| Well, there are the indictments against 13 Russian nationals by the DOJ, and all the materials necessary for that. https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/grand-jury-indicts-thirteen-r... And there are reports from the intelligence services which are very clear as well, for example: https://www.dni.gov/files/documents/ICA_2017_01.pdf A brief search will come up with much more. The only question is why you haven't found any of this evidence, haven't believed any of it, or why you would argue such an easily disproven position without ever taking a few minutes to find out if the position you argue is still true many years after you've formed it. It's almost as if you heard an opinion once or multiple times, perhaps from people or political figures you trusted. Then you internalized that opinion and it took on the attributes of 'belief' and haven't ever questioned it since it was formed. This belief became bound up with other things you believe, and now the defense mechanisms your brain uses to support 'belief' are also supporting this opinion in contradiction to facts that have been proven over the past years. These defense mechanisms exist in your brain for good reasons, but they are also a way that propaganda exploits your brain's natural tendency to behave. It's difficult for victims of this to see it for what it is, confront their 'belief' system and admit they've been tricked. They have to overcome the feeling that it's their own fault they were tricked and their brain was exploited, which many never do, even though it's really not their fault that the human brain works the way it does. Propaganda is insidious, and particularly treacherous in the way that it convinces people to argue on its behalf, and that the act of doing so reinforces the hold the propaganda has on the person. |
Thank you for providing civil, factual, compassionate responses in this thread - it’s an inspiring example of discourse.
I’d like to add an informative and entertaining essay on the mechanics of belief and the reasons some beliefs are harder to change than others:
https://theoatmeal.com/comics/believe