🐱 Prepare for the Ultimate Gaslighting*

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CatParty


*Gaslighting, if you don’t know the word, is defined as manipulation into doubting your own sanity; as in, Carl made Mary think she was crazy, even though she clearly caught him cheating. He gaslit her.

Pretty soon, as the country begins to figure out how we “open back up” and move forward, very powerful forces will try to convince us all to get back to normal. (That never happened. What are you talking about?) Billions of dollars will be spent on advertising, messaging, and television and media content to make you feel comfortable again. It will come in the traditional forms — a billboard here, a hundred commercials there — and in new-media forms: a 2020–2021 generation of memes to remind you that what you want again is normalcy. In truth, you want the feeling of normalcy, and we all want it. We want desperately to feel good again, to get back to the routines of life, to not lie in bed at night wondering how we’re going to afford our rent and bills, to not wake to an endless scroll of human tragedy on our phones, to have a cup of perfectly brewed coffee and simply leave the house for work. The need for comfort will be real, and it will be strong. And every brand in America will come to your rescue, dear consumer, to help take away that darkness and get life back to the way it was before the crisis. I urge you to be well aware of what is coming.

For the last hundred years, the multibillion-dollar advertising business has operated based on this cardinal principle: Find the consumer’s problem and fix it with your product. When the problem is practical and tactical, the solution is “as seen on TV” and available at Home Depot. Command strips will save me from having to repaint. So will Mr. Clean’s Magic Eraser. Elfa shelving will get rid of the mess in my closet. The Ring doorbell will let me see who’s on the porch if I can’t take my eyes off Netflix. But when the problem is emotional, the fix becomes a new staple in your life, and you become a lifelong loyalist. Coca-Cola makes you: happy. A Mercedes makes you: successful. Taking your family on a Royal Caribbean cruise makes you: special. Smart marketers know how to highlight what brands can do for you to make your life easier. But brilliant marketers know how to rewire your heart. And, make no mistake, the heart is what has been most traumatized this last month. We are, as a society, now vulnerable in a whole new way.

What the trauma has shown us, though, cannot be unseen. A carless Los Angeles has clear blue skies as pollution has simply stopped. In a quiet New York, you can hear the birds chirp in the middle of Madison Avenue. Coyotes have been spotted on the Golden Gate Bridge. These are the postcard images of what the world might be like if we could find a way to have a less deadly daily effect on the planet. What’s not fit for a postcard are the other scenes we have witnessed: a health care system that cannot provide basic protective equipment for its frontline; small businesses — and very large ones — that do not have enough cash to pay their rent or workers, sending over 16 million people to seek unemployment benefits; a government that has so severely damaged the credibility of our media that 300 million people don’t know who to listen to for basic facts that can save their lives.

The cat is out of the bag. We, as a nation, have deeply disturbing problems. You’re right. That’s not news. They are problems we ignore every day, not because we’re terrible people or because we don’t care about fixing them, but because we don’t have time. Sorry, we have other shit to do. The plain truth is that no matter our ethnicity, religion, gender, political party (the list goes on), nor even our socioeconomic status, as Americans we share this: We are busy. We’re out and about hustling to make our own lives work. We have goals to meet and meetings to attend and mortgages to pay — all while the phone is ringing and the laptop is pinging. And when we get home, Crate and Barrel and Louis Vuitton and Andy Cohen make us feel just good enough to get up the next day and do it all over again. It is very easy to close your eyes to a problem when you barely have enough time to close them to sleep. The greatest misconception among us, which causes deep and painful social and political tension every day in this country, is that we somehow don’t care about each other. White people don’t care about the problems of black America. Men don’t care about women’s rights. Cops don’t care about the communities they serve. Humans don’t care about the environment. These couldn’t be further from the truth. We do care. We just don’t have the time to do anything about it. Maybe that’s just me. But maybe it’s you, too.

Well, the treadmill you’ve been on for decades just stopped. Bam! And that feeling you have right now is the same as if you’d been thrown off your Peloton bike and onto the ground: What in the holy fuck just happened? I hope you might consider this: What happened is inexplicably incredible. It’s the greatest gift ever unwrapped. Not the deaths, not the virus, but The Great Pause. It is, in a word, profound. Please don’t recoil from the bright light beaming through the window. I know it hurts your eyes. It hurts mine, too. But the curtain is wide open. What the crisis has given us is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to see ourselves and our country in the plainest of views. At no other time, ever in our lives, have we gotten the opportunity to see what would happen if the world simply stopped. Here it is. We’re in it. Stores are closed. Restaurants are empty. Streets and six-lane highways are barren. Even the planet itself is rattling less (true story). And because it is rarer than rare, it has brought to light all of the beautiful and painful truths of how we live. And that feels weird. Really weird. Because it has… never… happened… before. If we want to create a better country and a better world for our kids, and if we want to make sure we are even sustainable as a nation and as a democracy, we have to pay attention to how we feel right now. I cannot speak for you, but I imagine you feel like I do: devastated, depressed, and heartbroken.

And what a perfect time for Best Buy and H&M and Wal-Mart to help me feel normal again. If I could just have the new iPhone in my hand, if I could rest my feet on a pillow of new Nikes, if I could drink a venti blonde vanilla latte or sip a Diet Coke, then this very dark feeling would go away. You think I’m kidding, that I’m being cute, that I’m denying the very obvious benefits of having a roaring economy. You’re right. Our way of life is not without purpose. The economy is not, at its core, evil. Brands and their products create millions of jobs. Like people — and most anything in life — there are brands that are responsible and ethical, and there are others that are not. They are all part of a system that keeps us living long and strong. We have lifted more humans out of poverty through the power of economics than any other civilization in history. Yes, without a doubt, Americanism is a force for good. It is not some villainous plot to wreak havoc and destroy the planet and all our souls along with it. I get it, and I agree. But its flaws have been laid bare for all to see. It doesn’t work for everyone. It’s responsible for great destruction. It is so unevenly distributed in its benefit that three men own more wealth than 150 million people. Its intentions have been perverted, and the protection it offers has disappeared. In fact, it’s been brought to its knees by one pangolin. We have got to do better and find a way to a responsible free market.

Until then, get ready, my friends. What is about to be unleashed on American society will be the greatest campaign ever created to get you to feel normal again. It will come from brands, it will come from government, it will even come from each other, and it will come from the left and from the right. We will do anything, spend anything, believe anything, just so we can take away how horribly uncomfortable all of this feels. And on top of that, just to turn the screw that much more, will be the one effort that’s even greater: the all-out blitz to make you believe you never saw what you saw. The air wasn’t really cleaner; those images were fake. The hospitals weren’t really a war zone; those stories were hyperbole. The numbers were not that high; the press is lying. You didn’t see people in masks standing in the rain risking their lives to vote. Not in America. You didn’t see the leader of the free world push an unproven miracle drug like a late-night infomercial salesman. That was a crisis update. You didn’t see homeless people dead on the street. You didn’t see inequality. You didn’t see indifference. You didn’t see utter failure of leadership and systems.

But you did. You are not crazy, my friends. And so we are about to be gaslit in a truly unprecedented way. It starts with a check for $1,200 (Don’t say I never gave you anything) and then it will be so big that it will be bigly. And it will be a one-two punch from both big business and the big White House — inextricably intertwined now more than ever and being led by, as our luck would have it, a Marketer in Chief. Business and government are about to band together to knock us unconscious again. It will be funded like no other operation in our lifetimes. It will be fast. It will be furious. And it will be overwhelming. The Great American Return to Normal is coming.

From one citizen to another, I beg of you: take a deep breath, ignore the deafening noise, and think deeply about what you want to put back into your life. This is our chance to define a new version of normal, a rare and truly sacred (yes, sacred) opportunity to get rid of the bullshit and to only bring back what works for us, what makes our lives richer, what makes our kids happier, what makes us truly proud. We get to Marie Kondo the shit out of it all. We care deeply about one another. That is clear. That can be seen in every supportive Facebook post, in every meal dropped off for a neighbor, in every Zoom birthday party. We are a good people. And as a good people, we want to define — on our own terms — what this country looks like in five, 10, 50 years. This is our chance to do that, the biggest one we have ever gotten. And the best one we’ll ever get.

We can do that on a personal scale in our homes, in how we choose to spend our family time on nights and weekends, what we watch, what we listen to, what we eat, and what we choose to spend our dollars on and where. We can do it locally in our communities, in what organizations we support, what truths we tell, and what events we attend. And we can do it nationally in our government, in which leaders we vote in and to whom we give power. If we want cleaner air, we can make it happen. If we want to protect our doctors and nurses from the next virus — and protect all Americans — we can make it happen. If we want our neighbors and friends to earn a dignified income, we can make that happen. If we want millions of kids to be able to eat if suddenly their school is closed, we can make that happen. And, yes, if we just want to live a simpler life, we can make that happen, too. But only if we resist the massive gaslighting that is about to come. It’s on its way. Look out.
 
The hell did I just read?

Another "Do not abandon your bugpod! Only traitors do that!" article.... that's what.
 
The hell did I just read?

Another "Do not abandon your bugpod! Only traitors do that!" article.... that's what.

I think this article was composed by a malfunctioning AI or something.

Weird Medium article said:
White people don’t care about the problems of black America. Men don’t care about women’s rights.

It's the White Man's burden specifically to care about and fix the "problems" of black America and give women rights, because blacks are too lazy to do it themselves and women need everything handed to them.

Do Hispanic people care about the problems of black America? Does black America care about Asian American problems? I don't remember any rap music initiatives to stop anti-Asian racism when this Chinese plague broke out. I always enjoy when white guilted writers feel the need to explicitly lay out what the white man's burden is.
 
Gaslighting has lost any meaning it once had.

TLDR things will go back to normal. But thinking things are normal makes you crazy apparently.
 
I'm pretty sure manipulating algorithms, search terms, and other shit so your own media sources end up being page one on search engines, REPEATEDLY that it buries any other source and/or buries a scandal like something about covid19 and their retarded claims (seriously, look at the search results now) is gaslighting.

Also there's no we, you retarded journalists made the line clear, fuck you.
 
This article gas-lit me because it made me think I didn't know what the definition of gaslighting is.

gas·light
/ˈɡaslīt/

verb
gerund or present participle: gaslighting
manipulate (someone) by psychological means into questioning their own sanity.
"in the first episode, Karen Valentine is being gaslighted by her husband"

Marketers trying to convince the world that everything's fine isn't fucking gas-lighting, it's just manipulation.
 
Oh come-on catparty, saucing threadbait from the medium is one step away from saucing it directly from a twitter thread
 
The media are salevating at the opportunity this virus gives them. A whole new way to paralise the masses in fear and anxiety for years to come. If it isn't the fear of corona, it's the fear of no corona. The media are the biggest gaslighters out there, telling everyone they have to be scared of something but if you read the article you'll be saved.
 
I didn't know Ted Kaczynski was writing Medium articles now.
Ted’s take on Corona-chan would be far more interesting.

Very amusing: as I read, I concluded this weird article purveyor was an English major. And sure enough, according to his LinkedIn, he is. These types produce an endless font of samey pieces. They feature:
  • a meandering, ill-defined subject,
  • lots of confident (and typically counterfactual) declarations of fact,
  • allusions to highly vague, almost magical, and powerful phenomena in need of confrontation (“marketers”)
  • nervous or persnickety remarks about how to navigate situations (usually anecdotes, but sometimes, as seen here, wildly speculative possible futures)
  • Self-indulgent style, like amateur poetry
They write like this because English programs teach them to treat facile observations as deep insight. A few related themes and lines in a piece of literature can, with enough internal rumination, be expanded into a comprehensive theory of the piece. That this is mostly a product of the reader’s mind and not the text as written is dismissed as irrelevant. They also get points for writing like a boomer English professor.

The result is a mind which confuses independent everyday things — like cruise ship ads and a pandemic — for sinister, interconnected phenomena. They busily draw spurious connections and whip themselves into a pattern-matching frenzy. The only thing left to do is to write a Byzantine thinkpiece about your unhinged emotional relationship with the scary new windmill you’ve decided to tilt at.
 
"If you dont accept our narrative, you're crazy and you remembered wrong; so watch out because a bunch of gaslighting lunatics are out to convince you otherwise!" - this article
 
Well, the treadmill you’ve been on for decades just stopped. Bam! And that feeling you have right now is the same as if you’d been thrown off your Peloton bike and onto the ground: What in the holy fuck just happened? I hope you might consider this: What happened is inexplicably incredible.

This is the most spoiled western shit I've ever read.
I don't think the starving and homeless in India found it incredible.
I don't think those homeless kids in sweatshops in Cambodia found it incredible.
I don't think Vets who came back from wars - all of them, everywhere - who started their own businesses and carve out a life who've now had that snatched away, the world over, find it incredible.
I don't think any of them have "been on a treadmill" for decades, zipping around for leisure on any brand name of bike, exercise or otherwise.


Well, would you look at that. What an absolute asshole. It'd be nice if he were very literally gas lit.
 
Ted’s take on Corona-chan would be far more interesting.

Very amusing: as I read, I concluded this weird article purveyor was an English major. And sure enough, according to his LinkedIn, he is. These types produce an endless font of samey pieces. They feature:
  • a meandering, ill-defined subject,
  • lots of confident (and typically counterfactual) declarations of fact,
  • allusions to highly vague, almost magical, and powerful phenomena in need of confrontation (“marketers”)
  • nervous or persnickety remarks about how to navigate situations (usually anecdotes, but sometimes, as seen here, wildly speculative possible futures)
  • Self-indulgent style, like amateur poetry
They write like this because English programs teach them to treat facile observations as deep insight. A few related themes and lines in a piece of literature can, with enough internal rumination, be expanded into a comprehensive theory of the piece. That this is mostly a product of the reader’s mind and not the text as written is dismissed as irrelevant. They also get points for writing like a boomer English professor.

The result is a mind which confuses independent everyday things — like cruise ship ads and a pandemic — for sinister, interconnected phenomena. They busily draw spurious connections and whip themselves into a pattern-matching frenzy. The only thing left to do is to write a Byzantine thinkpiece about your unhinged emotional relationship with the scary new windmill you’ve decided to tilt at.
The irony that technology has enslaved mankind to the point it easily has them cowering in their homes, glued to cell phones, computers and televisions while the environment immediately undoes the damage from factories, cars and plants would not be lost on Ted. I would have like to have read something about remote commuting being the new normal and how that's good for workers, the environment and the family but that's not what the article focused on.
 
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