Hoodwinked - Prepared
Social media algorithms accelerate this process. They feed us content that aligns with our existing beliefs, reinforcing neural pathways. When a lie arrives that fits our worldview—whether political, commercial, or personal—it encounters no resistance. We have prepared the soil of our minds through selective exposure. The lie is not an invader; it is a returning friend.
This article explores the psychological and social mechanisms that prime us for deception—how our biases, habits, and trust become tools used against us. Deception is most effective when it arrives wrapped in legitimacy. Con artists, propagandists, and manipulators understand a simple truth: a person is far more likely to believe a lie if they have already been conditioned to trust the source. hoodwinked prepared
Consider the “authority bias.” Psychologist Stanley Milgram demonstrated that ordinary people will perform acts against their conscience if instructed by a figure of authority. The hoodwinker doesn’t need to build authority overnight. Instead, they borrow it. They use uniforms, official-sounding titles, or forged credentials. By the time the false instruction arrives, the victim is neurologically prepared to obey. Social media algorithms accelerate this process
The only defense is awareness. Refuse to be prepared. Keep your blindfold off. And question not just the lie, but everything that made you ready to accept it as truth. We have prepared the soil of our minds
In digital life, this takes the form of “deepfake” videos of CEOs or phishing emails that perfectly mimic a bank’s branding. We are prepared by years of legitimate digital correspondence to trust familiar layouts and voices. That preparation is precisely what the deceiver exploits. We also prepare ourselves. Social identity theory suggests that humans derive part of their self-esteem from group membership. To be hoodwinked by an in-group source is far easier than to be tricked by an outsider.
The 2021 impostor social media accounts that spread false scientific studies are a case in point. Users shared fraudulent papers not because they were lazy, but because the claims validated their pre-existing suspicions about vaccines or climate change. They were hoodwinked because they had prepared themselves to believe. Preparation for deception is not always psychological; it is often physiological. Chronic stress, information overload, and multitasking deplete what Daniel Kahneman called “System 2” thinking—our slow, deliberate, analytical mode. When we are tired, we default to “System 1,” the fast, intuitive, gullible mode.
The word “hoodwinked” evokes the image of a blindfold being pulled over someone’s eyes. It suggests a temporary trick, a clever ruse. But in the modern information age, being hoodwinked is rarely an accident. More often, it is the result of a subtle, systematic preparation of the target. Long before the lie is told, the groundwork is laid. We aren’t just tricked; we are prepared to be tricked.
