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Why People Believed It So Quickly
One reason the rumor gained traction is because Americans still remember the very real assassination attempt that occurred during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, in 2024.
Millions watched footage showing the shocking moment unfold.
The event became one of the most significant political security incidents in modern American history.
The rumor exploited an existing memory.
And when misinformation aligns with something people already fear, it spreads much faster.
Not accuracy.
Algorithms amplify content that generates:
outrage
surprise
curiosity
The Trump rumor checked every box.
Commented.
Argued.
Reacted.
And every interaction pushed the claim further into news feeds.
This phenomenon isn’t unique to politics.
But political misinformation often spreads especially quickly because emotions already run high.
What Journalists Found
As major news organizations began checking the claim, something unusual became apparent.
There was no evidence supporting it.
No police reports.
No Secret Service alerts.
No hospital statements.
No emergency press conferences.
No eyewitness accounts from credible sources.
No official confirmation whatsoever.
For an event as significant as a presidential shooting, the silence from authoritative sources was telling.
If such an incident had actually occurred, every major news network would likely have interrupted programming immediately.
Instead, nothing appeared.
The Role of Recycled Videos
Investigators soon discovered that many viral posts were using old footage.
Some clips came from:
previous campaign rallies
past security incidents
archived news reports
unrelated public appearances
The videos were paired with misleading captions designed to create a false impression.
Viewers who only watched a few seconds often assumed they were seeing current events.
This tactic has become increasingly common online.
A real video.
A fake caption.
A misleading narrative.
The combination can be surprisingly powerful.
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