Jesse Walker (1)Recensioni
Autore di The United States of Paranoia: a Conspiracy Theory
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Recensioni
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So you have to act as if you really might be interested in what they say. 'That's interesting; I hadn't heard of that. So what does Gates get out of it? Wow! How do you know that? What makes them think that?...' I suspect real skepticism might be the stake through the heart of fake skepticism. The trouble is that it's almost impossible to do, because the arguments are so maddeningly stupid.
What about the questions: “Why engage at all? If people want to believe stupid things, let them. Nobody has been given a mission to correct every dumb idea in the world. So it makes little sense to try. Apart from anything else, why put the fake-believers through the humiliation. Don't they deserve some basic human respect too (no matter how stupid their notions)? If someone wants to believe the earth is flat, there is an invisible weightless cold-fire breathing dragon - or anything else, then let them. Provided they don't act on their beliefs to the detriment of others (so this excludes anti-vaxxers with kids) then it is nobody else's business.” Easy to answer: People who believe the earth is flat ultimately do no harm. People who believe COVID caused by 5G and then burn down towers or fail to get vaccinated and prolong its spread killing more people so cause harm to others primarily. That is why they need addressing. Of course, calling them a fuckwit and moving on is not really constructive, but it is satisfying.
Recently had a woman in my blog on one of my posts who asked if I believed the virus was real, her scepticism heightened by the fact that neither she nor anyone she knew had caught the virus. I asked her how many people she knew were airline pilots. She looked puzzled, and said none. I asked her if that meant she doubted the existence of airline pilots. She said no. She then said she "had heard" that the vaccine would be used to inject computer chips into people. I asked her how chips work. She didn't know. I suggested they were designed to work in computers, and be plugged into them so they can run their programmes. I suggested this might work in her, if she was a machine, a robot. I asked her how a chip might work in a flesh and blood human, rather than a robot. She couldn't say. I then said that even if a microscopic chip could be injected, how will it be plugged into a microscopic port within - one assumes - her brain? Was there also a microscopic IT geek inside her, waiting to plug the chip in? By this stage she had gone quiet. Had I convinced her of the insanity of believing such nonsense? Maybe not.
Her thoughts as she went quite: "I knew it, this guy is part of the conspiracy, he is trying to get into my brain and manipulate it.... I better end this conversation, it could be truly dangerous".... etc., etc.
You can't eliminate them from the face of Earth.... you can only keep them into a minority, just as Trump has learned at the recent USA presidential election.