When rumors take flight

’Political Rumors,’ a new book by MIT political scientist Adam Berin
’Political Rumors,’ a new book by MIT political scientist Adam Berinsky, examines how misinformation spreads in politics, and what we can do about it. Credits : Photo: Stuart Darsch
'Political Rumors,' a new book by MIT political scientist Adam Berinsky, examines how misinformation spreads in politics, and what we can do about it. Credits : Photo: Stuart Darsch Professor Adam Berinsky's new book examines the political misinformation that threatens the US system of government. Misinformation pervades U.S. politics. The outcome of the 2020 presidential election is perhaps the most pressing case in point. Every serious-minded academic and legal inquiry into the subject - including two cases that came before the U.S. Supreme Court - has rejected former President Donald Trump's assertion that he did not lose the election. Major media organizations now routinely label these statements "lies." Yet Trump's unfounded claims have gained wide traction among his followers. "The evidence against claims that the 2020 election was stolen is overwhelming and clear," writes MIT political scientist Adam Berinsky in a new book.
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