The author, Miles Mathis, argues that the mainstream media, exemplified by Microsoft Bing’s News homepage, is engaging in widespread “gaslighting” by presenting misleading or false information as fact. Mathis provides two primary examples. The first critiques an article labeling the 1985 film Fletch as one of the “Worst Films,” arguing it was a hit and critically acclaimed, suggesting the article is an attempt to distort reality. The second and more significant example focuses on a Popular Mechanics article, reporting on a Physical Review D publication, which claims wormholes are secretly altering our reality to explain the “vacuum catastrophe.” Mathis debunks this, highlighting the scientists’ admission of being “120 orders of magnitude wrong” for nearly a century and their unsubstantiated explanation involving microscopic wormholes and spacetime Orbeez. He criticizes the mathematical deception and the reliance on unproven concepts, especially after Roy Kerr admitted singularities, a basis for wormholes, don’t exist. Mathis asserts he has already solved these scientific problems but they are ignored to maintain funding. He also points to a NASA article on Mars life, noting that the “compelling evidence” is presented as merely a “possible indication” and links it to faked rover programs. Finally, he mentions a promoted video about “Alien Megastructures” that leads to a YouTube channel for scary videos, likening it to National Enquirer content. Mathis concludes that these news outlets are pushing inverted, false, and fear-inducing propaganda across all topics, contributing to what he calls “Operation Chaos.”
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