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Twitter Fact-Checking Parodies, also known as Twitter Through History, refers to a series of memes which parody Twitter assigning fact-checking labels to tweets which contain misleading information. The trend gained traction after Twitter applied such warning labels to multiple tweets posted by Donald Trump following the 2020 US Presidential Election.

Origin

On November 4th, 2020, following the closing of the polls during the 2020 Unites States Presidential Election and the preliminary results becoming available, the United States president Donald J. Trump posted[1] a tweet in which he claimed that he at that time had a strong lead in the election and that a certain group was attempting to manipulate the results. The tweet was subsequently flagged by Twitter as misleading (shown below, left). More Donald Trump's tweets[2][3] containing allegations that the election results were being manipulated were flagged by Twitter in the following days (examples shown below, center and right). On November 7th, CNN[4] reported that Twitter applied warning labels to 37% of Trump's tweets posted between November 4th and 7th.

On November 11th, The Donald user lordvon[5] posted a tweet which parodied Twitter assigning the warning labels, applying such label to a fake tweet containing the quote "The British are coming, the British are coming," misattributed to American silversmith Paul Revere. The tweet received over 7,500 upvotes in one week.

Spread

On November 12th, 2020, Twitter[6] user @ElonBachman posted the first derivative meme based on the format, a fake tweet by Galileo Galilei. The post received over 3,000 retweets and 10,500 likes in four days (shown below).

On the same day, right wing activist Jack Posobiec reposted[7] lordvon's post to Twitter, gaining over 6,800 retweets and 25,100 likes in four days. In the thread, Posobiec also reposted[8] @ElonBachman's post, gaining over 810 retweets and 18,600 likes. Later on the same day, Twitter[9] user @ConceptualJames tweeted another version of the meme, gaining over 3,600 retweets and 19,700 likes (shown below). In the thread, multiple users replied with more variations of the joke.

In the following days, the meme format maintained a significant popularity on Twitter, with users imagining various historic quotes being labeled by Twitter as disputed. On November 13th, 2020, an anonymous 4chan[10] user created a generator[11] for the format, posting a link on /pol/ board and popularizing the meme format on the imageboard.

!⃝ Copypasta

!⃝ 𝗧𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗰𝗹𝗮𝗶𝗺 𝗶𝘀 𝗱𝗶𝘀𝗽𝘂𝘁𝗲𝗱

Starting on November 16th, Twitter users started utilizing the enclosing circle Unicode symbol in their parody posts to give them a more organic appearance. On that day, Twitter[12] user @rubyysapp13 made the earliest such tweet, writing "About to finish this semester strong / !⃝ This claim has been disputed by BIOL 112 & STATS 302." The tweet gained over 80 retweets and 1,700 likes in three days (shown below, left). Several hours later on the same day, Twitter[13] user @DomDiFurio posted a tweet (shown below, center) that gained over 160 retweets and 3,100 likes in three days. Within ten minutes, Twitter[14] user @MatthewKBegbie posted a tweet that gained over 7,200 retweets and 45,000 likes (shown below, right), prompting viral spread of the copypasta in the following days.

Various Examples


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