James Burke
Being a grandpa is more fun than working
...and she says "Daddy, I gotta go reaaaaallll bad"...
Yep....
But I really do miss those days...and so will you.
JB
...and she says "Daddy, I gotta go reaaaaallll bad"...
Yep....
But I really do miss those days...and so will you.
JB
People like being angry, its addicting. Social media and the internet in general are a great place for people to get their daily adrenaline fix and the fastest way to it is through manufactured hate and crisis. People chase the things that make them angry, it triggers a dopamine release just like other pleasurable activities. Looking for truth and ways to not be angry at something is the proverbial buzz kill. Politics is the enabler and anger is the addiction.
Blame the media or whoever but they are simply delivering what we want and it shows in their ratings.
I agree, must be the pacific islander in us.
I have a short drive to work each day and when I look around I see people hunched over their steering wheels - not looking around - scowling at nothing as far as I can see.I agree, must be the pacific islander in us.
--If you just focused on family, your job and hobbies next week, and turned off all National news - would you really be "un-informed" "Missing Out"? Nope. you can catch up on national news once per week in my opinion.Now to see if I can do it LOL
It's bad but it isn't anywhere close to the Vietnam era.
I see that a respected member rated my post as "0 Informative". So I'll add a list of informative items off the top of my head to illustrate how bad things were for the many who either don't remember, don't read history or weren't yet born.
Was this informative enough? So tell me how things are worse today than during the Vietnam Era.
- In an effort to contain communist expansion after the fall of French IndoChina (now Vietnam) in 1954, major commitments of funds, weapons, and U.S. military troops were made by Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon.
- Secrecy and deception such as the Gulf of Tonkin incident were used to cover these commitments.
- We lost more than 50,000 U.S. soldiers in Vietnam along with 100s of 1,000s of casualties. The Vietnamese lost a much higher number.
- The civil rights movement was at its peak.
- The women's liberation movement began coincidentally with the release and legalization of the birth control pill.
- John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., Robert F. Kennedy and Malcolm X were all assassinated.
- Major protest riots took place in Chicago outside the 1968 Democratic Convention.
- Riots with looting and arson took place in many major U.S. cities.
- The universal draft was used to supply most new military inductees. Many protesters burned their draft cards. Many privileged "rich kids" got exemptions while less fortunate young men were inducted.
- As a people, we became highly divided in Hawk and Dove camps as war protests increased.
- Returning U.S. military from Vietnam were spat upon.
- Richard M. Nixon was elected to the Presidency in 1968 largely on the promise to get us out of Vietnam. He never did.
- In 1970, four students were killed and nine other wounded when the Ohio National Guard fired on protesting students at Kent State University.
- After Kent State, the Doves became the apparent majority with regards to Vietnam.
- In 1970, President Nixon authorized expansion of the Vietnam War into neighboring Cambodia. Protests followed.
- In 1971, The New York Times and the Washington Post published The Pentagon Papers ... A secret government study of how we got involved in Vietnam. It exposed and detailed the many lies and deceptions committed by our leaders.
- In 1972, President Nixon reopened diplomatic relations with the Peoples Republic of China.
- In 1972, the White House Plumbers were arrested while burglarizing the Democratic Party Headquarters in the Watergate Office Building.
- In 1972, Richard M. Nixon was reelected by the largest margin of voters in U.S. history.
- In 1973 and 1974, the Nixon administration attempted to coverup its involvement in the Watergate break in while the U.S. Senate and House held hearings which ultimately resulted in the imminent impeachment of President Nixon.
- In August 1974, Richard M. Nixon resigned the presidency of the United States.
- In September 1974, President Gerald Ford granted a full pardon to Richard M. Nixon.
- On August 30, 1975, Saigon fell to the Viet Cong and the People's Army of Vietnam ending the Vietnam War and the North and South were reunified.
The issue is the media - I blame them the entire national media spectrum. There are more ways and outlets to get news. Now its 24 hours seven days a week. And then we simply follow / listen to the voices that we like.
So pretend you are a news outlet--you have 100 competitors. You have to go hard left or hard right to get the eyeballs. You have to keep the adrenaline, the dopamine running in your viewers. I think we are all burnt-out!
The market is RIPE for a news outlet that reports: Who what where when...no opinion. And just talk about laws, or proposed laws, who brought them up etc.
I don't think it's healthy to watch/ listen/ read for hours per day to national one-sided voices ( I can be guilty of it)
Think about this --If you just focused on family, your job and hobbies next week, and turned off all National news - would you really be "un-informed" "Missing Out"? Nope. you can catch up on national news once per week in my opinion.
Now to see if I can do it LOL
I agree on the media being the biggest part of the problem. Certainly the very fact that virtually all are now governed by making a profit ... which was not always the case. Walter Cronkite, Huntley and Brinkley et al used to work for networks that supported broadcasting the news as a public service. The best of them now insert their agendas into the evening news.
For example, and I will say up front that I am a global climate change believer, we've noticed that the ABC Evening News has for several months now inserted an every night report on the worst of the U.S. weather. Not a night goes by that we don't get five to seven minutes of floods, tornadoes, hurricanes and forest fires. The agenda is quite obvious no matter where you stand on the issue of climate change. What is wrong, however, is that it is an adopted decision to call attention to an issue through story selection without coming out and saying so in an effort to sway opinion instead of just reporting the news.
There used to be journalistic rules. Among other things, a news organization used to be compelled to separate news from editorial opinion. These rules were intended to inspire credibility and trust. That has largely fallen by the wayside whether for better profits, secretly affecting opinion or other motivations and I see it as a major threat to the quality of life of most of us as well as the welfare of our democratic republic.
The media used to be comprised of journalists who understood their first amendment rights as well as their responsibilities. Somehow, we citizens need to find a way to bring them back to their former standards.
That, my friend, is an absolute privilege...and adventure.
I'm sure any that any parent of a cancer patient at St. Judes Children's Hospital would gladly trade places with you.
JB
Not to incite a political battle, but, reporting of those things are fine and dandy... It's when 99% of the time the reporters are modern activists inserting their political agenda to the report, and no longer acting as unbiased, that becomes and is the problem.Sorry, you'll have to explain how the reporting of ACTUAL unprecedented weather and climate related events where billions of people are affected is NOT important news. Or how the broadcasting of how those events are and will affect our economy, safety, future policy, food supply, etc. Is some sinister plot to steer public opinion. If my car is stalled on some railroad tracks, I'd much rather know that a freight train is coming than bury my head in the dashboard and "pray" that I'll be fine if I just ignore the blare of the bullhorn.