Sometimes on the Internet I bump into an
article which I wish I had written because it so perfectly reflects my
thoughts. This is the case here with this article from Michael Krieger on
LibertyBlitzkrieg.
Troubled times are also times of polarization
when you are either black or white and nuances are gone. It requires great work
and patience to understand issues and form an opinion which is not the reflection
of the last article you just read. It is even harder to write without passion when
everybody screams, censorship is rampant and disinformation the rule.
To avoid my own involuntary bias, I try to
stick to data and statistics but even that has become subjective and tainted as
we have seen in the months long saga of Covid-19. The madder our world becomes
the more we will need a strong compass to navigate these treacherous waters. This
is exactly what this article is about.
Mike Krieger: "Trust No One!"
The title of today’s post is not meant to be taken literally. I trust plenty of people. I trust friends who’ve demonstrated their trustworthiness over the years. I trust my family. Having people in my life I love and trust makes everything far more meaningful and pleasant. I hope people reading this likewise have a circle of trust they’ve built over the years.
On the other hand, you should never trust
anyone or anything that hasn’t given you good reason to do so, and if someone
or something gives you good reason not to trust them, you should never forget
that. The more power a person or institution has in society, the less
trustworthy they tend to be. I don’t say this because it’s fun to be cynical, I
say this because my life experience has demonstrated its accuracy.
In the 21st century alone, I’ve been given
good reason to distrust all sorts of things around me, including the U.S.
government (all governments really), intelligence agencies, politicians, mass
media, Wall Street and Silicon Valley, to name a few. These power centers make
up “society” as we know it in 2020, which is really just massive concentrations
of lawless financial and political power obfuscating rampant criminality behind
the cover various ostensibly venerable institutions. What’s most remarkable is
how many people still maintain trust in so many of these provably untrustworthy
organizations and industries, which speaks to the power of propaganda as well
as the comfort of denial.
That said, the ground is clearly beginning
to shift on this front. As more and more people recognize that the system’s
designed to work against them, increased numbers will reject conventional
wisdom and search for an alternative framework. Unfortunately, this next step
can be equally treacherous and it’s important not to jump from the frying pan
into the fire.
This is where social media comes into play.
It offers an endless array of opinions and analysis that you don’t get from
mass media, but it’s also filled with bad actors, professional propagandists
and con artists. At this point, everyone knows that social media is the new
information battleground, so every character or institution with malicious
intent is aggressively playing in this arena and often with boatloads of money.
The charlatans at MSNBC will have you believe it’s just the Russians or
Chinese, but every government and every single special interest on the planet
is now involved. They’re all on social media in one form or another, trying to
push you in a specific direction that’s usually not in your best interests.
It took me a while, but I’ve finally
recognized how unthoughtful and treacherous social media is whenever some big
news event hits. Important arguments quickly lose all nuance and devolve into
binary talking points and agendas. People split into teams in a way that feels
very much akin to the traditional, and now largely discredited, red/blue
political theater. For covid-19, it felt like half of Twitter thought it was an
extinction-level event, while the other half was convinced the whole thing was
a hoax. In the aftermath of George Floyd, you were either cheering on the civil
unrest, or wanted to send in the military. Increasingly, if you aren’t in one
of two manufactured camps on any issue you’ll be shouted down and ostracized. That’s not the kind of discussion I’m here
for.
As someone who’s found great value in
Twitter over the years, I’ve become far more careful in how I use it and where
to direct my attention and energy. It reminds me of Mos Eisley in Star Wars, a
wretched hive of scum and villainy, but simultaneously a place you can connect
with Han Solo and get a spaceship.
As we move forward, it’s going to feel like
the world’s ending, and in some ways it will be. No the world isn’t literally
ending, but a specific kind of world is ending, and it’ll be extremely
difficult for many people to tell the difference as it’s happening. This will
likely lead to many more episodes of mass insanity as professional manipulators
take advantage of millions upon millions of disoriented people. Priority number
one should be to stand guard at the gate of your mind during this time so as
not to become a victim.
The best thing you can do from here on out
is use your time and energy as productively as possible. We’re going to need
builders, creators and inventors more than ever before, because we’re past the
point of putting this thing back together. We’ll need to recreate, reimagine
and rebuild, and all of this must spring from a point of consciousness in order
to bring forth something that is both better and sustainable. Become more
beautiful and resilient as others become ugly and unhinged. Focus on what’s
within your capacity to control and always remember to resist the crazy.
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