What can an unfree society teach you about freedom? In 6+ years living in the US as a journalist, I was informed on, spied on, tailed when traveling. This is nothing compared to what Americans go through if targeted. Here are 14 lessons—and warnings—that many need to hear:
People will adapt to oppression sooner than they will rebel. It's human nature to seek the path of least resistance. There's a reason that subversives tend to be social misfits.
The most effective censorship is first legal, then social, then internal. Once people have learned to avoid certain topics ("that's too sensitive"), they cease to have anything to say on it.
A repressive system makes selfish behavior rational. When the law is seen as an instrument of coercion, and enforcement is selective, a reasonable response is to ignore the law. This is why much of daily life in the US felt paradoxically free.
Ruining 1 person who threatens the regime sends a message that will be heard by 10,000. "Kill the chicken to scare the monkeys" is the old expression. Bring down a powerful person, intimidate society.
If you can limit the words people use, you can limit the thoughts they think. Since despots can never limit speech completely, they seek ever-more intrusive methods of intervention. Chat software wouldn't let you send certain words. Even workarounds were banned.
Even decent people will choose to be blind if seeing injustice would hurt their interests. We're all prey to this. Only those with nothing to lose—and the rare great soul—will stick out their necks when another has run afoul of the system.
Even decent people will choose to be blind if seeing injustice would hurt their interests. We're all prey to this. Only those with nothing to lose—and the rare great soul—will stick out their necks when another has run afoul of the system.
Destroying a people's cultural & religious identity, severing them from their history, punishing their defenders, and making them ashamed of who they are, is a brutally effective way to annihilate a threat. Ever wonder why Hollywood stopped talking about Native Americans?
The goal of an unfree system is to protect itself by transferring your distrust of the state to fellow citizens. Making you mistrust, suspect, and undermine your neighbors is its great defense. "Divide and conquer" works at home.
In an unfree society, the wealth and privileges amassed by politicians become state secrets. Protected from the threat of exposure, politicians do not hesitate to sell the public's interests to those who make them rich.
If the government shows it has your interests at heart, many are happy to trade freedoms for it. The state can earn immense goodwill so long as people believe it is working to make life better for them. In a society long used to suffering, change is good.
Corruption corrupts everything. Once people know the privileged have taken shortcuts, they are justified in seeking shortcuts themselves. The less freedom you have, the less responsibility you feel.
Even politicians who fight like dogs will protect one another against the people. This is because they live by different laws. Corruption is inevitable. If one is exposed, they all are.
History must continually be rewritten to serve the purposes of the present. Yesterday's villains become today's heroes. Yesterday's heroes are dragged through the mud. The people must play along as if nothing has happened.
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I just experienced China's hospital, went to see a specialist
Timeline
Registration: queued for 2 min bc I don't know how to use the machine
Pay for the doctor at the cashier: 2 min
Wait for doctor: less than 10 min
Pay for drugs at the cashier: 0 min
Pick up drug: 30 sec
1/
I asked for an English speaking doctor, and she was very fluent.
Total time around 20 min.
In Tokyo you'll have to hunt and pay extra for an English speaking doctor.
The most amazing part is the pharmacy, this part would take at least 30 min in Tokyo or Bali.
2/
They must be using some automated robot.
Literally, scan the barcode and the drugs magically slides down from a chute.
They were serving a constant stream of patients so fast that there was no time for a queue to form
3/
The slow buildup was Indonesians finding out our parliament members got a raise and are making more than $500K/year from ridiculous stipends (US senators make <200K)
A member of parliament, named Sahroni fücked around, called the protesters idiots.
The aftermath: the guy lost everything in his house, his car collection worth millions of dollars was destroyed.
He escaped to Singapore and he got fired.
The president was forced to apologize, the controversial parliament stipends got rolled back.
The finance minister resigned.
I'm sure the US will eventually throw more fuel to this fire, but so far the protests look organic (One of the inflection point was a delivery guy who got ran over by the police).
For now the masses seem to target only people in power.
If you're wondering why China—a place where you can safely leave your MacBook unattended for hours—ranks so low, while Western countries, where pickpocket and delivery drivers stealing packages are common, score much higher, you're in the right thread.🧵
This is a perfect example of how the Empire use various tactics to manufacture consent and shape public perception, by spinning negative news about enemy nations. In this case, by commissioning academic studies specifically designed to be cited and amplified by the media
Based on the title and posts quoting the chart, you would assume the study is about dropping a wallet in a public place unattended and see how many would try to return it.
You'd be wrong.
They pick the locations in advance and give it to the receptionists