How I Decide What’s Worth Sharing
You’re not getting my first reaction. You’re getting what survived the filter.
Note: I don’t look like this… it’s a AI created Image of an old man who’s nobody’s fool.
Every now and then someone sends me a piece that’s slick as hell.
Confident.
Detailed.
Full of names, dates, court filings, percentages.
Reads like a Netflix political thriller.
And I’ll admit something.
My first instinct is not to believe it.
It’s to slow down.
Because I’ve learned something over the years:
Confidence is cheap. Evidence is expensive.
If I build a story on something, I’m attaching my name to it.
And at 73, I’m not interested in being loud. I’m interested in being right.
So here’s the quiet part of how I decide what’s worth sharing.
No drama. No secret handshake. Just standards.
The GeezerWise Credibility Filter
Before I build on a claim, it has to pass this.
1. Can I verify it across ideological lines?
If something is true and significant, I should be able to find it reported by:
Mainstream outlets
Conservative outlets
International press
Not identical spin.
Just acknowledgment that the event happened.
If it only lives inside one tribe’s ecosystem?
That’s a red flag.
2. Are primary sources actually linked?
Not “court documents say…”
Not “official filings show…”
Show me the filing.
Show me the bill text.
Show me the transcript.
If I have to take the writer’s word for it, I don’t build on it.
Receipts matter.
3. Are fact and interpretation clearly separated?
Good writing distinguishes between:
What happened
What it might mean
If those two are blended into one seamless emotional narrative, you’re not reading reporting.
You’re reading persuasion.
That doesn’t make it automatically false.
It just means I slow down.
4. Is uncertainty acknowledged anywhere?
Reality is messy.
If a piece presents itself as airtight, total, absolute —
No nuance. No gray. No “we don’t know yet.”
That’s not how serious analysis sounds.
Serious people leave room for complexity.
5. Does it escalate toward fear or violence?
This one matters.
If a piece ends by nudging readers toward panic, civil war language, or “prepare yourselves” energy…
I’m out.
Even if I agree with some of the concerns.
When rhetoric shifts from analysis to agitation, credibility collapses.
Why I’m Sharing This
Because I get asked why I don’t jump on every viral narrative that crosses my feed.
Because I won’t amplify something just because it’s emotionally powerful.
Because outrage is addictive — and I refuse to be steered by someone else’s adrenaline.
Most of what you see me publish is already filtered through this lens.
You’re not getting my first reaction.
You’re getting what survived scrutiny.
The Long Game
I care about Canada.
I care about the U.S.
I care about democratic institutions.
But I care even more about intellectual discipline.
If we lose that, it doesn’t matter which side “wins.”
So when you see me share something, you can assume…
I checked it.
I verified it.
I separated signal from narrative.
I ignored the bait.
And if I ever get something wrong?
I’ll correct it publicly.
Because credibility compounds slowly… and disappears instantly.
This isn’t a manifesto.
It’s just how I operate.
Quietly.
And if you’re someone who values receipts over rage…
You’re in the right place.
— Fred Ferguson
GeezerWise
🔎 The GeezerWise Standard
This space is built on disciplined thinking.
Facts over spin.
Verification before amplification.
Good-faith discussion over tribal noise.
I use AI tools to help shape my spoken drafts into clear writing.
The judgment, conclusions, and final message are mine.
If you’re new here, this explains how I decide what’s worth sharing:
How I Decide What’s Worth Sharing → [link]
💌 Subscribe at GeezerWise.com to receive future letters:
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— Fred Ferguson
GeezerWise
#Un-Learn



Your content & output are both high level. I’m glad I stumbled across your, er, Stack
“Because outrage is addictive - and I won’t be steered by someone else’s adrenaline”. Well, I guess that statement disqualifies you from the CPC social media team.