Source Confusion
This is a well-studied finding in psychology called “source confusion”: you remember things you “learned” long after you’ve forgotten where you learned them.
(also known as source misattribution or unconscious transference,)
If you consume 100x as much fiction as you do history, philosophy or theology, you will subconsciously derive your beliefs from fiction - which might have zero bearing on reality, or (as we often see invert reality completely)
This applies to moral “lessons” derived from fiction as well. In fact, this is the entire reason we read morality tales with talking animals to our children: we know they will internalise the “lessons” in those stories, even though the stories may not be factually true, they contain a symbolic representation which can be true.
After a lifetime of consuming such made up stories, you end up in a state you could call “fiction-brained”: where your beliefs about the world are subconsciously based primarily on movies, novels, and sadly in most cases on social media.
The Boomer Truth Regime works by implanting emotions and connecting simplistic morality lessons to it, which is the programming/message that 'sticks' in the mind - especially effective on women who are more driven by emotion and social factors.