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hedders, in Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?
@hedders@fedia.io avatar

Nah. There are just a lot of them, and most of them have access to the Internet.

Snapz, in You have a magic pill, which de-ages you by 20 years. You can take it once in your life only, so long as you are at least 20. What age — past, current or future — do you reckon is best to take it?

A lot of variables in the magic to consider, but if you retain your knowledge, than 35 back to 15. You’ve essentially matured as far as you will at that point, started a family or married if you will do so, found stabilization in your career or at least moved far down that path, you hit the major milestones.

So back to 15 and then you live out the bulk of your high school with knowledge to help you actually enjoy learning, slow pace of high school, form lasting lifelong friendships, properly pursue education beyond high school, then live your 20s with a full appreciation for what they are, start saving money the right way, date the right way and invest in all of the tech companies before they get big so that you’re obscenely wealthy through your late 20s and beyond.

Use the money to line a small island completely with underground dynamite charges. Invite trump, tell him you’re offering him an unlimited budget to make the island into the first trump island and resort, hand him a golden shovel and say, “I’m going to get in this helicopter to get higher up to take a nice cinematic shot of you breaking ground for the press release” when you’re out of the blast radius, press the button. You’ve done one of the greater services to humanity by any living human in history. Enjoy your earned retirement.

eya, in What are some must have Firefox plugins?
@eya@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar
shinigamiookamiryuu, in Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?

Yes, though you have to remember, in most other places, the government cracks down on conspiracy theories. For example, if you live in China and believe that certain groups are secretly being mistreated, you’re going to have the authorities on your tail.

NeoNachtwaechter, in Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?

I have met several people who moved into Usa during the last years, and they all said Yes very much.

someguy3,

Moved from where?

NeoNachtwaechter,

Some Germans and some Usamericans who had lived in Europe for a while.

anarchy79,
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

Why would you do that?

HootinNHollerin, (edited ) in Does AI-generated art posted on lemmy bother you?

IMO it should be in ai communities or at least labeled as such. It’s so disheartening that ai is doing art when it should be doing the menial tasks to free us to do art

ani, in Thunderbird or Betterbird. What is better on Windows?

You can use gmail.com on any web browser. No need to install any app.

xkforce,

Read the room.

Kuvwert,

You’re not gonna see a lot of love for Google products here dude…

Asudox,
@Asudox@lemmy.world avatar

Does OP use gmail?

Rhynoplaz,

It’s fine for on my phone, but the Gmail UI is trash on a PC.

GrammatonCleric, in Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?
@GrammatonCleric@lemmy.world avatar

David Icke is English 😂

anarchy79,
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

There is nothing funny about that.

GrammatonCleric,
@GrammatonCleric@lemmy.world avatar

The irony is pretty funny 😁

anarchy79,
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

Ok it’s really funny. What. You tryna start something?

K0W4LSK1, in Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?
@K0W4LSK1@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I would also add things we consider conspiracy like UFO’s have been seen all over the world just other countries usually have a religious or spiritual reason for the sightings and thus they don’t become a conspiracy just part of their everyday life. Look up Jacques Vallee he does great research into this.

jjjalljs, in Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?

You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…

American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.

It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.

Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.

JungleJim, (edited )

It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read

You know, you lose a lot of people with comments like that, talking down to everyone. You’ve provided a source that makes a lot of good points, but that’s some alienating phrasing that’ll make people feel you’re elitist.

jjjalljs,

On the one hand, you’re right.

I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.

On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.

Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually are better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad about?

JungleJim,

I’m sorry for assuming your intentions were less than innocent and positive. I also want to live in that sort of world, and I hope it didn’t seem like I was jumping on your case or calling you a jerk. I just think it’s important to choose our words in a way that encourages people to read. Too often people think they’re bad at reading or math or something and so they avoid it, when it should be more like singing; it doesn’t matter if it sounds good, we sing as a manner of expression. Reading should be for everyone. But, I was misguided, and you weren’t disagreeing with that notion, and so I’m sorry.

jjjalljs,

It is very rare for anyone on the internet to apologize or admin fault. Well done. Thank you. I understand your intent and I’m not mad. Apology accepted.

anarchy79,
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

Oh no. Telling the truth alienates all of the idiots? We should really coddle them more, because that’s what’s important- their feelings.

anarchy79,
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

“Read at a 6th grade level”

I thought it worked like, when you know how to read, you know how to read, and if you don’t, you won’t.

jjjalljs,

There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.

You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.

Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.

I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/

I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.

anarchy79,
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

The Great Gatsby is shit, and the Hobbit is even worse. It doesn’t affect the situation here, but just wanted to make sure we’re on the same page.

So reading level is basically a stupidity meter. If you can read this text, you’re a moron. But you’re less of a moron if you can read this text.

jjjalljs,

I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.

Also I think you have a typo and one of your can should be can’t

anarchy79, (edited )
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

Bold of you to assume I have a point, and that’s not a typo. That’s the duality of existence.

MajorHavoc,

Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor.

if those kids could read, they would be very upset

Diabolo96, (edited ) in Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?

The Simple answer is No. Every country has its fair share of loud and dumb.

anarchy79, (edited )
@anarchy79@lemmy.world avatar

The complicated answer is, the less education and the more propaganda, the more likely you are to believe dumb shit.

Asudox, in Does AI-generated art posted on lemmy bother you?
@Asudox@lemmy.world avatar

A few is fine, if AI pics appear in my feed more than that, then it does annoy me.

neidu2, in What do you think of sports analysts ?

I don’t

darganon, in What do you think of sports analysts ?

It is interesting to hear a current or former pro player share insights about the game.

Media personalities that haven’t been professionals are useless and feed on clickbait.

kjPhfeYsEkWyhoxaxjGgRfnj,

I don’t find the designation to be that much of a thing. There are former players that are great and there are former players who are completely awful clickbait clowns. Same is true for non former athletes.

The good former pros definitely have a valuable perspective though I think there’s also something to be said for a bit of a removed perspective.

LopensLeftArm, in What do you think of sports analysts ?
@LopensLeftArm@sh.itjust.works avatar
pimento64,

“DAE le hate it when ur le fundy dad watches le sports ball???”

Back to reddit

afraid_of_zombies,

What are you on about?

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