Daniel
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Suburban Philadelphia (Wayne)
The kind that has you knowing the pledge of allegiance by heartwhich brainwashing you're referring to?
-AJ
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The kind that has you knowing the pledge of allegiance by heartwhich brainwashing you're referring to?
-AJ
I remember the night well... my sister and I waited at the top of the steps and busted my parents bringing out the presents...there was that whole Santa Claus lie. And completely supported by entire communities and even nations.
-AJ
That's just patriotic ritual, young kids have no idea what it really means. Every culture/religion has rote words like that kids learn to recite, it's nothing in the big scheme of things. Certainly people talk about their "allegiance to the flag". That's something different, has to do with what they were raised to believe by their parents and surrounding community. Reciting it in elementary school does nothing to turn a child into a rabid nationalist, that's a whole 'nother formula.The kind that has you knowing the pledge of allegiance by heart
I did not realize you are an expert in space travel technology. When we were kids we'd listen to my dad's surplus U.S. Army tank shortwave radio. It was rumored in the early 60's that a Russian cosmonaut was stranded in orbit. We thought that if we scanned through enough of the shortwave bands we'd either hear his voice calling for help or his Morse Code SOS signals. We found some very interesting stuff but could not find the lost cosmonaut. The Russians were very good at putting people into space and the U.S. picked up on it and got very good at it. If you follow the technology trail from the early jet and then rocket flights on the edge of the Earth's atmosphere the building blocks are clear to the point where they figured it out enough to make the big flights to our near orbiting hunk of rock and keeps humans alive doing so. An amazing accomplishment.I remember the night well... my sister and I waited at the top of the steps and busted my parents bringing out the presents...
I never told my son that Santa Claus doesn't exist... Just that daddy doesn't believe in Santa Claus...
Pretty good analogy too.
At some point you have to grow up and realize that reindeer can't fly, and a fat man can't fit through the chimney... and maybe you'll live long enough to grow up to the fact that humans aren't even close to the technology needed to walk on the moon.
You're at the top of the list... though you seem nice enough.. I only hope you live long enough to realize you've been scammed.... how long will it take.. let's say for example if we don't get back by 2040? would that be long enough to convince you that it just can't be done?Good luck fighting off the brainwashed zombies Daniel!
-AJ
Perfect... having children stand, face the flag, hold their hand over their heart, and pledge alligiance to the flag EVERY DAY AT SCHOOL, isn't brainwashing... it's NOTHING?????That's just patriotic ritual, young kids have no idea what it really means. Every culture/religion has rote words like that kids learn to recite, it's nothing in the big scheme of things. Certainly people talk about their "allegiance to the flag". That's something different, has to do with what they were raised to believe by their parents and surrounding community. Reciting it in elementary school does nothing to turn a child into a rabid nationalist, that's a whole 'nother formula.
-AJ
Children are much smarter than that. They know BS when they see it. Give them some credit.Perfect... having children stand, face the flag, hold their hand over their heart, and pledge alligiance to the flag EVERY DAY AT SCHOOL, isn't brainwashing... it's NOTHING?????
Your proposition is a perfect illustration of how brainswashed people never realize that they have been brainwashed...
I propose that anyone who can recite the pledge of alligiance by heart HAS BEEN brainwashed....
and
And you're STILL brainwashed if you still believe that having school children recite the pledge of alligiance is NOT brainwashing.
You're deep in the matrix bro....
There’s a lot of pressure to conform though, especially for this example. I was penalized at first when I stopped standing for the pledge of allegiance during the Iraq war at the beginning of school. One (substitute) teacher made me write an essay about it. I was 13. You can call me unpatriotic- I was disillusioned- I saw through the bullshit war narratives. Then I had to sit through the morning TV in home room, which had ads for the army and world news with who knows what kind of bias, tuning it all out. That was required watching, every morning. How lovely it would have been if they put on some Bob Ross instead..Children are much smarter than that. They know BS when they see it. Give them some credit.
AJ, either you post these from a desk top, or your thumbs are the most formidable this side of the Mississippi. And if you clacking these out on a keyboard, tour fingers are the most formidable this side of the Mississippi.
that's crazy, where was the school?morning TV in home room
You're my new hero... that's pretty young to be seeing through the war mongers' propagandaThere’s a lot of pressure to conform though, especially for this example. I was penalized at first when I stopped standing for the pledge of allegiance during the Iraq war at the beginning of school. One (substitute) teacher made me write an essay about it. I was 13. You can call me unpatriotic- I was disillusioned- I saw through the bullshit war narratives. Then I had to sit through the morning TV in home room, which had ads for the army and world news with who knows what kind of bias, tuning it all out. That was required watching, every morning. How lovely it would have been if they put on some Bob Ross instead..
As I’ve grown I’ve come to appreciate this country in a new way, and ultimately I’m grateful for the freedoms I get to enjoy, including the freedom to openly criticize some of the terrible things that are done by our government and military.
And yeah, there were other kids who didn’t feel the liberty bell ringing deep in their rib cage but they didn’t want any attention drawn to them. The pressure to conform is high. And whatever family bias a kid is raised in, we don’t start shaking any of that until many years later, usually. So kids are smart, but also heavily pressured to conform.
There’s a lot of pressure to conform though, especially for this example. I was penalized at first when I stopped standing for the pledge of allegiance during the Iraq war at the beginning of school. One (substitute) teacher made me write an essay about it. I was 13. You can call me unpatriotic- I was disillusioned- I saw through the bullshit war narratives. Then I had to sit through the morning TV in home room, which had ads for the army and world news with who knows what kind of bias, tuning it all out. That was required watching, every morning. How lovely it would have been if they put on some Bob Ross instead..
As I’ve grown I’ve come to appreciate this country in a new way, and ultimately I’m grateful for the freedoms I get to enjoy, including the freedom to openly criticize some of the terrible things that are done by our government and military.
And yeah, there were other kids who didn’t feel the liberty bell ringing deep in their rib cage but they didn’t want any attention drawn to them. The pressure to conform is high. And whatever family bias a kid is raised in, we don’t start shaking any of that until many years later, usually. So kids are smart, but also heavily pressured to conform.
Suburban Massachusetts public school system.that's crazy, where was the school?
Aha, yep same here. I have enough sour taste in my mouth from growing up in suburbs outside of Boston, I’ve declined high school reunion invites fah eva. Small minded maybe on my part but no interest in revisiting anything from growing up in a white picket fence entitled New England town loaded with crazy toxic BS covered up with propriety. Same old same old.Suburban Massachusetts public school system.
When I first started drawing military equipment, jets, tanks, war scenarios with my crayons I had no concept of painful injury and death. I knew I didn't like scraping my knees on a sidewalk tumble or falling out of a tree but war and all its technology seemed so exciting. No concept of miserable outcomes whatsoever, dead people were drawn with X's for eyes and lots of red crayon.
Funny thing how careful my brothers and I were about rendering national markings on the rockets, jets and tanks we drew.
This is the relative innocence of childhood. By the time I was becoming a teen I knew something was terribly wrong with war. And the country I'd so frequently pledged allegiance to without really knowing what I was saying was a major player in all this. This is what I mean by saying "Give the kids some credit for detecting BS".
. I guess this is why I'm maintaining that more critical thought and finer distinctions are needed to discuss "How brainwashed are you?"
-AJ
So I think the kind of fallacy of the whole thread is that if your position is that we are all brainwashed, and we have to question everything because everything we have been taught to believe is false, that position, in and of itself, could be seen as its own kind of brainwashing. Nothing is as it seems…! Actually some things are as they seem. Some things really did happen.Oh ya... it's the innocence of youth or maybe just NOTHING... Nothing to see here... we're not brainwashed...