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“There is a collective understanding that you did falsely accuse a lot of people because you did.”
A user posting under the name Infinity Knight left the comment:
“There is a collective understanding that you did falsely accuse a lot of people because you did.”
It’s worth pausing and pulling this apart.
1. Hiding behind someone else’s name.
The first red flag is that the account isn’t using its own identity. Instead, it has hijacked another user’s name to make the remark. That choice alone says something — if you truly believe what you’re saying, why not stand behind it? Borrowing someone else’s online identity to deliver a message is an admission that you don’t want your real name or reputation tied to the accusation.
2. Gaslighting with “collective understanding.”
The phrase “collective understanding” is a psychological tactic. It tries to imply consensus and pressure: everyone knows this about you; you’re already judged guilty. It’s a way of making the accused doubt themselves and feel isolated. But “collective understanding” isn’t evidence; it’s a rhetorical trick.
Whenever you hear “everyone knows” or “it’s common knowledge”, it’s worth asking: Who exactly? Where is the record? What evidence supports the claim? The answer is almost always silence.
3. Lack of specifics.
Notably, there’s no detail — no names, no examples, no links, no quotes. “You falsely accused a lot of people.” Of what? When? Where? Without particulars, the statement is just a smear. If there were real cases of false accusation, they could be cited. People could step forward. Screenshots could be shown. That never happens — and that’s telling.
4. Sharing ≠ creating.
Another user — A Thinking Woman — tried to add weight, saying:
“You repeated it/reposted it — which makes you as guilty as the person who made it originally.”
But does it really? Information flows in real time online. People share things because they’re shocking, concerning, or newsworthy. If sharing alone equals guilt, then almost everyone on the internet is guilty of something. Journalists, commentators, even everyday users amplify what they encounter — the ethical question is what you do once the truth emerges.
Your position is clear: if I’ve unknowingly shared something false and later learn it’s false, I’ll own it and apologise. That’s not guilt — that’s responsible correction.
5. Belief vs. defamation.
There’s also an important distinction between:
Holding a personal belief about an event or testimony; and
Knowingly inventing and promoting a lie.
It’s fair and human to say, “I believe X story is credible,” especially if that story is circulating publicly. Guilt requires knowledge and intent to harm — not simply reporting what’s already out there.
6. Noise doesn’t equal truth.
Finally, a repeated accusation doesn’t make something factual. A hundred comments repeating “you did it” don’t transform speculation into evidence. Truth isn’t crowdsourced; it’s proven.
Bottom line.
The “Infinity Knight” comment tries to shortcut evidence and jump straight to guilt by appealing to “collective understanding.” But until someone provides clear, documented proof of false accusations — who, what, where, and when — these kinds of remarks remain just that: noise, not truth.
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