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54
Mixed Global

Alcoholic beverages are claimed to force you to think more about the bad than the good because they are a depressant.

The claim that alcohol as a depressant forces individuals to think more about the bad than the good is a statement about its psychological effects rather than purely physical. The provided evidence discusses the physical and cognitive effects of alcohol, such as impaired judgment, memory issues, and altered brain function, which are generally consistent with the characteristics of a depressant. However, none of the sources directly address the claim that alcohol specifically leads individuals to focus more on negative thoughts. Without direct corroboration of this specific psychological impact, the evidence supports but does not conclusively prove the claim. Therefore, based on the available evidence, including the broad effects of alcohol as a depressant, the claim is partly plausible but unverified in terms of its specific psychological assertion.

June 20, 2026 Language: en 1 claim analyzed

Individual Claims

54
Mixed Health
Alcoholic beverages force you to think more about the bad than the good because they are a depressant.
The sources describe the general depressant effects of alcohol, which include impairing judgment and memory. However, they do not specifically confirm that alcohol induces a focus on negative thoughts over positive ones. Thus, the claim is plausible but the evidence is indirect.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score 60
Web Consensus Weight 50
Source Quality Score 50
Source Quality Weight 25
Llm Reasoning Score 50
Llm Reasoning Weight 25
Weighted Total 54
Evidence Summary Web evidence supports general depressant effects of alcohol, none specifically confirm focus shift to negative thoughts.

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