На информационном ресурсе применяются рекомендательные технологии (информационные технологии предоставления информации на основе сбора, систематизации и анализа сведений, относящихся к предпочтениям пользователей сети "Интернет", находящихся на территории Российской Федерации)

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Here's What We Learned From Friday's #DayofFacts


Museums and libraries are typically nonpartisan institutions, but even they can’t stay quiet in this political climate and amid the “fake news” buzz. On Friday, they took to Twitter to stand up for something that’s become a puzzling political talking point: Facts.


Using the hashtag #DayofFacts, scientists, historians and even encyclopedias filled Twitter feeds with all the facts that no one ― not a POTUS nor political pundit ― could deny.


The movement was launched by two museum educators in Virginia and D.C., and more than 280 institutions participated, according to The Washington Post.


“We’re using facts to illustrate truth about the present moment,” Alli Hartley, one of the founders, told the Post.


Tweeted facts varied from the mind-blowing (

) to the poignant (over ). Most tweets seemed to address political topics: civil rights, climate change, , and the .






The San Francisco Public Library was one of the hundreds of institutions that tweeted Friday. It participated to “remind our patrons and the world that libraries are a place that all people can come to and access trusted and curated information,” library spokeswoman Katherine Jardine told The Huffington Post.


However, Jardine said that promoting facts shouldn’t be considered a political movement because provable facts, unlike “alternative facts,” shouldn’t be up for debate.


“I think public libraries are here to encourage that notion,” she said.


Of the four #DayofFacts tweets shared by the San Francisco Public Library, two were about climate change and one included the tag #BlackLivesMatter.






So, what do we get when a horde of researchers, scientists and history buffs tweet in the fight against “alternative facts”?


Turns out, a whole lot of truth bombs about our country, its history, its communities and the health of the planet we all call home.










































Lastly, not a fact, but some wonderful insight about what knowing more can achieve:





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