Evidence Matters Verdict System
Verdict system is how Evidence Matters rates public claims after checking the source, context, logic, and available evidence.
The goal is simple. Do not guess. Do not cheerlead. Do not protect a side. Follow the evidence and say what the record actually supports.
Why a Verdict System Matters
Public claims move fast. Evidence does not. A clear verdict system helps slow the argument down long enough to ask the only question that matters here:
What can actually be proven?
Every claim reviewed by Evidence Matters should be judged by the same basic standard, whether the claim comes from a politician, pundit, influencer, media outlet, or random viral post.
The Evidence Matters Verdict Labels
Supported by Evidence
The claim is backed by reliable, verifiable evidence. That may include official records, court documents, direct transcripts, government data, primary source video, or multiple credible reports that match the available record.
Mostly Supported
The main point is supported, but some wording, numbers, or framing may need clarification. The claim is not fake, but it may not be perfectly stated either.
Needs Context
The claim contains something real, but leaves out important background that could change how people understand it.
Misleading
The claim uses selective facts, incomplete context, exaggerated framing, or weak sourcing to push people toward a conclusion the evidence does not fully support.
Unverified
The claim may be possible, but there is not enough reliable evidence yet to confirm it. This verdict is used when the evidence is missing, unclear, anonymous, or not independently checkable.
False
The available evidence contradicts the claim, and credible records do not support it.
How We Rate Claims
Evidence Matters uses the FABLE method as a plain language filter for checking public claims.
- False Claim: What exactly is being claimed?
- Authority: Who is making the claim, and are they in a position to know?
- Bias: What incentive does the source have to bend, hide, or exaggerate the truth?
- Logic: Does the argument actually make sense?
- Evidence: What proof exists that other people can check?
A claim does not become true because it is popular. It does not become false because the wrong person said it. The verdict depends on the evidence.
What Counts as Strong Evidence
Stronger evidence usually comes from sources that can be checked directly.
- Official records
- Court filings
- Government documents
- Public transcripts
- Original video or audio in full context
- Reliable data from named sources
- Credible reporting that cites documents, records, or direct statements
Weak evidence includes screenshots with no source, anonymous claims, edited clips with missing context, memes, rumor chains, and stories that only trace back to people repeating each other.
What This System Is Not
This verdict system is not about protecting Democrats, Republicans, conservatives, liberals, independents, or anyone else.
It is also not about proving what someone already wants to believe.
The standard is the same every time. Bring the evidence. Show the source. Check the logic. Follow the record.
Use This Before You Share a Claim
Before sharing a political claim, ask:
- Can I find the original source?
- Is the quote, clip, or number complete?
- Does a reliable source confirm it?
- Is important context missing?
- Would this still look true if my side did not benefit from it?
If the answer is no, slow down. That is usually where bad information gets a head start.
