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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
NPR: yet another head-spinning experience, and more about "feels"
Tuesday, October 23, 2018 6:34 AM
SIGNYM
I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.
Wednesday, October 24, 2018 12:32 PM
Wednesday, October 24, 2018 12:55 PM
6IXSTRINGJACK
Wednesday, October 24, 2018 1:06 PM
JEWELSTAITEFAN
Quote:Originally posted by SIGNYM: This is a personal observation, so don't expect any "links" to any fancy polls or sociological studies. I spend my time in the kitchen listening to whatever happens to be available: Mostly NPR, but also Tom Luongo (a libertarian), London Paul, Gerald Celente, Harley Schlanger (also a libertarian) or whichever alt analyst happens to have posted something that day, and going from any one of those analysts to NPR is a head-spinning transition. I finally figured out the difference: NPR is constantly (and I mean CONSTANTLY) fluffing up and manipulating people's emotions. It's a fluffer (and yes, I know what that term means). For example, in their latest piece on the migrant caravan heading to the USA, they want to make sure that they provide a little "context" to the story, interviewing a tearful woman who only wants to protect her children from the violence, making sure that you get the "poor desperate migrant" angle without ever delving into WHY Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala etc are such shit-shows; whereas the other shows will readily delve into the problem of USA-fostered corruption in Central and South America. I know I mentioned this before, but that little blurb by Mary Louise Kelly (NPR) ("Sometimes the news feels like like a train going way too fast, destination unknown..." said in a "oh poor you" tone of voice) epitomizes everything wrong with NPR. But it's not just NPR. It's about a whole generation of people who believe, apparently, that they are entitled to go thru life without ever having their feelings hurt. Or people who believe that it's OK to get hysterical about phantom menaces. Or who feel "the resistance" as some sort of meaningful political statement without engaging brain first; or that mindless anger and fear are a legitimate political response. Which is why we seem to have an entire generation of people behaving like two-year-olds having a temper tantrum. Yanno, it's stupid, ugly, and counterproductive no matter WHO does it. I don't need my feelings jerked by entities who're trying to drive me in a particular direction. I have enough feelings of my own, thank you; and I have a hard enough time getting them to quiet down so I can THINK. Can we please stop coddling our precious feeling long enough to talk facts?
Wednesday, October 24, 2018 1:40 PM
Quote: why would any sensible or reasonable person feed their ears with what they already know is crappola? I'm fair certain LA has more than a couple radio stations.
Wednesday, October 24, 2018 3:15 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SIGNYM: To continue with my NPR experience of yesterday evening ... They went on to cut Trump down for his statement that there were (or might be) Middle Eastern terrorists hidden in the caravan coming north, how there was no "proof" of it, and how Trump had no respect for the truth. Now, IMHO some of Trump's statements are indeed outlandish. They're said more for effect than for accuracy. My thoughts jumped from Why WOULD Trump try to be perfectly accurate? to Why SHOULD Trump try to be perfectly accurate? ... When it's absolutely clear that the M$M has no respect for accuracy either. The previous discussion about "nationalism" was a perfect, if small, example of how NPR distorts the truth ALL THE TIME. But I don't have to look backwards TOO far to find other, far more consequential examples of M$M distorting the truth ... The RUSSIA!!RUSSIA!!RUSSIA!! hysteria "Assad gassed his own people" "Kaddafi is massacring his own people" "Hillary ... because it's time" The M$M is no more truthful than Trump. The difference between Trump and the M$M is that Trump uses "reality-TV-show-speak" while the M$M uses "neocon-neoliberal-speak". NEITHER one of them is anywhere near the truth. If the M$M doesn't respect the truth, and uses lies against Trump, why should he not lie in response? (Oh, and BTW, Obama was just as big a fibber.) So, two insights on the same night! What could be better? ***** Quote: why would any sensible or reasonable person feed their ears with what they already know is crappola? I'm fair certain LA has more than a couple radio stations. Because ALL stations are crappola. All websites and news outlets are also crappola. You are no more likely to get "the truth" from Fox as you are from NPR or RT. Feeding your brain with ideas is like following a healthy diet: Variety is key.
Wednesday, October 24, 2018 4:05 PM
Saturday, October 27, 2018 7:23 PM
Quote: 25% Of Millennials Claim They Have PTSD From 2016 Election, Study Says A new psychological study from San Francisco State University claims that a full quarter of millennials are suffering from bouts of post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, because of the 2016 elections. The study is by no means comprehensive - the research pool was limited to 769 students studying psychology at Arizona State University - but of those millennials chosen for the test, 25% reported experiencing “clinically significant” levels of stress, along with other symptoms of PTSD. Students were evaluated using an “Impact of Event” scale, which measures stress levels at various times following a major traumatic event, typically a tragedy or a personal illness or injury. The results, the Washington Examiner reports, "indicated that students’ average stress score was similar to those of witnesses of a mass shooting seven months after the incident." “The scale is used to gauge the extent to which individuals have been impacted by an event in such a way that it might lead to diagnosable post-traumatic stress disorder,” lead researcher, Melissa Hagan said in a statement released alongside the study. “What we were interested in seeing was, did the election for some people constitute a traumatic experience?” Hagan added. “And we found that it did for 25 percent of young adults.” Those students suffering symptoms all qualify for an official PTSD diagnosis, according to the study itself. And students who self-identified as a minority, as female, as a Democrat, or as a non-Christian reported the most significant stress levels. "Black and nonwhite Hispanic students scored higher on the assessment than their white classmates, for instance. Gender, political affiliation and religion all played even larger roles. Females scored about 45 percent higher than males on the assessment, and Democrats scored more than two and a half times higher than Republicans," the study said. Hagan attributed the "clinically significant" stress levels to both the election's "surprise" result and rhetoric tossed about in the final weeks of the campaign - specifically Donald Trump's comments about what makes a person a real American. But if it seems strange that simple rhetoric - speeches made in the closing weeks of a campaign when candidates from both parties were trying to instill fear in voters - should trigger actual stress symptoms months after an election, that's because it is, at least from a commonplace perspective. But it's easy to see how students might translate politics into personal harm. Since November of 2016, emotions have been at an all-time high, and outrage meters, particularly on the Left, are set to 11. Each new development from the Trump White House warrants weeks of impassioned social media postings, in-world protesting, and panicked speculation. Each simple policy change is often accompanied by concerns that President Donald Trump is going to "de-humanize" segments of the population, strip women of rights, and institutionalize everyone he disagrees with. In the months following the election, few - if any - dire predictions have come to pass, but that doesn't mean true believers aren't living in fear. It might be time, though, to let go - and grow up...
Saturday, October 27, 2018 8:33 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SIGNYM: REALLY? Quote: 25% Of Millennials Claim They Have PTSD From 2016 Election, Study Says A new psychological study from San Francisco State University claims that a full quarter of millennials are suffering from bouts of post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, because of the 2016 elections. The study is by no means comprehensive - the research pool was limited to 769 students studying psychology at Arizona State University - but of those millennials chosen for the test, 25% reported experiencing “clinically significant” levels of stress, along with other symptoms of PTSD. Students were evaluated using an “Impact of Event” scale, which measures stress levels at various times following a major traumatic event, typically a tragedy or a personal illness or injury. The results, the Washington Examiner reports, "indicated that students’ average stress score was similar to those of witnesses of a mass shooting seven months after the incident." “The scale is used to gauge the extent to which individuals have been impacted by an event in such a way that it might lead to diagnosable post-traumatic stress disorder,” lead researcher, Melissa Hagan said in a statement released alongside the study. “What we were interested in seeing was, did the election for some people constitute a traumatic experience?” Hagan added. “And we found that it did for 25 percent of young adults.” Those students suffering symptoms all qualify for an official PTSD diagnosis, according to the study itself. And students who self-identified as a minority, as female, as a Democrat, or as a non-Christian reported the most significant stress levels. "Black and nonwhite Hispanic students scored higher on the assessment than their white classmates, for instance. Gender, political affiliation and religion all played even larger roles. Females scored about 45 percent higher than males on the assessment, and Democrats scored more than two and a half times higher than Republicans," the study said. Hagan attributed the "clinically significant" stress levels to both the election's "surprise" result and rhetoric tossed about in the final weeks of the campaign - specifically Donald Trump's comments about what makes a person a real American. But if it seems strange that simple rhetoric - speeches made in the closing weeks of a campaign when candidates from both parties were trying to instill fear in voters - should trigger actual stress symptoms months after an election, that's because it is, at least from a commonplace perspective. But it's easy to see how students might translate politics into personal harm. Since November of 2016, emotions have been at an all-time high, and outrage meters, particularly on the Left, are set to 11. Each new development from the Trump White House warrants weeks of impassioned social media postings, in-world protesting, and panicked speculation. Each simple policy change is often accompanied by concerns that President Donald Trump is going to "de-humanize" segments of the population, strip women of rights, and institutionalize everyone he disagrees with. In the months following the election, few - if any - dire predictions have come to pass, but that doesn't mean true believers aren't living in fear. It might be time, though, to let go - and grow up...
Sunday, October 28, 2018 8:28 AM
Quote:Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN: Quote:Originally posted by SIGNYM: REALLY? Quote: 25% Of Millennials Claim They Have PTSD From 2016 Election, Study Says A new psychological study from San Francisco State University claims that a full quarter of millennials are suffering from bouts of post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, because of the 2016 elections. The study is by no means comprehensive - the research pool was limited to 769 students studying psychology at Arizona State University - but of those millennials chosen for the test, 25% reported experiencing “clinically significant” levels of stress, along with other symptoms of PTSD. Students were evaluated using an “Impact of Event” scale, which measures stress levels at various times following a major traumatic event, typically a tragedy or a personal illness or injury. The results, the Washington Examiner reports, "indicated that students’ average stress score was similar to those of witnesses of a mass shooting seven months after the incident." “The scale is used to gauge the extent to which individuals have been impacted by an event in such a way that it might lead to diagnosable post-traumatic stress disorder,” lead researcher, Melissa Hagan said in a statement released alongside the study. “What we were interested in seeing was, did the election for some people constitute a traumatic experience?” Hagan added. “And we found that it did for 25 percent of young adults.” Those students suffering symptoms all qualify for an official PTSD diagnosis, according to the study itself. And students who self-identified as a minority, as female, as a Democrat, or as a non-Christian reported the most significant stress levels. "Black and nonwhite Hispanic students scored higher on the assessment than their white classmates, for instance. Gender, political affiliation and religion all played even larger roles. Females scored about 45 percent higher than males on the assessment, and Democrats scored more than two and a half times higher than Republicans," the study said. Hagan attributed the "clinically significant" stress levels to both the election's "surprise" result and rhetoric tossed about in the final weeks of the campaign - specifically Donald Trump's comments about what makes a person a real American. But if it seems strange that simple rhetoric - speeches made in the closing weeks of a campaign when candidates from both parties were trying to instill fear in voters - should trigger actual stress symptoms months after an election, that's because it is, at least from a commonplace perspective. But it's easy to see how students might translate politics into personal harm. Since November of 2016, emotions have been at an all-time high, and outrage meters, particularly on the Left, are set to 11. Each new development from the Trump White House warrants weeks of impassioned social media postings, in-world protesting, and panicked speculation. Each simple policy change is often accompanied by concerns that President Donald Trump is going to "de-humanize" segments of the population, strip women of rights, and institutionalize everyone he disagrees with. In the months following the election, few - if any - dire predictions have come to pass, but that doesn't mean true believers aren't living in fear. It might be time, though, to let go - and grow up...Can't say I'm really shocked. I am a tad surprised that more like 100% of Collegium Studiments studying psychology are not self-diagnosing PTSD from whatever disrupted their little world, regardless of what generation claims them. Was this more of the highbrow revelations on NPR? Did Kooky Roberts report?
Sunday, October 28, 2018 9:03 AM
THG
Sunday, October 28, 2018 9:24 AM
Quote:Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK: Apparently these "journalists" don't know what an adjective is. Just take the "white" out of it and you've got a perfect antonym to Globalist.
Sunday, October 28, 2018 12:32 PM
1KIKI
Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.
Sunday, October 28, 2018 12:45 PM
REAVERFAN
Sunday, October 28, 2018 1:04 PM
Sunday, October 28, 2018 2:30 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK: Quote:Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN: Quote:Originally posted by SIGNYM: REALLY? Quote: 25% Of Millennials Claim They Have PTSD From 2016 Election, Study Says A new psychological study from San Francisco State University claims that a full quarter of millennials are suffering from bouts of post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, because of the 2016 elections. The study is by no means comprehensive - the research pool was limited to 769 students studying psychology at Arizona State University - but of those millennials chosen for the test, 25% reported experiencing “clinically significant” levels of stress, along with other symptoms of PTSD. Students were evaluated using an “Impact of Event” scale, which measures stress levels at various times following a major traumatic event, typically a tragedy or a personal illness or injury. The results, the Washington Examiner reports, "indicated that students’ average stress score was similar to those of witnesses of a mass shooting seven months after the incident." “The scale is used to gauge the extent to which individuals have been impacted by an event in such a way that it might lead to diagnosable post-traumatic stress disorder,” lead researcher, Melissa Hagan said in a statement released alongside the study. “What we were interested in seeing was, did the election for some people constitute a traumatic experience?” Hagan added. “And we found that it did for 25 percent of young adults.” Those students suffering symptoms all qualify for an official PTSD diagnosis, according to the study itself. And students who self-identified as a minority, as female, as a Democrat, or as a non-Christian reported the most significant stress levels. "Black and nonwhite Hispanic students scored higher on the assessment than their white classmates, for instance. Gender, political affiliation and religion all played even larger roles. Females scored about 45 percent higher than males on the assessment, and Democrats scored more than two and a half times higher than Republicans," the study said. Hagan attributed the "clinically significant" stress levels to both the election's "surprise" result and rhetoric tossed about in the final weeks of the campaign - specifically Donald Trump's comments about what makes a person a real American. But if it seems strange that simple rhetoric - speeches made in the closing weeks of a campaign when candidates from both parties were trying to instill fear in voters - should trigger actual stress symptoms months after an election, that's because it is, at least from a commonplace perspective. But it's easy to see how students might translate politics into personal harm. Since November of 2016, emotions have been at an all-time high, and outrage meters, particularly on the Left, are set to 11. Each new development from the Trump White House warrants weeks of impassioned social media postings, in-world protesting, and panicked speculation. Each simple policy change is often accompanied by concerns that President Donald Trump is going to "de-humanize" segments of the population, strip women of rights, and institutionalize everyone he disagrees with. In the months following the election, few - if any - dire predictions have come to pass, but that doesn't mean true believers aren't living in fear. It might be time, though, to let go - and grow up...Can't say I'm really shocked. I am a tad surprised that more like 100% of Collegium Studiments studying psychology are not self-diagnosing PTSD from whatever disrupted their little world, regardless of what generation claims them. Was this more of the highbrow revelations on NPR? Did Kooky Roberts report? I find it heartening that not all of the college kids are allowing themselves to be brainwashed by the "Progressive" agenda. You might find this enjoyable. Do Right, Be Right. :)
Sunday, October 28, 2018 3:49 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: Is there an internet definition for a troll who's also a spammer? tic tac
Sunday, October 28, 2018 6:14 PM
Quote:Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN: Quote:Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK: Quote:Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN: Quote:Originally posted by SIGNYM: REALLY? Quote: 25% Of Millennials Claim They Have PTSD From 2016 Election, Study Says A new psychological study from San Francisco State University claims that a full quarter of millennials are suffering from bouts of post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, because of the 2016 elections. The study is by no means comprehensive - the research pool was limited to 769 students studying psychology at Arizona State University - but of those millennials chosen for the test, 25% reported experiencing “clinically significant” levels of stress, along with other symptoms of PTSD. Students were evaluated using an “Impact of Event” scale, which measures stress levels at various times following a major traumatic event, typically a tragedy or a personal illness or injury. The results, the Washington Examiner reports, "indicated that students’ average stress score was similar to those of witnesses of a mass shooting seven months after the incident." “The scale is used to gauge the extent to which individuals have been impacted by an event in such a way that it might lead to diagnosable post-traumatic stress disorder,” lead researcher, Melissa Hagan said in a statement released alongside the study. “What we were interested in seeing was, did the election for some people constitute a traumatic experience?” Hagan added. “And we found that it did for 25 percent of young adults.” Those students suffering symptoms all qualify for an official PTSD diagnosis, according to the study itself. And students who self-identified as a minority, as female, as a Democrat, or as a non-Christian reported the most significant stress levels. "Black and nonwhite Hispanic students scored higher on the assessment than their white classmates, for instance. Gender, political affiliation and religion all played even larger roles. Females scored about 45 percent higher than males on the assessment, and Democrats scored more than two and a half times higher than Republicans," the study said. Hagan attributed the "clinically significant" stress levels to both the election's "surprise" result and rhetoric tossed about in the final weeks of the campaign - specifically Donald Trump's comments about what makes a person a real American. But if it seems strange that simple rhetoric - speeches made in the closing weeks of a campaign when candidates from both parties were trying to instill fear in voters - should trigger actual stress symptoms months after an election, that's because it is, at least from a commonplace perspective. But it's easy to see how students might translate politics into personal harm. Since November of 2016, emotions have been at an all-time high, and outrage meters, particularly on the Left, are set to 11. Each new development from the Trump White House warrants weeks of impassioned social media postings, in-world protesting, and panicked speculation. Each simple policy change is often accompanied by concerns that President Donald Trump is going to "de-humanize" segments of the population, strip women of rights, and institutionalize everyone he disagrees with. In the months following the election, few - if any - dire predictions have come to pass, but that doesn't mean true believers aren't living in fear. It might be time, though, to let go - and grow up...Can't say I'm really shocked. I am a tad surprised that more like 100% of Collegium Studiments studying psychology are not self-diagnosing PTSD from whatever disrupted their little world, regardless of what generation claims them. Was this more of the highbrow revelations on NPR? Did Kooky Roberts report? I find it heartening that not all of the college kids are allowing themselves to be brainwashed by the "Progressive" agenda. You might find this enjoyable. Do Right, Be Right. :)Transcript?
Sunday, October 28, 2018 7:40 PM
Quote:Since November of 2016, emotions have been at an all-time high, and outrage meters, particularly on the Left, are set to 11. Each new development from the Trump White House warrants weeks of impassioned social media postings, in-world protesting, and panicked speculation. Each simple policy change is often accompanied by concerns that President Donald Trump is going to "de-humanize" segments of the population, strip women of rights, and institutionalize everyone he disagrees with. In the months following the election, few - if any - dire predictions have come to pass, but that doesn't mean true believers aren't living in fear.
Sunday, October 28, 2018 10:21 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: Quote:Since November of 2016, emotions have been at an all-time high, and outrage meters, particularly on the Left, are set to 11. Each new development from the Trump White House warrants weeks of impassioned social media postings, in-world protesting, and panicked speculation. Each simple policy change is often accompanied by concerns that President Donald Trump is going to "de-humanize" segments of the population, strip women of rights, and institutionalize everyone he disagrees with. In the months following the election, few - if any - dire predictions have come to pass, but that doesn't mean true believers aren't living in fear. I personally would like a few examples of those dire predictions that failed to come to pass. But it sounds like people are panicking themselves into PTSD over non-events. What can I say ... they're young, and this is the first major crack in their paradigm of 'how the world is', which, up too now, has largely been formed by media and social media.
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