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yes that makes sense. My point is about information availability and social consensus about it. you're assuming people have shared *trusted* information sources to evaluate threats. I'm thinking Matts point of view is developed from an assumption people do not share trusted information sources. As a result, social consensus about the reality of a threat could not emerge. So instead of accurately measuring the real likelihood of a threat, people can also get hype about a threat that is actually very low probability or people can get information that minimizes what may actually be a high probability threat. Thinking that everyone shares your trust in the information sources you prefer is soooo mid-2000s 😂 its unfortunate. but its the information space we live in now.

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