Vedantam's report loses credibility when he uses the controlled
demolition of WTC buildings as an example of a myth. What an
elaborate way to try to discredit the truth and advocate his own
myth! There is no finer example of an urban legend than the
official story of the 9-11 collapses.

+++++++++++++++++

This could also be entitled, "People believe what they want to
believe, 
despite evidence and argument to the contrary."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/03/A
R2007090300933_pf.html
 
" When University of Michigan social psychologist Norbert Schwarz
had 
volunteers read the CDC flier, however, he found that within 30
minutes, 
... people *misremembered* 28 percent of the false statements as
true. 
Three days later, they *misremembered* 40 percent of the myths as
factual.

* *  *

"Most troubling was that people of all ages now felt that the
source of 
their false beliefs was the respected CDC.

"The psychological insights yielded by the research, which has
been 
confirmed in a number of peer-reviewed laboratory experiments,
have 
broad implications for public policy. *The conventional response
to 
myths and urban legends is to counter bad information with
accurate 
information. But the new psychological studies show that denials
and 
clarifications, for all their intuitive appeal, can paradoxically

contribute to the resiliency of popular myths.*

**  *  **

"Research on the difficulty of debunking myths has not been
specifically 
tested on beliefs about [gun control].  But because the
experiments 
illuminate basic properties of the human mind, psychologists such
as 
Schwarz say the same phenomenon is probably implicated in the
spread and 
persistence of a variety of political and social myths.

"The research does not absolve those who are responsible for
promoting 
myths in the first place [such as Drs. Kellerman and Wintermuth].
What 
the psychological studies highlight, however, is the potential
paradox 
in trying to fight bad information with good information.


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