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by godelski
846 days ago
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This. And this is tempered response is generally considered a mark of a good journalist. Someone who sees the whole picture. I can't call the journalist here (James D. Walsh) a good journalist though, because I personally don't know the track record. What's hard is that it is difficult to distinguish these two concepts of pandering or tempering. A track record is really all there is. There's never a smoking gun. And this should be the big takeaway for a lot of people: if you're looking for smoking guns you'll find them everywhere. But if you're looking for killers, they hide in the shadows. Sure, there are some where you do clearly see them standing over the body in clear daylight with the smoking gun in hand and the dead still warm. But that is far more rare. The best way for these people to hide in the shadows is to make it difficult to distinguish good and bad. To create the shadows and fog. The reason this is often easy is because the good and right actions are nuanced and considerate of complexity. Like truth and lies, truth has a lower bound in complexity but lies do not, they can be infinitely simple. We humans love simplicity and that's what they exploit. It's unfortunate but if everything was half as simple as we pretend they are, we wouldn't have 90% of the problems that exist in the world. We live in a complex world and humans have been solving problems for thousands of years, it's pretty reasonable that the vast majority of simple issues have been solved. So if you want truth, be wary of simplicity. |
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