Birds are real, a US government agency wants to assure you

Authored by cnet.com and submitted by Apxm
image for Birds are real, a US government agency wants to assure you

A parody movement claims birds aren't real. Now, a government agency, the US Consumer Product Safety Commission, is jumping in to defend its feathered friends.

Background: Peter McIndoe, 23, created the "Birds Aren't Real" movement in 2017 as a parody of conspiracy theories, according to The New York Times, His storyline claimed birds are drones created by the government to spy on its citizens, although McIndoe says he's done with the joke now. "It's a way to laugh at the madness rather than be overcome by it," he told the newspaper.

Not everyone has heard of the "Birds Aren't Real" claim, but apparently someone at the US Consumer Product Safety Commission has, because on Wednesday, that organization's account tweeted, "Birds are real."

Birds are real. — US Consumer Product Safety Commission (@USCPSC) January 5, 2022

The tweet flew high with readers -- more than 35,000 people have liked it as of this writing.

Then the commission offered up a number of images of two birds having a long conversation -- oddly enough, about having a potluck. Seems one bird wants to be the host, but doesn't feel it can outdo the other bird's impressive potlucks. In the end, the birds decide to come together and host a joint event. Again, this really happened on a US government agency's Twitter account.

Sorry, but this is nature and it is a wonder. pic.twitter.com/ia5Xedt8l0 — US Consumer Product Safety Commission (@USCPSC) January 5, 2022

Turns out the thread was meant to promote something -- not potlucks or birds being real, but a government website, SaferProducts.gov, where consumers can report unsafe items. The account encouraged people to use the site "if a product you own unexpectedly blows up, lights something on fire, breaks dangerously, or does anything dangerous, really."

Thank you for coming. This has been a government PSA about a government website called https://t.co/qFWdMF6Xk0 — US Consumer Product Safety Commission (@USCPSC) January 5, 2022

Maybe the birds mentioning slow cookers is meant to remind people of the (spoiler!) slow-cooker death in 2018 on the TV show This Is Us? Because if any product should've been reported to a dangerous-items website, that was it.

Regardless, people seemed to approve of a government agency breaking out from the boring and flying free as a bird.

"This was weird... and I 100% approve of it," wrote one person.

This was weird... and I 100% approve of it. — $6MGS7 (@6MGS7) January 5, 2022

Said another, "This is by far the most efficient and effective use of my tax dollars. Thank you, all of you."

Alpha10101 on January 8th, 2022 at 15:02 UTC »

Ok guys, it's official.

Birds have infiltrated the government!

God help us all

LordEdgeward_TheTurd on January 8th, 2022 at 14:35 UTC »

Nice another meme that went far enough to get an public announcement from an agency. Like the forestry service doing a PSA about not trying to outrun your friends if a bears chasing you, not long ago.

IAWOfficial on January 8th, 2022 at 14:33 UTC »

Why do they sit on power lines if not to charge their batteries?