In some ways one part of the solution is simple: Pass laws that deliver consequences for lying and disseminating false information or fabricating narratives.<p><i>Note I am NOT identifying any one political party as the culprit. They are all at fault here.</i><p>These laws should apply to everyone, from traditional news networks to politicians and individuals. I know the situation is a bit different with social media. If the argument is that all they do is provide a means for interpersonal communication with minimal or no supervision, then, OK, the laws apply to individual users and perhaps only apply to social networks if users are allowed to post and exist anonymously.<p>This isn't a new concept. Human life is about reacting to consequences. From learning how to walk to learning not to touch hot pots or when to cross the street. The most basic of human behaviors are self regulated due to very clear undesirable consequences we learn about along the way.<p>Politics and the media are absolutely rotten. They both hide behind the abject lack of consequences. Both politicians and media outlets can lie and fabricate with absolute impunity. I won't list examples here, suffice it to say we could easily fill thousands of hours of videos with examples of both media and politics (on all sides of political thought) lying or misguiding the public with impunity.<p>This is a forcing function these people do not have. And, because of that, they can say and do almost as they please without consequences. Taking things out of context, fabricating "facts" and threading ridiculous conclusions are every-day realities. Sadly, the Internet and Social media has expanded this exponentially through massively greater access to all of it and the ability for people to interconnect and interact like never before.<p>If we implement consequences for this most insidious problem we will be treated to a very different kind of politics and politicians as well as media that actually does the homework necessary to report well researched facts rather than distortions and politically aligned falsehoods hour after hour, day after day, year after year.<p>This would be a refreshing start. Not perfect, but it would address one of the most serious issues pulling people apart: The dissemination of lies that, when repeated enough times, are taken to be true by a population seemingly uninterested or incapable of research and critical thinking (factors that are openly exploited by political actors).