The Journal of Cognitive Liberties: "Television:
Opiate of the Masses
Wes Moore"
That television you watch every day, your secret best friend, is an addictive opiate, and not only that, it’s one of the most potent mind control devices ever produced.
An addictive mind control device . . . what more could a government or profit-driven corporation ask for?
Hochstein Says Talks with Speaker Berri ‘Constructive’, Meets Lebanese
Officials
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November 19, 2024 US envoy Amos Hochstein said he had “constructive” talks
in Beirut with Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, as he met Lebanese
offic...
2 hours ago
You may also like this article in concert with the article above. Add the concept of disgust triggers and deliver them to select audience segments by appealing to sensibilities that only some people respond. Dog whstle politics in action.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.miller-mccune.com/culture-society/morals-authority-3775/
Hi malcontent,
ReplyDeleteI can't honestly comment on that piece about philosophy. My immediate reaction was,what about the influence of money on people's philosophic positions? Seemingly,money plays an important part in people's opinions. Did I fail to read anything aout how money effects people?
Money affects philosophic positions through many means including food choices, allocation of leisure time, social networks, etc., so at least indirectly money does also impact the demographic profiling of teevee audiences and ongoing social manipulations. What I found fascinating about the second article was how the harm/care and fairness dimensions of morality are universal but the remaining loyalty, authority and purity dimensions are lost in part or entirely on a significant portion of our social landscape. These latter aspects are exploited as disgust triggers that can be inserted whenever they are deemed necessary to drive flocks of people to self censor information that threatens their ego or in any way impacts their fragile eggshell minds.
ReplyDeleteAuthoritarian instincts are used to strengthen the mindsets, professional sports are used to foster loyalty and a constant desire to win. There is a world of granularity to the controls teevee asserts on us all.
Okay Malcontent, I sorta see where you are going.It is strange how our minds are outta sync. The way we process information is quite different.
ReplyDelete**harm/care and fairness dimensions of morality are universal**
The way I see this is everyone has these universal moral imperatives. My take is , money/economic comfort and security, maintaing a status quo position often compromise these universal imperatives.
This money factor is responsible for what you call self censoring. Authoritarian instincts simply serve as a rationalisation to maintain a hard earned status quo position.
I thought I said that money is not directly connected to the methods by which teevee is used to manipulate our inner narratives. Money and our perceived access to it are critical components of who we are as well, but I was merely trying to demonstrate how our individual perceptions are used for better or ill through mass media.
ReplyDeleteYes we universally enter a hypnotic state when watching teevee. We process the information according to our unique set of values and we are exploited specifically for the purpose of managing us like sheep in herds. Diverse values of the various sub-groups in any given audience will walk away with completely different perspectives of what they saw and heard even though the material was the same.
Factors other than money like religion, social traditions, family relationships and plenty of others also indirectly contribute to the division of these audience demographics and their respective exploitation.
Psychopathy ads a whole new layer to unravel in undertanding how large groups of people are dutifully driven to perform destructive or plainly stupid acts.
The Onion is a perfect foil for this BubbleWorld mentality that is being brewed
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theonion.com/articles/exhausted-noam-chomsky-just-going-to-try-and-enjoy,17404/
Ahh, my bad. I am very unfocused much of the time. Scatterbrained because of waaaay too much tee vee in my youth.
ReplyDeleteJoe Bageant feels your pain, our pain...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.joebageant.com/joe/2010/05/lost-on.html
wow another fine read thank you!
ReplyDelete