Everything posted by cosmicway
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JFK was murdered by a hitman - conspiracy or not. Lincoln the same. Aldo Moro in Italy the same. Those who are after Trump are neighbourhood yobos with a gun, those people whose right to weaponize themselves he defends.
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Great speeches by great men: Winston Churchill: We shall fight on the beaches JFK: Ich bin ein Berliner Charles De Gaulle: Quebec libre Those went down well when they were spoken. Now D,J. Trump's dog speech. Will it be an election winner or an election loser ?
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Plmer for sale ? https://chelseafclatestnews.com/sky-sports-pundit-claims-Chelsea-open-to-selling-cole-palmer-for-100m-199437/?fbclid=IwY2xjawFVKM1leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHYjzA-nwEbwxqtnznoaddxu5uCdB8sTpnZmDWvtaMm-J6AjYaq1lVLtwEA_aem_W5EuZCKwgcdagtIKdIOj2g
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I knew a woman who found a peacock in the street. It had strayed away from the national garden. She cooked it.
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Pep is n't winning any premier title this year.
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Arteta v. rest of the world.
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The link between conspiracy theories and insight is also evident in the role that memes play in proliferating conspiracies. Take the example of Melissa Rein Lively – a former QAnon supporter who rose to fame after a video of her destroying a face mask stand at a Target store during the COVID-19 pandemic went viral (anti-vaccine beliefs are a key part of the QAnon worldview). She has cited a particular meme as being pivotal to her journey into QAnon: it features a photograph of Polish Jews being put on a train in 1939, edited so that they wore face masks. Lively – the granddaughter of Holocaust survivors – grasped the implied link between mask mandates and authoritarian injustices, causing her to experience a rewarding sense of insight. Just like participants who are required to unscramble sentences, for her that ‘aha’ feeling gave rise to a deeper acceptance of the idea. As she put it: ‘Everything I was learning and everything I have ever been afraid of connected in a way that convinced me that at least some semblance of what I was reading was true.’ We propose that the hunger for insight and discovery is present in all humans and that engagement with conspiracy theories satisfies that hunger. This helps to explain the attractiveness of conspiracist communities, such as QAnon. These communities offer participation in a collective act of discovery, wherein users aid each other in discovering clues and decoding cryptic messages to generate their own insights. Contrary to the view that conspiracy theorists don’t think hard enough, many conspiracies are popular precisely because they require hard thinking. This explanation also illuminates a potentially important cause of conspiracy theories – when people feel excluded from the kind of collective discovery that conspiracy theory communities offer. Take the example of anti-vaccine sentiments amongst new mothers. Mothers often feel that their maternal instincts and first-person experience are devalued by medical professionals. Such interactions deny them the chance to experience insight through participating in problem-solving about their children’s health. This ‘epistemic exclusion’ can lead the insight-hungry to seek out alternative views of medicine, often involving conspiratorial elements (centring around cover-ups by ‘big pharma’, for example). Consistent with this, people who reject mainstream medicine in favour of such alternatives often emphasise that they are only exercising their right to engage in their own truth-seeking activities. Designing effective insight-based interventions relies on getting to know your audience If we’re right about the role of insight in conspiratorial thinking, governments could apply the psychology of insight to design interventions that better combat conspiracy theories. Up until now a standard approach has been to focus on countering misinformation (through factchecking or providing information that contradicts it). But this treats those who consume misinformation as passive victims, rather than active and enthusiastic participants. It ignores the drive for discovery at the heart of much engagement with misinformation. A better approach is to take the drive for discovery seriously, which will require countering misinformation with the same spirit of intellectual playfulness that draws people to it. For example, interventions could work with engaging questions and puzzles instead of factual statements. An important step in designing effective insight-based interventions of this kind is simple: know your audience. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the ‘vaccine zombie’ metaphor resonated among the anti-vaccine community because it tapped into the way they thought of vaccine users. Designing a more accurate, but equally attractive, metaphor requires a firm understanding of the beliefs and attitudes of those who believe in conspiracies. Gaining such knowledge relies on getting to know your audience. A relevant distinction is between perspective-taking and perspective-getting – don’t just try to put yourself in someone else’s shoes (perspective-taking); genuinely enquire about how they see the world (perspective-getting). That knowledge can then be employed to connect with communities that believe in conspiracies. Another way is to represent people’s lived experience. People gain a sense of insight when recognising a link with their personal experiences. The meme that Lively encountered about face masks resonated with her so strongly because she was the daughter of Holocaust survivors – she uncovered a surprising link with her own perspective. This suggests that effective interventions should connect with people’s experiences. One approach to delivering insight-based interventions could be via developments in AI, which hold the promise of countering conspiracy thinking via personalised interactions. For example, in a recent study, interactions with ChatGPT-4 Turbo substantially and durably shifted the beliefs of even the staunchest of believers in conspiracies ranging from the causes of COVID-19 to the Moon landings to the death of Princess Diana. Analysing these conversations showed that the model didn’t simply present counterevidence but questioned and reasoned with users. Although users were not explicitly asked to report insight experiences, we would venture that such experiences were a crucial mechanism underlying their shift in beliefs. The mind-changing potential of these systems is bound to continue to grow. They already have more ‘patience’ than any human for gaining our idiosyncratic perspective through dialogue. As they can ingest more information about us, they will be able to simulate our positions more effectively. That will allow them to challenge us at the just-right level – eventually coming up with new, resonating metaphors and pointed questions. We are hopeful that such personal(ised) AI assistants will help to prevent and counter harmful beliefs at scale (but they will need to be implemented carefully, given the risk of misuse). Conspiracy believers are not unintelligent and gullible. They are driven by their hunger for insight. Whether via AI or other media, recognising and respecting this hunger is the way towards more effective interventions. Remember the time Chelsea were disqualified from the champions league to Juve-Shakhtar Donetsk ? It was the 2012-13 champions league and Shakhtar knocked uss out on h2h away goal difference. The last day it was Shakhtar at home to Juve and Chelsea at home to Danish amateurs Nordsjaelland. My prediction was Shakhtar were going to let Juve go through. If Shakhtar had won then that would leave Juve to the third place, Shakhtar first and Chelsea second. If draw then Juve finish first, Shakhtar second, Chelsea third. So my prediction was away or draw for Shakhtar v. Juve. There was then that character who confronted me. A commie - "original gate 21". Said ok, Juve go through but it will be Chelsea who lose to Nordjaelland, put your money there ! I was aghast at this, blocked the man straight away (perma block). Chelsea beat the Danes 6 to 1 of course and Juve won 1-0. So this shows you there are conspiracy theorists and conspiracy theorists. Those with detective thinking and the idiots.
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Newcastle may win, I don't know - Spuds will lose 3-0.
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Taylor tried to equalize it for them by not giving the foul and letting them counterattack but he was unlucky.
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There was one team on the pitch for 65 minutes. Then they got tired - it looked as if we were going to win and we did. Cucurella - hero of Telemark. And Sanchez.
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Both Fofanas should be playing for Goz Tepe.
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Are we going to win this ? Brighton flopped and I switched my bets to Chelsea at 2.05.
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It makes and there are various types of left in the world. Putin is against America quid erat demonstratum. Not the biggest-ultra fans however. The ultras are the right wingers and PAOK Salonika. Kasselakis took a Harris position on the matter and it was not liked by the priests.
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In Ikaria island the prices are +30% compared to Athens. In nearby Mykonos I don't dare say. Mc Guire made some heroic efforts but ... The problem we have here is of different nature - it's taxes and those taxes are directed mainly against the poor and the middle classes. But the lefties are happy with those taxes. Last year the lefties elected a new leader, Stefanos Kasselakis, who tried to reform them but the party grand priests chucked him out last week with a vote of no confidence. Some Putin loving scummy leftie will be their new leader we expect.
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How do you know ? You go out for dinner to the Marriott Marquis hotel and they serve you roast beef a la Greek aux sauce empereur. But it's a cat.
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All this cat eating in America rings a bell to me, There are souvlaki restaurants I always suspect. As a matter of fact here in Ikaria island and in Mykonos maybe the meat portions are big and tasty. There is one who cuts the potato chips too thick because he is crazy but that's another matter. In Athens however you will find souvlakis the size of a fingernail. Are those not cats ?
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The clause that he plays two thirds of the matches looks ok at first sight. All this commotion and he does n't play two thirds of the matches ? But what if the player is injured or red carded ? To optionally claim him back in ... January is a guillotine. Heads we win, tails you lose. If he is bad let him be, if he is good we claim him back ! Goztepe are way bottom of the league in Turkiye and they did n't mind. However I imagine if AEK Athens had the money and really liked the player they could do something better.
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Well the clubs of Turkey seem to have money. They signed players like Icardi, Bats, two or three of the good Greeks also. Those who seem to have gone abysmal are the once respected Bulgaria. Greeks are poor but you know something strange ? In the early seventies Greek budgets were about 50% of those of Europe (and Real Madrid - Italians had a brief lean spell those years it seems). The world record transfer of 1972 was Alan Hudson from Chelsea to Stoke City for 220,000 pounds and the record Greek transfer was Greek-Argentinian Nicolaou for about half that amount. This did not last of course as well as the Italians and Madrid returned in strength. Now the difference is big and especially after the economic crisis of 2010 it is really huge. If a talent appears in Greece like Mimis Domazos how long will he stay ? Domazos (the undisputed all time Greek superstar) came to Panathinaikos in 1959 from a lowly neighbourhood side. The Panathinaikos manager was Harry Game and from the first season Domazos was nicknamed "the general". If the football world was like today's football world would he have stayed in Greece after January 1960 ? Likely. After summer 1960 ? Unlikely. Today we would n't even remember him as a Panathinaikos legend. We 'd probably not even remember his Greek club.
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AEK rating is 1590 for better or worse. Goztepe is 1355 ! One cinch above Pitcairn island, Samoa. However the Turks have money - remember before Boehly there was a Turk who placed a bid to take Chelsea.
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Blackies in action:
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Harris ahead in the betting, 1.80 - 2.00.
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Racist. But reds you use is also racist.
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Cenai got a phd from MIT later. Maybe he is teaching there I think.
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Debate effect: Trump 1.80, Harris 2.00 From 1.72-2.20.
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In Greece the MAGA, brexit equivalents were dead for some 25-30 years. We exclude the commies who of course wanted a Greek "brexit" after their own style. Whatever remained was in the sphere of romance and the late king Constantine never accepted to have any relations with them, so the old junta fanciers died. The circus started life again in 1999 when an Albanian student, Odysseus Cenai, was allowed to carry the Greek flag in a national parade as he was the top of the class. From that moment they started again, now with a purely racist platform - nothing to do with either the communist danger or the trade unions. Now the Mitsotakis party is the strongest among the political parties and the left are nowhere. With Mitsotakis we have mean austerity measures again and he is losing some points. But all those points he is losing go to the extreme right who are well on their way to reach 20% all of them added together. No percentage points go to the debunked socialists or the left. As for the commies they stand at 8%. Sometimes a bit higher because some leftists who think the left wing party of Syriza is not left wing enough make the journey back to the mother ship. The only ones who are relatively happy now are the blackies.
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