Not sure if it’s related to your story, but a lot of people self indoctrinated through right-wing media. There was a documentary that came out in 2016: The Brainwashing of My Dad.
Sure, but something can be “compelling” for any number of reasons and truth or accuracy don’t need to factor in. People like to hear what makes them feel good or confirms their existing beliefs.
So your model of why conservative views stick for some people is that they cause massive dopamine surges like a drug?
Is it some kind of kundalini yoga mantra that tickles the roof of the mouth just right to activate the natural meth?
And when considering that explanation versus the alternate explanation that they might have some good points, the magic meth words story is the one you’d go with?
Not sure if it’s related to your story, but a lot of people self indoctrinated through right-wing media. There was a documentary that came out in 2016: The Brainwashing of My Dad.
It’s online if you haven’t seen it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FS52QdHNTh8
https://piped.video/watch?v=FS52QdHNTh8
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=FS52QdHNTh8
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
You might like this video https://youtu.be/QRxZmQnDA20
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/QRxZmQnDA20
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
So if there’s certain material which, whenever a person encounters it, changes their mind, how do you account for that?
Wouldn’t the simplest explanation for that be that this material contains compelling arguments people aren’t seeing outside that material?
The History Channel makes compelling arguments for how extra-terrestrials built the pyramids. Compelling doesn’t always equal true.
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In this case I’m using to to mean compelling to people with a brain, not just “history channel made a speculation so I’m sold”
If you’re taken in by conspiracy theories, it’s not because the information is compelling-but-unseen, but rather because you want to believe that
A) information that confirms your biases is true
B) you are privy to knowledge others don’t have.
These two things reinforce one another.
Sure, but something can be “compelling” for any number of reasons and truth or accuracy don’t need to factor in. People like to hear what makes them feel good or confirms their existing beliefs.
In much the same way that meth is “compelling”
So your model of why conservative views stick for some people is that they cause massive dopamine surges like a drug?
Is it some kind of kundalini yoga mantra that tickles the roof of the mouth just right to activate the natural meth?
And when considering that explanation versus the alternate explanation that they might have some good points, the magic meth words story is the one you’d go with?
Or, and I know this is really out there, but maybe, just maybe, facts don’t actually care about your feelings.
Yeah but you have no idea what claims are in these materials, because you think they’re too toxic to read.
Completely untrue. I’m not afraid of news outlets. I’m not afraid of what the “others” have to say
Pretty sure you’re talking about yourself here, champ.
Ooh man! You’re rubber I’m glue. What a deft turnaround!
Was it? You proud of those words?
Cause everyone else here thinks you’re an idiot…
Maybe for idiots
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