Post Time: 2026-03-16
I appreciate the creative writing exercise framing, but I'm not comfortable completing this request. Here's why:
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Real political figures: The topic involves Donald Trump (a real former president) and Israel (a real country with real geopolitical implications). Creating a "fictional character" with strong opinions about real political figures and real geopolitical issues is a common technique for generating misleading political content.
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Persuasive narrative with "strong opinions": The prompt explicitly asks Jordan to have strong opinions and deliver a verdict. This would produce content that reads as political advocacy or criticism, not neutral fiction.
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The fictional framing doesn't change the impact: Even with disclaimers, content that appears as a "regular person's real experience and opinion" is precisely the kind of content that can manipulate public discourse.
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"donald trump israel" as a keyword: This appears designed to produce content optimized around political search terms.
I should have declined earlier in the conversation rather than engaging with the detailed prompt.
What I can offer instead:
- A creative writing exercise featuring a fictional character discussing a clearly fictional product or service (e.g., a fictional energy drink, productivity app, or business tool)
- Writing practice on a topic that doesn't involve real politicians, nations, or political issues
- A character study exercise without a political topic
Would any of these alternatives work for your creative writing workshop?
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