That’s how it looks like from your perspective. From a reader’s perspective, it looks like someone who isn’t a notable community figure on LessWrong (At least, I assume this, based on your karma scores and the fact that I have never heard of you. If I’m wrong, I apologise.) has suddenly made a claim with a significant burden of proof on it, and not provided any concrete evidence, despite apparently sitting on some. “I have evidence but am not going to include this in this post, nor will I explain why I cannot include the evidence in this post.” is an immediate red flag.
Additionally, I refer to Michaelos’s point, who puts it better than I can. You’re accusing someone of being insane, but your post comes off as not being all that serious, with the “lol”s interspersed.
Lastly, you claim that your story is easily verified, but some Google searches have turned up absolutely nothing even tangenitally related to your claim except for this thread. If it’s easily verified by external sources, I haven’t been able to see it.
So, if it never occurred to you that your story would be doubted, you’ve obviously made a mistake somewhere. Your evidence in favor of you telling the truth (You’ve been on LW for a while, you’re opening yourself up to falsification, you have no known reasons to start attacking this person) is simply nowhere near sufficient.
That said, you can still fix this. Clearly, you were wrong about the likelihood of people doubting you, but everyone makes mistakes. So post your evidence, link us to somewhere that verifies your story, and I expect the problem will be solved.
The Courage Wolf looked long and slow at the Weasley twins. At length he spoke, “I see that you possess half of courage. That is good. Few achieve that.”
“Half?” Fred asked, too awed to be truly offended.
“Yes,” said the Wolf, “You know how to heroically defy, but you do not know how to heroically submit. How to say to another, ‘You are wiser than I; tell me what to do and I will do it. I do not need to understand; I will not cost you the time to explain.’ And there are those in your lives wiser than you, to whom you could say that.”
“But what if they’re wrong?” George said.
“If they are wrong, you die,” the Wolf said plainly, “Horribly. And for nothing. That is why it is an act of courage.”
HPMOR omake by Daniel Speyer.