matrixmann: (Default)
matrixmann ([personal profile] matrixmann) wrote2014-10-02 10:53 pm

Cars protect you from bullets

Media ruins the logical thinking of people. Lacking reality experiences, and increasing the lack by taking in what they say, people adopt the logic of amateurs which don't know exactly what they're talking about.
They get filled with wrong and simple information which doesn't reflect physics or historical content.
It is a second dimension which exists virtually; its news and its contents work in this sphere, but nowhere else.
There're as far off reality as the moon is from the earth.

But because people lack knowledge about reality, they tend to believe these simple-minded world views.
They don't know that there's not just a few moderates who fight an evil regime, but the same group which received weapons and means for the last few decades, they don't know that there's not just a revolution going on, but foreign forces paying and enlisting activists for an issue they've been planning all along abroad and they don't know that it's not whole political parties but single persons who are member of a certain society which never is mentioned which advocate certain political changes.
They believe it's about culture fights if there's an armed upheaval, if it's about a woman being fired from a high position that it's because of her being the frame that she is.

They get urged to think with a mind that's been built up by stories that fairytale writers invented.
None of that reflects reality, but owning nothing which verifies the given information which could possibly tell them about the discrepancy in between, the assumption remains that this world works that easily.

[identity profile] gonzo21.livejournal.com 2015-03-26 12:03 am (UTC)(link)
And people have also been taught that their opinion is just as important and valid as an experts. So you see these people lacking knowledge of reality, but utterly convinced that their ill-informed opinion is just as 'valid' as the experts.

[identity profile] gonzo21.livejournal.com 2015-03-26 02:04 pm (UTC)(link)
It amazes me these days just how low the bar is on something becoming 'true', like, once somebody has seen it re-tweeted once, it becomes a 'fact'.

Reality has never been so thin.