Conspiracy Generator

Step 2 — The official story

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Pandemic Hits Women and Youth's Mental Health

A YouGov survey carried out in 27 countries finds the Covid-19 pandemic has had the most severe mental-health effects on young people and on women. Younger respondents consistently reported higher levels of anxiety about their mental health and increased worries about their financial futures, while women were more likely than men to say the pandemic had harmed their wellbeing. The findings summarize self-reported experiences rather than identifying precise causes.

Despite these mental-health strains, the survey found relatively few people worldwide were planning major life changes because of the pandemic. Respondents in northern Europe and many English-speaking countries reported comparatively small effects on their personal finances. Overall changes to lifestyle were limited; where people did report positive effects, they most often cited closer family ties and strengthened partner relationships, producing a mixed picture of harm and resilience.

Source: theguardian.com

Now pick the conspirators

Every conspiracy theory pins one culprit and one motive on the same story. The same story can spawn any number of theories — different culprits, different motives. That's part of how you spot a conspiracy theory: the same event can be "explained" any number of ways.

Culprit
Culprit
Motive
Motive
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You'll walk through the four moves on separate screens, with a debunk on every step.

Conspiracy Generator — the recipe, written out