Game Theory #29: Final Examination
Credibility score: 42/100 — Mixed Credibility. Analyzed 69 claims. Found 25 low-credibility claim(s). 1 claim(s) rated as highly credible. Logic analysis: 15 fallacy issue(s), 5 cross-segment inconsistency(ies), reasoning integrity: 0%.
Claims analyzed
USD reserve status is unique historical accident, won't recur β Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Overstates uniqueness β other currencies held similar status before.
Geopolitics is purely a game with no loyalty or friends, just optimal strategy β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Classic realist take β states act in self-interest, alliances shift with advantage.
US needs to control the population to build AI data centers β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Re-scored to 50/100 after evidence check.
Sources: They didn't want data centers. It didn't matter, but it should. | Opinion, Fact Check Team: AI data centers spark local backlash across the US, This map tracks data center projects and AI policy around the world | The Verge
US dollar collapse happens when government defaults on debt β Mixed Credibility (35/100)
Equates dollar collapse with sovereign default β that's not how it works.
Post-collapse, no cars or buying won't cause starvation β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Optimistic take on societal collapse β pure speculation.
100 strangers on island will instantly cooperate and invent language β Mixed Credibility (25/100)
Sounds like Lord of the Flies fan fiction β cooperation isn't guaranteed.
Power outage would make people more caring and cooperative, not violent β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Optimistic view of human nature under crisis β plausible in short-term localized events.
Freemasons were critical to America's founding β Mixed Credibility (60/100)
Common historical view β influence existed but 'critical' is debated.
Claims Franklin was Freemason and Hamilton was half Jewish β Mixed Credibility (65/100)
Franklin's Freemason membership is documented β Hamilton's Jewish ancestry claim is more disputed.
Says overlaps exist but don't overemphasize them β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Reasonable caution against conspiracy thinking β the overlaps are real but don't prove coordinated influence.
Says Lincoln received congratulations from 'angles' and admired their publications β Mixed Credibility (40/100)
'Angles' appears to be a mistranslation or mishearing β possibly meant 'Angels' or a publication name, context unclear.
States Lincoln, Franklin, Hamilton were not British spies but had Empire contacts β Mixed Credibility (80/100)
Correct β none were British agents; elite transatlantic contacts were normal for the era.
British elites used Rockefeller, Carnegie, Vanderbilt as fronts to secretly buy America with Indian/Chinese loot and create the Fed β Mixed Credibility (15/100)
Rockefellers and Carnegies built their own empires β zero evidence they were London puppets. Fed founded 1913, not by foreign agents.
Says millions of Americans view Trump as messiah fighting transnational capital and British influence β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Classic interpretive leap β framing political belief as having 'a point' without evidence.
A billionaire is someone willing to kill their own grandmother for money β Mixed Credibility (10/100)
Rhetorical hyperbole, not a definition β zero evidence supplied.
India currently plays no important role in geopolitics β Mixed Credibility (35/100)
India is already a major player β G20 host, QUAD member, top economy.
Gold loses value in population decline due to reduced demand β Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Assumes population decline directly tanks gold demand β oversimplifies what actually drives prices.
Elites want depression to buy assets cheap and impose authoritarian control β Mixed Credibility (20/100)
Conspiracy framing with zero evidence β treats motive as proven fact.
NZ, Australia, Canada are literally owned by Britain as resource colonies β Mixed Credibility (5/100)
Legally false β these are fully sovereign states since the 20th century.
Claims Divine Comedy most influential book last 10-20 years β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Subjective literary influence claim β zero way to verify ranking.
True scientists must have 'occult' imagination like Newton, not patents β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Equates scientific drive with occult mindset β rhetorical move, not evidence.
True innovation requires treating it like a cult β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Framing innovation as inherently cult-like is a rhetorical move, not evidence.
Elites create depressions and drafts to retrain young men β Mixed Credibility (15/100)
Classic conspiracy logic β governments don't stage recessions to fix OnlyFans.
Young men left alone will waste time on games, OnlyFans, and Bitcoin instead of contributing economically β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Broad stereotype dressed up as inevitable outcome β zero data offered to back the three specific behaviors.
People who can't adapt mentally to new reality will die β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Re-evaluated β evidence is mixed on this claim.
Sources: People Experience 'New Dimensions of Reality' When Dying: study | Hacker News, A different reality - MIT McGovern Institute, Why Facts Donβt Change Our Minds | The New Yorker
Powerful people refuse tax hikes or give up wealth because they're stubborn and violent β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Classic 'if they cared we'd be fine' logic β assumes motive explains everything.
Says bedside vigil for sick friend feels like deep pleasure β Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Pure opinion on subjective emotional experience β no fact to check.
Claims AI exists to let 'powers that be' control you β Mixed Credibility (25/100)
Conspiracy without receipts β tech control narrative with no sourcing.
Pipelines in Saudi desert are extremely easy to destroy with ballistic missiles β Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Sounds simple on paper β real-world pipeline defense and redundancy make this way harder.
Claims Indian and Jewish academic success due to Vedic and Kabbalistic traditions β Mixed Credibility (25/100)
Cultural traditions cited as cause β correlation presented as causation with no data.
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