses. This should be quite obvious, but in the current political climate "love of science" has become tribal signalling (OTOH, distrust of science has been tribal signalling for quite some time). In the "cancel culture", a vocal group of people don't want to see scientific truth debated or explained, because they think deplatforming the opposition is more important than convincing people of the truth.

    It's not.

    So, if you want the voters to vote as if evolution was true, and we damn well do, you must explain it to them, without being insulting or dismissive of counter-arguments, or talking down to people. If you say "if you don't believe in evolution you're just a big dummy" you will not convince anyone. If you deplatform religious views to the contrary, you will only strengthen those views among rebellious teens, and then it's very hard to get those people to see the truth as adults. The same goes for climate change. The same goes for vaccination.

    You can't just say "science says so, so shut up". Well, you can if you only want to feel good about yourself, and accomplish tribal signalling, but you can't if you want to persuade people. And since this is a democracy, you should want to persuade people. Back before cancel culture, all of this was obvious, and the wonderful folks on the talk.origins newsgroup made a heroic effort when it comes to evolution. All the common counter-arguments to evolution were taken seriously, and the flaws explained in details, with examples. You can still find much of this online. [talkorigins.org] This is the way. This is the right model.

    At least for flat earthers, there are people doing the right sorts of things: engage, and explain the truth. Heck, the just-released SpaceX Docing Simulator has a flat earth mode. Of course, this is there largely because Elon likes to meme, but making a flat earther comfortable with ideas like orbital mechanics or even just "the ISS is real" is exactly the right approach. We need more of this sort of thing, and less abuse, if we don't want society as a whole to abandon faith in science.

    • All the common counter-arguments to evolution were taken seriously, and the flaws explained in details, with examples.

      Which in no way alters the fact that if evolution is false, you lose, and if evolution is true, you lose.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        How's that? I mean, if evolution is false that's basically in the realm of philosophical skepticism at this point, where we can neither trust or sense or our memories, so yeah, that would suck, but it doesn't suck more to persuade someone of it as all beliefs are unreliable. But I don't see the downside, if evolution is true, of persuading someone that evolution is true.

        • How's that? I mean, if evolution is false that's basically in the realm of philosophical skepticism at this point

          Well, no. You're just overevaluating the implications of your simple illogical non sequitur.

          "Evolution occurs" is fact and has great scientific predictive power. But that isn't sufficient for the actual purposes and motivation and hand, that is, above all else, maintaining the viability of atheism as the preferred personal bias.

          Therefore, the stance is non sequitured to "-only- evolution occurs", which is both unfalsifiable, and unsupported by the evidence. With respect to stepwise survivability of compl

          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            "Evolution occurs" is fact and has great scientific predictive power. But that isn't sufficient for the actual purposes and motivation and hand, that is, above all else, maintaining the viability of atheism as the preferred personal bias.

            But now you're back to mere tribal signalling. If the problem at hand is, say, understanding the spread of the Corona virus, or how to develop a useful vaccine, then understanding that viruses regularly demonstrate evolution is critical. So, sure, there are people only interested in the tribal signalling portion of the discussion but that's not the useful part of the discussion. What's more important is the practical problems we have to decide as a democracy how to face. Let people on both side have the

            • then understanding that viruses regularly demonstrate evolution is critical.

              I have made no claim otherwise, nor does my position limit that in any way. My view is a superset of yours, which includes such factors as having some rationale as to why we try to keep someone alive in the first place--which naturalistic evolution can't speak to, and has no "moral" element to be able to even theoretically speak to it.

              Religion is not any sort of useful collection of statements about how the world is.

              Well, no, it's the most universal collection, and absolutely useful collection, of statements about how the world is that exists. You cannot make any statements about "how t

              • by lgw ( 121541 )

                Well, no, it's the most universal collection, and absolutely useful collection, of statements about how the world is that exists.

                The stories in the Old Testament vary in how old they are, but probably average around 3000 years, as they weren't new when written down. So we're talking about a work meant to be understood by pre-technological people, possibly stone age. If God had wanted to teach them quantum mechanics and general relativity, presumably He could have, but instead the Book is an explanation of "how the world is" that fits that stone age or bronze age world view. It's not useful for understanding physics today.

                You cannot make any statements about "how to live in the world" without a justification on the basis of "how the world is",

                Well, I d

          • by jhdsl ( 74051 )

            A lot of strawmanning.
            Atheism is not a worldview. Atheism is not being convinced a god exists. It has nothing to do with evolution. The Catholic Church accepts evolution.

            • Atheism is a worldview. It "has to do with" evolution in that without it, that worldview is immediately invalidated. You have no other vaguely plausible causal explanation for human life.

              This is why, lie about it or not, you will always be compelled to defend evolution like a puppet on a string.

              And indeed, the Catholic Church does accept evolution. And that atheists will be destroyed, or, extincted, if you prefer.

              • by Megol ( 3135005 )

                One doesn't need to know how human (or any other) life came to be to not believe in something that's, even if it exists, is not distinguishable from a mere fantasy.
                But I took your bait hoping to make your meaningless existence a bit better.

                • is not distinguishable from a mere fantasy.

                  Must be nice, that whenever you don't know something, that means nobody else does either. Because of your global psychic powers to know what's in everyone else's life experience.

                  But no, Google "Lancet peer-reviewed NDE", "fine tuned universe", "statistical improbability of prophecy", "EAAN", "irreducible complexity directed evolution nobel prize" for starters, and you'll find extensive evidence clearly differentiating it from "mere fantasy". When you then directly lie about it, or goalpost shift to a "pro

    • If you really want to understand vaccines then there are lots of great resources to learn from. This one struck me as being particularly good https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] Dr Brianne Barker Drew University Biol 348 (Immunology) Lecture Vaccines. If you want a taster then this clip is included "History of Vaccine Preventable Diseases in the USA, 1912 to 2017" https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] Note that the lower scale of case counts rescales to a tiny fraction of the starting number of cases in 1912 over

    • If you want people to believe the truth, you have to explain it to them.

      since when does that work?

      If you say "if you don't believe in evolution you're just a big dummy" you will not convince anyone.

      If people don't accept evolution by now they are in fact big dummies and literally nothing will convince them.

      If you deplatform religious views to the contrary,

      Someone is taking away churches now?

      In the "cancel culture",

      "Cancel culture" is what pissy righwingers call it when uppity liberals (a) use their fr

    • "So, if you want the voters to vote as if evolution was true, and we damn well do, you must explain it to them, without being insulting or dismissive of counter-arguments"

      The problem is that many of those voters don't have the education to understand the facts, and their counter-arguments are consequently fucking stupid. The public education system has been perverted and compromised to produce low-information voters, and you can't talk to them like they're intelligent and educated. They might be the first o

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        The problem is that many of those voters don't have the education to understand the facts,

        See, you talking down about people, which is not helpful. You're being dismissive, which is not helpful.

        People consume inline educational content voraciously. Adult self-education is immensely popular. Provide the education needed to understand the facts. Simple as that. the tolk.origins guys did just that. It's called "respecting people who disagree with you".

        they actively resist efforts to educate them.

        Obviously if you're dismissive and insulting, people won't listen to you. Tribal signalling is the opposite of persuasion. By it's very natur

        • "People consume inline educational content voraciously."

          Which people? Certainly not the low-information voters. And even if they do, it's only the information that doesn't challenge their assumptions.

          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            Which people? Certainly not the low-information voters. And even if they do, it's only the information that doesn't challenge their assumptions.

            Again you're dismissive. Not caring about political bullshit is an advantage when it comes to learning physics or biology, because it doesn't fill your head with conservation bias. People who obsess over politics make themselves dumber every day.

            • "Again you're dismissive."

              Of senseless arguments? Absolutely.

              "People who obsess over politics make themselves dumber every day."

              Any time you have people with differing opinions you have politics. You can't hide from it.

              • by lgw ( 121541 )

                Differing opinions in science aren't resolved by politics. There's a better way.

                • If science made all the decisions it would be that simple. And maybe it should. But it doesn't.

                  Not everything boils down to science, either. There's judgement calls to be made. For example, is it best to extend life, or maximize quality?

                  • by lgw ( 121541 )

                    Judgement calls like that are obviously best left to the judgement of the person directly affected.

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Friday May 15, 2020 @08:30PM (#60066038)
    I like it. Take it further and play dirty. Major hospital systems and health insurance companies have extremely deep pockets. It wouldn't take much to hire a few grey-hat hackers to program a bunch of bots on all the social media platforms. Set them to promote factual information. Let the doctors draft it, but then, hire a few saliva-spraying white guys to angrily shout it into microphones. Make sure they look reeeaaallllllyyy blue collar. A flannel shirt would be good and it helps if they're fat and balding.

    If the hackers have to break a few TOSs along the way, so be it. I'm well past the point of caring about playing nice. Let's fight for the attention span of the people who listen to angry shouting white guys, and the ones who can't distinguish fact from fiction. There are lots of them, they get to vote just like the smart people, and it would help if we spoke to them in what amounts to their own language. It would be worth it. We can't stomp down all the misinformation on the internet. Dilute it with a flood of good information USING THE SAME TOOLS.

    Decades ago, this sort of info-spycraft would have been done by the FBI. Unfortunately, using that kind of thing for the common good requires competent leadership in the executive branch, At the moment, we're extremely short on that. Some other entity would have to do it. Any competent medical personnel feeling ambitious?
  • Everybody wants to be a hereoeo

  • They need to, and it's up to us to continue to spread the valid science instead of the utter trash and lies that the anti-vaccine lunatics continue to share.

    We *have* to keep fighting them.

    I am so sick of the anti-vaccine losers. That trash called "Plandemic" is going to pop up again when the full length version comes out. Problem is, that the antis now think there's some deep state agenda when a private services removes objectionable and potentially harmful content.

    Youtube has a lot of stuff that they stil

    • Youtube has a lot of stuff that they still need to remove, though. Start by getting rid of the 9/11 truther garbage, and any trace of Infowars.

      I know of a lot of people who used to watch Infowars, and every one of them has said they viewed it as fictional entertainment, not to be taken seriously. We also shouldn't forget that broadcast tv has produced and aired television shows about conspiracy theories [wikipedia.org]. I don't remember any push to censor them.

      The sad thing is, as much as I disagree with those who believe 9/11 conspiracies or who won't vaccinate themselves or their children, when people such as yourself advocate for the use of force to silence th

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday May 15, 2020 @10:49PM (#60066310)

    The problem is... facts are usually boring and often nuanced. Additionally, grasping the truth behind a fact often requires a fair bit of thinking.

    It’s much easier to just memorize a simple four-word slogan and attempt to apply it willy-nilly to everything.

  • Not taking a side here. But logically, wouldn't the anti-vaxers be by definition "main stream" if that is what most people believe? Maybe just a poor choice of words...
    • " logically, wouldn't the anti-vaxers be by definition "main stream" if that is what most people believe?"

      Yes, but they don't. Most people believe in the efficacy of vaccination. Most people know they don't know everything, and they have to trust people who know more than they do about certain subjects. It's like getting your car fixed. If you don't know which end of a wrench is which, you don't try to fix it yourself. You call a mechanic. It doesn't mean you don't know anything, it only means that you're n

  • Interesting how they make these death predictions, totally ignoring the fact that there are at least two effective treatments for Covid out there.

  • How does one tweet facts on a network designed for twats?

  • The vast majority of his tweets are the former not the latter. Also, "observational studies" beat your anecdotes about masks every day of the week. It's painful to look at. I often wonder how otherwise smart people can be so incredibly stupid.

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