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Should we believe everything we read online? Guilty Until Proven Innocent?

 We live in a time when information is generated faster than we can digest it. A single tweet, unverified video, or provocative headline can travel the globe in seconds, influencing millions of minds before anyone bothers to ask a simple question: “Where’s the evidence?”

The digital space has subtly replaced evidence with narrative. But should we believe everything we read on the internet? The short answer is no.

The internet thrives on emotion, not accuracy. Algorithms are programmed to amplify content that evokes shock, anger, or moral outrage because outrage generates clicks. When emotion drives the news feed, facts become secondary. A well-crafted lie wrapped in passion will almost always trump a quiet, nuanced truth.

Think about how quickly online crowds gather to condemn a person, company, or political figure.

Imagine a viral post that reads, “Person X is corrupt and has ruined the lives of hundreds!” Within hours:

The headline gets thousands of shares. The comment sections fill with harsh judgments. The story becomes “common knowledge.”

Yet when you search for court documents, verified audit trails, or credible witness statements, there’s nothing. The accusation is based entirely on hearsay or an anonymous allegation. In the digital courtroom, someone often declares another guilty long before even a single fact comes to light. History and individual lives have been affected simply because a rumor was strong enough to ring true. 

Real-life examples that are the talk of today. For decades, fans have joked that FIFA is corrupt. 

Then came 2015. Federal prosecutors actually showed up with wiretaps, warrants, and damning evidence. It turned out that the “rumors” weren’t just true—they were actually underestimating how dire the situation was. Millions of dollars had been exchanged secretly. The bottom line? Sometimes when the internet screams that something is corrupt, it is—but without a solid paper trail and evidence, it’s just “tales.”


If you open social media about the Middle East crisis, you’ll see complex stories boiled down to 15-second clips and heated posts. People demand that you take sides immediately, but the backstory is almost always buried under propaganda.

If you were to rely solely on superficial online commentary, you might think that Hezbollah simply appeared out of thin air to wreak havoc. But history tells a much more concrete story. Hezbollah was formed in the early 1980s during the Lebanese Civil War, largely as a direct response to Israel’s 1982 invasion of southern Lebanon. It was backed by Iran to create an Islamic state and fight Israeli forces. Whether you see them as a military force, a political party, or a terrorist organization depends entirely on who you ask—and where you obtain your news.

The Word “Genocide” and the War in Gaza

Look at the ongoing war in Gaza. Online, you’ll find two very different worlds. One side uses terms like “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing” to describe the tragic deaths of thousands of Palestinian civilians and the destruction of infrastructure. The other side insists that the conflict is a legitimate war of self-defense against terrorism, blaming Hamas for the civilian casualties, which are caused by using people as human shields. Which side is right? The internet forces you to choose a side in 5 seconds. But real life requires considering international law, casualty reports, verified footage, and historical context. A viral post cannot summarize a tragedy of this magnitude.

Another headline you see every day on the internet is about how “China is stealing Western jobs” or “ruining Western economies.” Political leaders and commentators like to portray China as the sole villain behind the decline of Western manufacturing. Who moved the factories? It wasn’t China that invaded Western cities and stole machinery. It was Western corporations—seeking higher profit margins and lower labor costs. For decades, Western companies made billions by using cheap Chinese labor.

China didn’t just remain a silent labor force. It invested in its infrastructure, educated its population, built large tech giants (like Huawei, BYD, and TikTok—such companies are sanctioned, thereby making a self-condemnation that they are better than the West), and became a global economic superpower that now competes directly with the entire West. It had always been, but for the last 150 years after the Opium Wars, it had lagged behind. 

Why Internet History Is Distorted

Today, as Western economies face inflation or industrial decline, online discourse blames Chinese “economic aggression.” It’s a classic case of selective memory. The Internet pushes a narrative that makes people angry at an external rival, completely ignoring the fact of the greed of Western corporations and government decisions. Notice the common thread? Whether it’s about sports corruption, war in the Middle East, or the global economy, the Internet always tries to sell you a simplified story with a clear distinction between “good guy” and “bad guy.”

Real life doesn’t work like that. Behind every headline lies decades of history, corporate interests, and politically motivated redirection. Believing the first post you read isn’t just lazy—it leaves you completely open to manipulation. 

I can only add that social media algorithms are also to blame. They often prevent good and honest news from reaching more people. They intentionally silence certain news. I have no idea why. I guess lobbying and money are a factor for them.

                                                         

Author: Sezgin Ismailov

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