Demand Evidence
Demand Evidence is a plain standard for what “show your work” actually means. Claims are cheap. Evidence is work.
If a serious claim cannot be tied to a record, it is not ready to be trusted.
Send a link or screenshot plus the exact claim. If possible, include the full clip, full quote, or original post.
Demand Evidence standard
A claim is not proven because it sounds confident, matches a team narrative, or comes from a popular account. The minimum standard is simple. Provide the underlying record so a reasonable person can verify it without guessing.
Demand Evidence is really about pushing a conversation back onto material that can be checked. That means documents, datasets, filings, full recordings, full transcripts, or direct source pages. It does not mean attitude, repetition, or somebody saying “trust me.”
What evidence means here
- Primary documents, data, filings, recordings, or direct transcripts
- Full context, not a cropped screenshot or a short clip
- Links that work and point to the original source
- Enough detail to reproduce the conclusion
What not evidence looks like
- “Everyone knows” or “I heard”
- Anonymous screenshots without provenance
- Headlines without documents
- Clips without the full segment or transcript
A clean Demand Evidence test
Can you hand a stranger the sources and have them reach the same conclusion without you narrating it.
Demand Evidence questions to ask
Use these questions to slow a claim down and push the conversation back to something verifiable.
1. What exactly is being claimed
Write it as one sentence. If it cannot be stated clearly, it cannot be verified.
2. Who is the source
Name the person or institution. If it is anonymous, ask why and what independent verification exists.
3. What is the underlying record
Not commentary. The record. A filing, a dataset, a full transcript, or the full video.
4. What would prove it false
If nothing could change their mind, it is a belief statement, not an evidence claim.
5. What is the alternative explanation
Slow down and list two non dramatic explanations. Most “mysteries” collapse right here.
6. What do credible checks say
Look for primary documents first, then credible independent checks that link to those documents.
Common red flags
These patterns usually show up when a claim is being pushed harder than it is being proven.
“Do your own research”
That often means they will not show sources. Research starts with links, not slogans.
Screenshot only
If it is real, there is an original page, record, or clip. Ask for it.
A clip with no context
Demand the full segment or transcript. Context changes meaning.
“Experts say” with no names
Credentials do not replace proof. Name the expert and show the work.
Moving goalposts
Every failed prediction becomes “part of the plan.” That is not verification.
Only one outlet
If the claim is huge, multiple independent sources should be able to confirm it.
Demand Evidence examples
Here is the difference between stronger evidence and weaker evidence in plain language.
Stronger evidence
- Official filings and court records
- Agency reports, audits, and inspector general work
- Full legislative text, not summaries
- Primary datasets with methodology
- Full interviews or full press conferences
Weaker evidence
- Unverified screenshots and anonymous images
- Opinion videos without source links
- Short clips without the full segment
- Viral posts with no provenance
- Claims that rely on “someone said”
