It’s been quite a while since I’ve shared a psychology-related write-up. Recently, I saw a clip of liberal commentary that prompted a realization: even many otherwise balanced, reasonable people don’t fully understand what’s happening in the psyches of those on the radical ends of the political spectrum. And this phenomenon is not confined to oneContinueContinue reading “The Psychology of Political Conviction: Why Facts Often Fail to Change Minds”
Tag Archives: reality and consciousness
When Compromise Becomes Complicity: Why Speaking Truth Is No Longer Optional
I saw a post recently about Susan Rice advocating for reeducation camps for those who haven’t adopted her worldview. Why this approach? Because persuasion has failed. When you can’t convince people through reason or evidence, the next step becomes force. This reveals something crucial about the current moment: we are witnessing the breakdown of sharedContinueContinue reading “When Compromise Becomes Complicity: Why Speaking Truth Is No Longer Optional”
Authenticity Unveiled: The Moral and Psychological Breakdown in Radical Left Ideology
I continue to notice an alarming contradiction playing out over and over again. In this post, I attempt to examine that contradiction, and peel apart its layers. A Contradiction in Moral Focus It was the recent release of more detailed Epstein files that led me to a full conscious awareness of the contradiction in moralContinueContinue reading “Authenticity Unveiled: The Moral and Psychological Breakdown in Radical Left Ideology”
Perception and Reality: The Role of the Observer in CTMU
Perception shapes our understanding of reality. Yet, the Cognitive Theoretical Model of the Universe (CTMU) posits that this relationship is not one-sided. Reality itself depends on the act of observation, creating a feedback loop between the observer and the observed. This perspective challenges traditional notions of an objective, observer-independent universe, suggesting instead that perception isContinueContinue reading “Perception and Reality: The Role of the Observer in CTMU”
