Area Uncle Discovers Meme with Level of Per-Pixel Disinformation Once Thought Impossible
Uncle John Teagarden, 57, of Saratoga Springs, unknowingly discovered and subsequently shared a meme on social media that miraculously managed to make a record number of political claims, but unbelievably, had no basis in fact on any one of them. Scientific analysis has revealed this meme to contain more unfounded and many-times-debunked disinformation per pixel than any previously known.
The meme follows the classic text overlay on an image, as many memes do. The text begins with a claim that the former President of the United States did something he actually did not do (though he claims he did), and then asserts that his successor undid that thing, though it would be philosophically impossible to undo something that was never done to begin with.
The meme then absurdly claims that, after undoing the work of his predecessor, the current President then invited others to join in compounding a tangential problem, while offering no explanation as to why, and the meme then claims the current President also offered to house, feed, and otherwise provide for those he invited to compound that same problem for free.
The meme cites no specific examples of any of these claims; however it does include a photo of a D-List celebrity, but does not attribute the content of the meme to the celebrity, leaving the reader to only assume the celebrity said these words, though it is unclear if the celebrity actually did.
Scientists have run tests on this meme and have deemed it to be the so-called, “Holy Grail,” of political Disinformation.
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