KING LIE
Mark Pesce
Futurist, Speaker, Inventor, Multiple Award-Winning Author and Podcaster, Educator and Entrepreneur.
In quick succession, three events clearly illuminate the shape of the world we live in. Quick flashes of lightning, each successively brighter, blinding: What does the thunder say?
First, on the weekend the radical-alarmist news blog ZeroHedge received a permanent ban on its Twitter account. Why? Because they’d singled out, named and ‘doxed’ a Chinese researcher as the source of the novel coronavirus presently arcing toward global pandemic status, implying that this virus had a human, engineered, origin.
Second, the IPSOS poll of Australian voters released on Monday 3 February revealed that among the ‘rusted on’ supporters of the Liberal-National coalition, responses to “I have serious doubts whether climate change is occuring” increased from 27% to 38% over the last year - that year being both the hottest and driest in the hundred-plus years records have been kept, and in the midst of bushfires of unprecedented severity.
Finally, the spectacular collapse of the Iowa Caucuses (with results still undeclared as I write this) have fueled endless speculation about vote rigging.
We are in an social environment where everything is flammable - every topic, every issue, every opinion, every personality - and yet everywhere we see incidents of arson. Some appear intentional, as in the case with ZeroHedge; others, as in Iowa, seem the product of simple stupidity. Whatever the cause, no one should be allowed to light matches; in this ‘new normal’ we have no guarantee that they won’t accidentally burn everything down around them.
Lies spread so quickly (thank you, Facebook, and hello! Twitter) and the truth so slowly precisely because the truth requires certification, verification, multiple checks and sensitivity. The truth is slow and will ever be thus because to know anything at all takes time and effort. Only lies are effortless - because they are supported by nothing but beliefs and intentions.
Speaking both as a futurist and as a pioneer of the Web, I feel compelled to issue a warning: We are now sailing directly into a fog of lies so thick that to know anything at all will become both the most important and most difficult task at hand. These lies - like all lies - seek to confuse, to pollute the truth, to dishearten, and disable. They seek power in darkness, and create this darkness in order to come to power.
What then is to be done? We must adhere to the slow, the careful, and the truthful. We must shine the light of truth, using that to dispel the fog of lies. And we must do this, day-in, day-out, forever. The truth is hard work, but it beats blind confusion. It’s the only thing that can.
CTO, JoopiterX
5 年Wish I could hit like many times :)
Pensioner
5 年Interesting article as I find out from other articles resources to educate myself.?
Senior Principal Engineer @ Constant Contact | Front End Specialist
5 年Progressive New Age people used to say "Create your own reality". This creative, constructive idea has fallen into the wrong hands in the 21st century, and has been taken out of the open fields of inspired envisioning and has been chained to the terminals of the troll factory.
Executive Producer | Senior Business and Brand Leadership | Enterprise Strategy | Creative Innovation | Project Management | Storyteller | Moderator | Deal maker | Impact
5 年Robert Anton Wilson (RIP) famously said, Reality cannot be comprehended simultaneously, only non-simultaneously. It may be logical, that Truth, like Reality shows up in the same way. Ironically, the word itself has a certain ambiguity to it. Turns of phrase like 'speaking one's truth' confirms it's sometimes subjective, even malodourous nature. Some part of me is inherently suspicious of anyone who claims to know the truth, because it signals the end of inquiry.? That said, 'truth' should not be confused with immutable Laws of Nature as declared by the high priests of science. Like the word "literally", who's definition now includes 'figuratively', the truth has got such a beating of late, it's hard to know if it will ever recover.?
CEO, Loyalty & Reward Co | Author ‘Loyalty Programs: The Complete Guide'
5 年Your best article yet.