No Stupid Questions
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I really want to know more about these specific people you've run into this with, particularly age, education level, and maybe political affliations (curious if it runs the gamut or not).
For my part, Wikipedia's usually a good starting point 'source', like an encyclopedia would be. But the actual sources referenced by a given article, carefully evaluated, are much better. A Google Search (once you scroll past the AI summary) can also yield good sources. I don't bother with LLMs at all, too many issues with accuracy.
End of the day, these are all signposts to actual sources, not sources themselves. What you find through any of them need to be evaluated by where they are getting their information. It also depends on the topic and level of discussion. I'm personally OK with quoting Wikipedia about a general piece of trivia, but if I'm trying to make a serious argument about something it'd be silly to rely on it if I don't know how strong the source behind it is. Could be well-researched and rock solid, could be bullshit with a flimsy reference no one's caught yet.
Wikipedia is useful for having a topic explained in layman's terms