@SpaceAce this is firmly in the "I could teach you, but I'd have to charge" category. You're not their mother or their teacher so if they want to believe nonsense then let them.
There are some documentaries debunking Ancient Aliens though.
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@SpaceAce this is firmly in the "I could teach you, but I'd have to charge" category. You're not their mother or their teacher so if they want to believe nonsense then let them.
There are some documentaries debunking Ancient Aliens though.
Jason Colavito does the hard work so you don't have to. There's such a firehose of claims that it is almost possible to keep up with it all unless you are a fan. Colavito does a good job of keeping on the various series and pointing out the problems.
If you wanted to engage with people who are promoting this kind of thing you could try and engage on a more meta level rather than slog through each claim. They often rely on the argument from disbelief: I can't believe the ancients were capable of this, therefore it was aliens. Or you could point out that not believing ancient people were capable of building some monument and had to rely on aliens of Atlanteans is a bit racist. However, be warned, you'll soon be considered the Fun Police and you are better off letting it slide unless someone won't stop banging on about it.
Wow. Three hours ๐ . Not before bed lmao
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I'm a skeptic at heart, but it's fun and ultimately harmless to pretend or even vehemently believe that aliens exist and have visited earth. In my opinion there's no reason to shut them down or try to prove them wrong. Of course unless they're taking it to a degree in which it's likely to harm others.
If nobody challenges them on the harmless stupidity it will fester into greater ignorance they feel entitled to perpetuate.
The thing is that other than the odd true believer, most people who watch these things are not interested in engaging in an intellectual debate about them. It's essentially a diversion and light entertainment.
Set phasers to full power!
You might be taking some friendly debate as more sinister than it is. It's okay to tell them you straight up don't believe and need some better evidence than a show on Netflix. When they tell you to watch it, ask them to sum it up for you, and go from there.
You can laugh at the absurdity without being mean-spirited. Most people who get hooked into that stuff don't really believe, they like the "but what if?" Aspect of it.
I don't actually recommend this, but it could be fun to play the conspiracies off each other.
Don't. It's a massive dick move to get up in people's business because you don't like the TV shows they watch.
Why do you feel the need to "deal with it"?
You can express your opinion without pushing it on others or trying to convince them. Is this a mystery to the social media generation?
I haven't seen those shows, but do they mention the pyramids? If so, you might point them to good research on how they were made. I think that's a whole lot more interesting than just throwing up your hands and claiming alien intervention.
This guy is doing really great analysis of the casing stones to find which order they were laid in. https://youtu.be/43V9RTpnxbk