All Truth is not True
© David Moorhead — September 2007
Subscribe to Staying Awake ezine
Our species rarely comprehends how easily our imaginations are influenced. Too many USA residents don’t realize our imaginations are on a speedy carrousel of ideologies and scenarios dispatching a war magnate’s truth. Since all commercial media reports insinuated as true are likely not so, or perhaps very nearly fictional, then how are we able to distinguish insinuated truths from those to which we weren’t an eyewitness?
These days, we’ve nearly got it right when we read, for example, diverse stories telling a range of citizenries’ challenges in a nation’s domestic policy. Until we can discuss polarized angles of a national challenge, instead of only the evaluation we favor, presume our vigilant awareness becomes evermore intentional.
… It’s important for us to understand what’s happening in Iran. You don’t see it in the newspapers. You get hints here and there about this tremendous argument that’s going on, whether or not we’re going to go out and invade Iran. This is insanity, unfortunately. But, how can we as a citizenry make any reasonable decisions; how can we talk to our congressmen; how can we talk to our senators; how can we make our voices heard if we don’t for instance have the information about what’s going on in Iran?
~ Pamela de Maigret, journalist, producer, film maker, life-long Republican activist. Refer The REAL News dot com
Moreover, media editors already know their reports are not written by artistries of journalists; instead, journalists’ reports are frequently negated or truncated to an extent that many USA journalists’ jobs are no longer necessary. Media moguls’ minions distribute directives for journalists to conceal or blend stories with insinuation; the words of which transform truth of one scenario into an assumed truth that’s entirely questionable; untruths forcibly fracture journalists’ possibilities for assessing fair and balanced evaluations for citizenries’ dilemmas.
One noteworthy euphemistic insinuation is the term homeland security, a delusional fear-based doublespeak also heralded to frighten and corral Earthlings in Western Europe in times of WORLD WAR TWO. Here’s why I feel the delusion is especially controversial, and, as certain as bearing false witness in religion, is an historical form of psychological control embedded in imaginations.
Beware the words ‘internal security’, for they are the eternal cry of the oppressor.
~ François-Marie Arouet (Voltaire) (b 1694), French Enlightenment writer, essayist, deist, philosopher
Power always has to be kept in check; power exercised in secret, especially under the cloak of national security, is doubly dangerous.
~ Edward William Proxmire (b 1915), U.S. senator, reformer, member of the Military Intelligence Service WWII, Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 1948
Our constant curiosity
is key
to watching what’s being created.
~ David Moorhead |