(1257) Afternoon all.
16. Moosh corner
15. Afternoon roundup
14. Combining Ian J and Penseivat at 805
13. Harris and the brainwashed left
12. IYE, at 805:2, addresses a major point
… which I, as a supposedly serious but prolific blogger, need to take into account. I’ve just put up intros about it at both UHC and Jstack, with a topic after that. There are only so many minutes in the day we can devote to this online stuff, let alone the MSM.
But it’s more than that:
“This is an incredibly important read to understand the psychological games, how the brain works, and more importantly – how brainwashing works. Once people have reached a point of exhaustion, which most have at this point, the mind becomes far more suggesti(ble) and it’s easy to fall into clickbait traps….”
Corey adds:
There are countless psychological campaigns rolling out simultaneously, most of which are done to induce fear and cognitive dissonance while other goals are achieved. Alongside those are hyped up clickbait posts on social media that are meant to create a false sense of hope, fear, anger, confusion, or generate ad revenue.
The problem is, a lot of people tend to react from emotion and share the information without even taking a closer look or doing a little bit of research. Some of the most annoying clickbait has been circulating the internet for years, even decades, and this article is intended to end those misconceptions once and for all.
The irony here, in this post item, is that it’s going to take you a certain time to click into NOWP, follow the links, read the articles and perhaps even return here for item 13 on Roseanne Barr. Also today, there is so much material compared to yesterday … there’s a backlog I need to get through just to “catch up”.
The Roseanne item has a comment attached which is quite to the point as well, based on the Yuri Bezmenov “demoralisation” idea … that people go past the point of capacity to reason, to think clearly.
Re 16. Moosh corner:
The late Fred Dibnah would have loved that!
Also Moosh. Also amazing when you consider the size of cameras at the time.
And photography was not the “shoot dozens of frames and one of them will be a good un.”