this post was submitted on 07 Mar 2026
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Prof. Jeffrey Sachs argues that the world may already be entering the early stages of World War III, as the rapidly escalating conflict involving Iran begins...

Crosspost from https://lemmygrad.ml/post/10943030

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[–] MerryJaneDoe@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

The only way to get to the truth is to listen to everyone's bullshit narratives and try to pick out the grain of truth in each. This has always been the case, throughout human history.

[–] ameancow@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

I don't trust people to do this anymore. A lot of people, across just about every segment of the population, are blisteringly stupid and can't actually form critical thought.

I get in an argument almost every week because someone, either in real life or online, can't tell what "better" or "worse" mean. This is a rising effect that emerges from large-scale cognitive decline, a black-and-white system of analysis of the world. So if I say to someone "This tie-down system is more safe than the tie-downs you're using" I fully expect now for someone to say "My system isn't dangerous, why are you saying it's dangerous?" instead of understanding that there are risk levels that scale and I'm not talking absolutes. I never had interactions like this before and I have to now carefully tip-toe around every professional conversation because nuance is dead.

This is one tiny sliver of an example, but it's widespread. People largely are having a very, very hard time figuring out anything on their own. Even basic shit like values and ethics... had a friend suddenly convert to evangelical christianity out of fucking nowhere because he had a crisis because he couldn't figure out if he was "good" or not and now just preaches gospel every interaction and admits it makes it easier because he "doesn't have to think about it" and just knows he's "saved."

A bigger example: the entire covid 19 thing.

[–] MerryJaneDoe@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

I don’t trust people to do this anymore.

What do you mean "anymore"? My whole point is that everything you are seeing is normal. The misdirection, the fake news, the corruption. It's always been there. The difference today is that information travels much, much faster than it used to.

[–] ChristerMLB@piefed.social 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I don't think that's true. If you're properly critical of your sources, and a ton of statements can safely be ignored. And that's a good thing too, since it's also not possible to be closely familiar with absolutely all narratives. There's a lot of them.

[–] MerryJaneDoe@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

I should not have used the phrase "everyone's narratives". I was referring more to tribalism.

So, for example, when we start analyzing the US-Iran hostilities, we can't trust any narrative that comes out of either the US or Iran. Recently, a school was hit by a US missile and children died, it tugged my heartstrings. I felt outrage. But then someone pointed out that the report of dead children could be a psy-op by Iran. Ok, fair point. Time to withhold judgement and check other sources for more information. In this case, it seems that the report was tragically genuine.