Sunday, June 11, 2017

Evegreen terrace – SATIRE is dead and why the dystopia is here and now

Many things are whirling in my mind at the moment. I can sense some relief at least that the Qatar ultimatum has not ended in a shooting show off perhaps because the Iranians, Turks and Russian have voiced their concern and are betting the Saudis chicken out. However, the future looks bleak for satirist, who all of sudden, yet not surprisingly have found out that what was called the news has been promoted or relegated into satire class. Some of this news can be whisked away as bad journalism and ludicrous opinions. But lately things, all things Trump in particular, have really made news consumers uncomfortable since the abundance of fake news is making the narratives crumble and resurrect the next day.

Social media mix – the abyss goes both ways


I can only blame at this point the social media and its savvy users who have successfully inserted their own narrative into the mix. This trend has lead to a mass confusion: the news have become the laughing stock and deservedly so. The business got used to lowering standards and were suddenly challenged by former disgruntled peers or lay persons who took to themselves to set the record straight.

Yet again we see, to prove my point, that the media has been unequivocally biased in UK against leftist Corbyn. Like we saw in US with Trump, the pompous establishment made a fool out of itself. May is in dismay and this does not bode well for the country which seems to be willing to open all the floodgates to suppress dissent, monitor all and everything online and quietly support our Western allies later turned out to be extremist terrorists. No govt will change that, that deeper layer of power structure. In US, we see a similar power struggle and no wonder we see senile senator McCain act confused in the Comey hearing. By the looks of it, unfortunately, I feel like I've entered a parallel universe when it came to see what local papers here in Finland wrote about the hearing. There was a striking difference. Trump was lying; therefore Comey was telling the truth. That seemed to be the main issue, even though local coverage had to admit that the Russiagate was going nowhere after Comey lackluster testimony. I feel this charade ended up netting many own goals forcing NYT to retract Russia articles.

The Russia did meme is still being widely used and will remain as a throwback to this moment in time. CNN, with a particularly awful track record, is indeed one of the main cited sources by the local press and it shows. We could use a critical eye. Alas it's not going to happen any time soon.


But the Kafkaesque trip is only beginning. I've been following Canada's regression and financial calamity for a while. Bill C-16 is the shot heard around the world. I've also invested some time to listening Joe Rogan's interview of Bret Weinstein and the disintegration of Evergreen State Collage. Then there's the case of Reality Winner and the odd negligence by the part of the NSA giving her security clearance. Internet really tore a new one for Kurt Eichenwald because of his tweeting slip up. CNN has canned two hosts who were 'threatening' the president. Sounds like nightmare PR even though these outbursts might the last moments for the channel in the limelight.

The Weinstein interview was very interesting. At this point, peer reviewed science has become another laughing stock. What is more alarming, is that, according to Weinstein and other authorities in this scene, many post-modernists advocate for denouncing the scientific method and deduction as tools of patriarchy or white supremacy. Indeed, logic and facts are bigoted. This is beyond insane. This leads to ludicrous "scientific" opinion pieces.

While we are distracted...  


https://irmaschiffers2014.wordpress.com/real-big-power-revelations-by-insider-ronald-bernard-part-2-2/

All of these highlights are mere side attractions and the big wheels behind the scenes grind. The markets are kept up but for how long. Fake growth won't be helping us anymore. This trend has been going on for some time ever since 2008 financial crisis. The Dutch deep state insider Ronald Bernard heeds warning: debt is death.

Living in a dystopia feels fuzzy and warm. However, with the fear of sudden terror attacks, taking a stroll on a busy city street might be the last thing you want to do. We are comfortably numb until the next shoe drops or the grim reaper thins the herd close to us.

With all the inter-connectivity in real life thanks to cyber technology, it is not unthinkable that a far away event snowballs into a big problem on the other side of the globe. A real butterfly effect yet the trigger is not so innocent after all.

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