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#1
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Rumors in the age of unreason
An interesting read from the New Yorker.
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Having argued my way through a few threads (when I was hot-headed and fervourish) back in 2001 and 2002 - I'm not blameless. I read what mongoose is spouting and wonder if I ever came across like that. Anyway - thoughts?
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Doesn't information itself have a liberal bias? - S. Colbert |
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#2
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
Music For the Masses? Just kidding.
Not to scream, "I'M NOT LIKE THAT!", but I prefer hearing all sides of a story and tend to take everything I read with a grain of salt. And vinegar. A little pepper too. No, make that loads of pepper. Mongoose has always tripped me out from the beginning. In regards to the above article, television viewing has always been this way and has been, in the past, the main source of information for the past few decades. I've never been much of a televison watcher. Except during college, then again there was usually the smell of pot in the room back then too. Go figure. I know this is cliche, but I believe we've entered a new era of open mindedness. Hopefully.
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Last edited by jOHN rODRIGUEZ; 11-01-2009 at 09:12 PM. |
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#3
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
Makes a lot of sense. When you go from three tv networks and a single regional newspaper to cable news and the interwebs people are going to quickly fill the void. the AP and reuters can still be the backbone, but its no longer required for the handful of news outlets to just report because the limited number of news outlets can't support diverse minority perspectives. Now, new guys can just offer to filter, groom, and present in a new packaged form. They'll pitch a tent on some internet real estate and friendly readers will camp out. Really seems like the way things are.
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1. The internet graph has too many edges, too many connections. its virtually impossible to not stumble on something outside yer box of gold stamped ideas. Do a youtube search on ann coulter, olbermann might show up. People will have no choice but to be exposed to differing points of view even if its by arguing with PatriotUSA4EVA in the comment section. Thesis, anti-thesis, synthesis. In a way, I'm optimistic to see the internet as an accelerated dialectic process, that will start slowly, but increase in magnitude at an exponential rate. 2. Specific problems facing individuals vis a vis the economy, wars, climate, corporatism, environmentalism, religion, will essentially force people start searching and reading based on problems, not ideologies. As Carl Jung said, Neurosis is always a substitute for legitimate suffering. It seems to me that the real problems we're facing will do nothing but make the people who care think broadly and the people who don't care, start. And I honestly think the diversity of one's attitudes is a function of how much one cares. I personally have everything from worldnetdaily (the birthers) to infowars (alex jones) to huffingtonpost (my favorite) to newsmax to dailykos to drudge, etc.. on my rss feed reader. Part of the reasoning was some attempt to stay intellectually honest even if it means wading through endless nonsense, but anymore, its been just a sincere desire to see all sides of a particular problem, because of how critical the problem has become. I think our culture is in for some serious legitimate suffering. 3. Ideologies sag and die under their own shelf life. This poll just came out that showed in the states both parties are losing favorability and voter association. Even more interesting is the independent camp is leading. Next election I plan to either vote for the libertarian or green party candidate, which ever one is less of a wing-nut. And I expect to be joined by more voters than ever in the history of the country. Bush was dead to me because of the iraq war. Obama is dead to me because of the bailout and the way he's handling it. I think these things will be main stream opinion. Anyway, no one sounds like mongoose except for mongoose.
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"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it." - Mark Twain |
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#4
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
hhhhh, lets make this interesting.
how about: in an effort to appear post-bias, an article is posted into a thread made on a forum about how we like to pay attention to news sources that agree with us. since actually following through and reading up drudge report to assure our 'guilty' consciences is practically insane because drudge isnt a decent source of anything, this can only be an in for everyone to pat themselves for being introspective enough to realize that they read news like everyone else has been for hundreds of years. come on. could you honestly be guilt tripped enough to look at pundits use weasel words to swipe at whoever you agree with just to know that you're goodly enough to sit through it? following the news has been turned into a character trait. it's not that anyone's curious, it's supposed to be a tool for bettering yourself when practically everyone in the news sucks/refuses at being objective about it. so you look at the news to get talking points for your own beliefs, that's how news, politics, ideas, statistics, peers, hunches, growing up means. it's a bullshit little non-thing to say just to do the same kind of self-affirmation that we're supposedly addressing. |
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#5
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
What a great opening sentence in the article you posted.
"Here we are, quadrillions of bytes deep into the Information Age. And yet information, it seems, has never mattered less." My worry is that we're not mature enough as a global society to responsibly handle the ease with which we can receive and pass on information. Yeah, the internet allows for the intelligent and immediate exchange of ideas, but honestly, it also gives really stupid people an equal sized soap box to scream their idiocy from. I mean, I don't believe that the majority of Republicans are "birthers" by a long shot, and I don't think that anywhere near the majority of them are racists, either. And I don't think that the majority of Democrats were "truthers", or PETA freaks who equate chicken farms with Nazi concentration camps. But damn if those aren't the ones that tend to grab more headlines than anyone else from their respective parties. Right now, it seems that everyone's just seeing how deep they can dig their heels in for their team, regardless of the quality of the debate, or the accuracy/honesty of their assertions. And unfortunately, there are tons of other stupid people out there who are just gobbling it all up without even a half-hearted attempt to find anything resembling an objective fact. Hell, it's hard to figure out the objective facts even when you are actively searching for them, so it's incredibly unnerving to imagine the folks who are actively avoiding them. But for me, the cherry on top of it all is that a very notable part of the dumb-dialogue of today seems to be unabashed hatred and mockery of "intellectualism". At a time in human history when intelligence is more crucial to our collective survival than ever, we really can't afford to be setting our sights on achieving willful ignorance. So I feel like global society is at a tipping point, where if we tip one way we race headlong into the downfall of the human race, tip the other and we'll actually survive to evolve into a far more advanced and stable future. I honestly feel like it's a 50/50 crap-shoot at this point.
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#6
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
isnt that the same kind of binary that prevents even the pretense at objective fact?
somehow i dont think following a medley of news sources to go after some perfect balance will result in a more stable anything. people are terrible, people like being terrible and finding new ways to be terrible, so it will keep being easy to knock down people who try not to be terrible. racism will evolve with a different dialogue our kids will think we havent addressed, more virulent parties will think to combine the rhetoric of different atrocities, convinced that they'll use what's worked towards a right solution "this time." since both of those are happening right now it's either falling down to degradation or realizing that it's the same kind of bullshit that will keep balancing and tumbling with itself as long as we're around. |
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#7
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
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![]() Anyone out there can put whatever information they want on Wikipedia, their own blogs, or on any number of other websites, and if they can find a way to steer enough traffic to them, then they've effectively reached more people than they ever would have otherwise. So the crazies who used to just rock back and forth alone in their basement now rock back and forth in their basement with a potential audience of millions. Strangelet, you're more optimistic about it than I am when you say that "specific problems facing individuals...will essentially force people start searching and reading based on problems, not ideologies". In my mind, it seems like people have more of an outlet for their ideological beliefs than ever before, and will continue to take advantage of it - too often in negative, even destructive ways - as long as people are listening.
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Download all my remixes Last edited by Sean; 11-02-2009 at 04:09 PM. |
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#8
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
LOL dubman.
Can't say I disagree with much of what you said. Its just not enough to convince me that reading a lot of news sources of differing levels of quality and bents isn't a good idea and something to recommend everyone else do as well. If the reasons I gave above aren't enough I can provide more. Quote:
Like I said, reviewing various sources allows you to search and filter based on problem, not on ideology. Camping out on a single angle will not get you anywhere. Yes its true the attitudes you bring to the table will color your experience. But that's true whether you camp or go wander. Moreso if you just camp. And unless you're an inert piece of angus tri-tip with the curiosity and imagination of a rock, eventually you'll have no choice but to a. suppose the possibility, b. begin a logical process of analyzing the possibility. Just because the process is tectonic in speed doesn't mean it doesn't exist, or that the process won't speed up over time. Which is why Quote:
I mean I don't know about you but I'm not smart enough to listen to one guy, decide I like him, formulate every possible counter argument and weakness, then decide I "agree" and turn off my brain. I doubt anyone is that smart .001% of the time. Ever experience the vertigo of watching stupid people call other people stupid? And the reason you think the stupid person calling the other person stupid is stupid is because you see a complexity of the argument that is completely oblivious to the person labeling everyone stupid? Maybe I came across as self congratulatory, but if it helps me to burn through the occasional bubbling brook of bullshit to better my odds of not being that guy, I'm fine with that. Because if there's ever a surplus of people in the world, its the douche bags getting all hostile without reason about the stupidity of the opposing viewpoint. Here's other reasons. 1. Know your enemy. Sometimes I watch fox news and listen to rush to get a better appreciation of where the country is at. You can hear about the birther's and the tea-party movement through the jokes and giggles of Maddow, or you can see it in action and get your own experience of it. And then weep. 2. You'll be surprised. Glenn Beck, this morning, was very surprising. A lady called in saying atheism and the constitution are contradictory and you can't believe in constitution without believing in the bible. Beck actually stopped her mid sentence and said atheists have a role in government like anyone else. He even went on to admit that the founding fathers had atheists in their ranks, mentioning jefferson and paine by name. They are welcome as long as they don't substitute God with the state. I mean, its a start. 3. There is no such thing as unuseful information. 4. And this is the biggie. Truth will always prevail. Always always. You can spin your propeller hat all day, it doesn't change the fact that reality is the framework in which you need to achieve your goals of survival. That means that even the most loudly shouted, manipulative news source, by definition must fail, and the reasons for that failure will be stark and unmistakable.
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"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it." - Mark Twain |
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#10
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Re: Rumors in the age of unreason
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there was a time that i bought that cherry picking your sources and getting all sides before forming an opinion was the way to go, but when you start to realize that everyone is willing to lie or color because it's really just a game to win that they have to be practical about, it's very disheartening and, as said before, exhausting. i'm cynical about myself, so realizing that the cherry-picking attitude is really just reacting against the assumption that people are self-serving would let me dismiss it as my delusion that i'm supposedly above all that. but when i see it in others i could either accept that as paranoia, or realize that peole use news, as colored as it is, as a measure of character, or as a game to be ahead of curve in. it really makes me question whether any of this is real information after people process it so self-consciously or if it's just external distractions that need to be relevant because there's not anything else. Quote:
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