The Sisters Slavephrase "alternative facts" has lit up the internet since Kellyanne Conway infamously used it to describe the White House's version of Trump's sad inauguration crowd numbers.
While most people have read the phrase as synonymous with basic lies, it also has another meaning -- and a brilliant redirect to a Psychology Todaypage perfectly explains it.
If you visit alternativefacts.com, you'll be directed to an article on the site explaining the psychological phenomenon known as gaslighting.
"Gaslighting is a tactic of behavior in which a person or entity, in order to gain more power, makes a victim question their reality," psychology expert Stephanie Sarkis writes. "It is a common technique of abusers, dictators, narcissists, and cult leaders. It is done slowly, so the victim doesn't realize how much they've been brainwashed."
In early December, a Teen Vogue editorial dived into how that method of manipulation is being used by the Donald Trump administration. "At the hands of Trump, facts have become interchangeable with opinions, blinding us into arguing amongst ourselves, as our very reality is called into question," it said. The piece went viral and sent off a wide-reaching discussion about gaslighting and what it means in the era of a Trump presidency.
So how does gaslighting happen? At alternativefacts.com, you can find out how to spot 11 signs of gaslighting. No. 1 on the list? "They tell you blatant lies."
CARD ID: 156585
"You know it's an outright lie. Yet they are telling you this lie with a straight face," Sarkis writes. "Why are they so blatant? Because they're setting up a precedent. Once they tell you a huge lie, you're not sure if anything they say is true. Keeping you unsteady and off-kilter is the goal."
Blatant seems to be a fair word to describe the kind of lie being told by White House Press Sean Spicer when he said that Trump's inauguration saw the "largest audience to ever witness an inauguration, period" -- at least considering the photographic evidence to the contrary. To remedy the situation, Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway referred to it all as "alternative facts."
That pair of words sent off a Twitter firestorm, with many users pointing out what's psychologically troubling about saying something like "alternative facts" and how it feels kind of like, well, gaslighting.
CARD ID: 156580
CARD ID: 156574
CARD ID: 156578
CARD ID: 156577
CARD ID: 156575
CARD ID: 156579
Some experts also believe Trump is gaslighting the country.
Psychologist Bryant Welch, author of State of Confusion: Political Manipulation and the Assault on the American Mind, told NBC News that constant lies allow for a gaslighter to trick their victim into confused submission.
"If you make people confused, they are vulnerable. By definition they don't know what to do," Welch said, adding that Trump is doing this by attempting to discredit the press.
"It tells them to go ahead and hate this person who is delivering bad news. Then you begin to substitute your own news, your own version of reality," Welch said. "If Donald Trump can undercut America's trust in all media, he then starts to own them and can start to literally implant his own version of reality."
CARD ID: 156584
Topics Donald Trump Politics President
From London to Antarctica women march in solidarity with AmericansSundance review: 'Tokyo Idols' paints a creepy picture of JEven Boston’s famous ducklings are wearing 'pussyhats'Party planes full of 'nasty women' are heading to DCThe biggest rivalry in 'Super Smash Bros. Melee' historyHow to watch the Women's March on WashingtonTrump's inaugural ball cake looked suspiciously like Obama's from 2013Barack and Michelle Obama send their first postGoogle's Assistant might not be exclusive to Pixel for much longerAncient moon volcanoes made tiny glass beads. Here's what they mean.Newborn baby becomes ideal wingman in father's surprise proposalSomeone at the National Park Service is obviously not happy about Trump's inaugurationSundance review: 'Tokyo Idols' paints a creepy picture of JTrump extended family member spotted at Women's March on WashingtonSecret service guy is wondering what’s happened to his lifeSee the super collection of the Guinness World Record holder who owns 1,518 Superman itemsThe stunning moment Whitehouse.gov changed handsAncient moon volcanoes made tiny glass beads. Here's what they mean.Security experts request retraction of The Guardian's WhatsApp articleHere's what everyone was dying to know during Trump's inauguration Louder than Bombs: An Interview with Joachim Trier and Jesse Eisenberg The Ogres and Shadows of Marcel Broodthaers’s Poetry Gone with the Mind: An Interview with Mark Leyner No One Paints Rome Like Francis Towne Painted Rome “A Major Poet of Quiet”: Ben Lerner on Keith Waldrop Little Match Girl: Taking Abuse on the Internet Whither the Fog Machine? and Other News by Dan Piepenbring A Remembrance of Phife Dawg from His Cousin, Zinzi Clemmons Join Us for Our Spring Revel on April 5—Honoring Lydia Davis The Rediscovered Prison Memoir of a Black Man in the 1850s You Didn’t Know You Wanted It, But … Knausgaard in Legos On the Road: The Loneliness of the Long Writers Are Always Spies and Voyeurs, Too Who Was Judith Leyster? The Overlooked Women Artists of the Golden Age Happy Tartan Day by Sadie Stein The Borges Memorial Library: A Brief Survey of Imaginary Books Why Charlie Chaplin Wanted to Play Hamlet Rereading Beverly Cleary’s “Fifteen” on Her Hundredth Birthday Why “Peblum” Is a Decidedly Different Take on the Toga Epic Let’s Proceed Under the Assumption That We All Look Great
2.1191s , 10130.6171875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Sisters Slave】,Steady Information Network