How Disinformation Taps Directly Into Emotional Needs

How Disinformation Taps Directly Into Emotional Needs
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The smartest person you know just shared a conspiracy theory that made you cringe. Maybe it was your college professor or that sharp-witted relative who usually sees through everything. You stare at your screen, wondering how someone so perceptive could fall for something so obviously false, yet there it is, posted with complete conviction.

The answer has less to do with intelligence and more to do with something deeper. Disinformation works because it feeds emotional hungers that facts alone cannot satisfy. It offers belonging to people who feel isolated, certainty to those drowning in complexity, and purpose to anyone searching for meaning in chaotic times.

Here’s a closer look at how false information exploits our most basic human needs, and what that means for all of us.