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"We" Don't Really Know What's Happening
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Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2015 22:15 -0500
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Submitted by Paul Rosenberg via FreeMansPerspective.com,
"If you don't read a newspaper every day, you are uninformed. If you do, you are misinformed." - Mark Twain
"Wars start because diplomats lie to reporters, then believe what they read in the newspaper." - Unknown
We Don't Really Know What's Happening... And, believe it or not, this is rather good news. I’ll explain.
We all like to know what’s happening in the world, and for good reason... understanding our surroundings is essential to survival. We instinctively seek information... we need information. There is, however, a problem that we face:
No matter how much “news” you consume, you won’t really know what’s going on in the world.
We can’t know, because ‘the news’ is half illusion, provided by government-dependent corporations that are paid to keep you watching and to keep you joined to the status quo.
Granted, they are quite good at providing pictures from disaster areas, but when it comes to explaining why the disaster happened, they mislead almost every time. Yes, some truth makes its way through the news machine, but most of it is wrapped in layers of manipulation. If, for example, you watch the news feeds all day, you’ll find a good deal of truth, but you’ll find it amongst a pile of half-truths. Do you really have enough time to analyze them all?
One Piece of Truth
The truth about public reporting comes out from time to time, but usually well after the fact. So, here’s one piece of truth that’s worth remembering:
For those who don’t recall the 1970s, Daniel Ellsberg was a man who worked as an analyst at the RAND Corp., moved from there to the Pentagon, spent two years in Vietnam working for the State Department, and then went back to RAND. He is the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers in 1971. These were the documents that revealed that three US presidential administrations had been plainly, knowingly, and openly lying to the public.
Here’s what Ellsberg thought the New York Times was good for:
… to see what the rubes and the yokels are thinking about and what they think is going on and what they think the policy is….
Later, in 1998, he said this in an interview:
The public is lied to every day by the president, by his spokespeople, by his officers. If you can’t handle the thought that the president lies to the public for all kinds of reasons, you couldn’t stay in the government at that level….
And here’s what Michael Deaver, a top aide to President Ronald Reagan, said about the press:
The media I’ve had a lot to do with is lazy. We fed them and they ate it every day.
That’s the truth about news, my friends. The newspapers are where the yokels get informed, presidents flatly lie, and legislatures are massively corrupt. The TV stations recycle opinions from the leading newspapers. And Internet news sites primarily recycle TV and newspaper stories.
Yes, some truth does slide through, but it looks almost the same as the other stuff. The only places we get anything close to refined truth is on a few Internet sites… and many of them have a particular axe to grind.
And the Internet news sites that really dig through the pile are in jeopardy. The Internet is being funneled into Google, Facebook, and a few other friends of the state. If things continue as they’ve been going, the independents will be cut off soon enough, under the guise of copyright or some such.
Sad to say, we shouldn’t accept the news as true. In my personal experience, I’ve been close enough to a few news stories to know the truth, and the networks got it wrong every time.
More Truth
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-12-05/we-dont-really-know-whats-happening

Realist - Everybody in America is soft, and hates conflict. The cure for this, both in politics and social life, is the same -- hardihood. Give them raw truth.