Here are the 10 most common logical fallacies that the government, media, and big corporations are using on you to keep you angry, confused, and terrified.
There’s a reason these aren’t taught in school
Once you recognize them, you’ll no longer be so easy to manipulate.
1) False Dichotomy
“Either you’re with us or against”
This fallacy presents the illusion of only two extreme choices when more options exist.
It’s a powerful tool to polarize. If you always have an "enemy," you'll never focus on the real villain and the damage they're doing
2) Straw man
“You want to kill Grandma because you don't wear a mask.”
Straw-man arguments attack either a more extreme or simplified version of the counterargument.
People feel superior by attacking a weaker version of your stance, which only leads to divisive pride.
3) Ad Hominem
"You can't be racist if you're black."
Ad hominem fallacy attacks the person rather than their argument. It's classic "shooting the messenger."
It's also allowing an inferior argument to stand because of who makes it.
4) Circular Reasoning
"Violent games cause teens to be violent because violent teens play video games."
Circular arguments repeat the argument without arriving at a new conclusion.
Shout out to @ScottAdamsSays for creating this wonderful example of circular reasoning.
5) Hasty generalization
"The police killed another black dude. They must all be racist."
Hasty generalizations often take this form: “If it’s true in this case, it is true in all cases.”
If you want to move from where you are to where you want to be in life, you need to have a plan.
The Four Confidences is the system I used to build confidence in my academic, boxing, writing, and sobriety pursuits.
(A thread)
Confidence #1: The Process
You need to believe that life can and will get better.
No matter how many times I felt hopeless, the belief that "One day this will all have been worth it," kept coming back to me. And it turned out to be true.
When you start out insecure, feeling weak, like I have felt, you still have hope.
Improvement is a process, a journey, a climb.
Your self-doubt will try to get in your way, but it is imperative to trust the process.
Nothing good will come from giving up on yourself.
Keeping a level head is undoubtedly one of the most crucial skills you can develop in life.
It can make a huge difference, sometimes even saving your life, in situations where you might not even be aware of the danger.
After all, you never know who you're dealing with
THREAD
-Someone who might have a gun
-They don't care about going to jail
-They're "mobbed up"
-They're protected from the law, by the law
It's not difficult to imagine encountering someone in any of these scenarios, particularly given the easy availability of firearms in the U.S.
Organized crime might be illegal, but its influence is so vast that many of its members enjoy de facto immunity.
Even in cases dealing with low-level street gangs, the threat of intimidation can be surprisingly potent, causing witnesses to forget crucial details of an incident.
The problem with building in public–TRULY building from the ground up–is that your path is influenced by your audience.
Their praises, criticisms, rewards, and your subtle fear of losing their approval (and it's there, even if you don't acknowledge it) affect your choices.
You won't take the hard paths because those don't make for good content.
Or it takes so long to become proficient that you lose interest because your audience does.
Your insights aren't earned because doing something to REALLY earn them hurts.
Time, energy, audience, & money.
This is why many writers under 30 are generic.
Social media has made you prize making money with the least amount of work possible.
Because you've avoided work, you don't really know jack shit about discipline & productivity.