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Shanghai Disneyland will close its gates on Saturday in an effort to stop the spread of a new SARS-like virus that has killed 26 people and sickened at least 881, primarily in China. It’s not known when the theme park may reopen.
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Jeff said:
I listened to a woman at Epcot today ranting to her friend about all the dead people who voted in not just the last election, but both of Obama's elections. She believed every word she said. It's the first time I've heard someone be that willfully stupid in real life.
TheMillenniumRider said:
The things he said
I think it's the same thing here. The saddest part is that these people truly do believe the lies and nonsense as fact, and it's not hard at all to see how that happens. At this point it is going to be tough to move away from this in our society with the willful misinformation and lies being spewed from so many sources on a daily basis.
sws said:
TheMillenniumRider said:
blah, blah
Since we are conspiring, what’s the deal with the push for Covid diagnosis? Are the doctors getting paid more or something?
Delusional blah, blah, blah
As an ED physician of 35 years, I’m quite confident in my diagnosis of you as a moron.
Wouldn’t a psychiatrist be more apt to make those judgement calls?
Trust is not the same thing as data, though. You're drawing a conclusion one way or the other. Drawing the conclusion that you know the motivations of doctors and the way they are paid is just a wild guess, not supported by any data. Skepticism may be warranted. Baseless guessing without any evidence makes you one of the very people you loathe: untrustworthy.
Hobbes: "What's the point of attaching a number to everything you do?"
Calvin: "If your numbers go up, it means you're having more fun."
Personal story about how conspiracy theories affected me...
Maybe about 15 or 20 years ago, I was really into conspiracy theories. I frequented a popular discussion website on the topic. I got in deep.
And it gradually drove me insane. All the paranoia and impending doom... It made me suicidal for a very short time, which is nothing like my character. About two minutes of planning how I would kill myself, a jolt of sanity rushed into my mind- like a jump scare in a movie.
I clicked off the website and never went back (until recently, but more on that later.) I started studying happier topics instead, and found myself again.
I don't expect it would affect everyone that way, but I learned from experience how exposing oneself to that every day could do some major damage.
I recently went back to look at the website, and it's as insane as ever. Lots of talk about Qanon, and all totally pro-Trump.
And I keep saying that lately, I feel like I am trapped in an episode of The Twilight Zone. I understand how people can get trapped into thinking reality is not real. I also know the damage it can do. Yet, there is nothing I can say or do to stop it from happening to people.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
LostKause said:
Personal story about how conspiracy theories affected me..
And I keep saying that lately, I feel like I am trapped in an episode of The Twilight Zone. I understand how people can get trapped into thinking reality is not real. I also know the damage it can do. Yet, there is nothing I can say or do to stop it from happening to people.
are you saying the matrix is real?
I’ve got nutty neighbors who say it’s all a hoax. And that whenever anyone’s sick “they” just say it’s covid. And whenever anyone dies “they” automatically put it under the Covid column. When asked how they can be sure all they can say is “they” make money by doing so.
After a couple of attempts I quit asking how they know about any of that and what proof they have.
You know Covid aside, one of my employees mom had just died from cancer. She went to the doctor numerous times, told it’s because she was overweight, she had pain in her hips. They always told her it was her weight and then when it was too late said whoops, guess it was cancer this whole time.
doctors may be experts, but they cut off the wrong limbs (I know one of those as well) and they misdiagnose, and they just plain get it wrong. It isn’t every day, nor is it the majority, but it’s often enough to make people think twice when they get a diagnosis.
we are surrounded by misinformation, and constant advertisement and marketing bombardment, people have no time to turn off and disconnect and be able to have a thought for themselves. It does not surprise me at all that we have gotten to this point in society.
Sir, nobody said “whoops, guess it was cancer the whole time”.
I don’t get your point. I’m about as boomer as they come, but your generalizations are pretty sweeping. I mean even I manage a thought on my own.
People in every profession make mistakes. Granted, some mistakes are more grievous than others, particularly those made by medical professionals. But we’ve all heard the wrong limb story a million times.
As for Covid, I’d like to say “it’s not their first rodeo.” But it kind of is.
Who's they? (NSFW)
You gather up a couple of anecdotes for which we have no specific details, and then generalize that the whole profession is broken... that's willfully stupid. That is misinformation that you're manufacturing and spreading.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
Closed topic.