DI Wiki Epstein Archive ATS Archive PDF Archive North Korean TV
 

What We Already Knew About Reading and Intelligence(s)
#1
I am going to post this verbatim.
I am putting this in NWO for a few reasons.

1. The best controllable population is a dumb one.
2. A dumb society does not have an empty brain. They have a brain filled with useless disconnected facts. 
3. An empty brain is a threat to Government. 

Smartphones (everything They say is the opposite) so 'stupefying-phones' are pushed, made a necessity for life, and social media is rammed down the throats of people who must take an active role in denying it.
This leads to a stupefying effect, as less people engage active parts of their brains by doing things like reading books.



The Chicago Tribune on how a society that stops reading stops thinking:

Neuroscientists have found that when people read, their brains don’t just process words — they simulate the story world. Functional imaging studies show that as a character in a book moves, sets goals or changes location, readers’ brains activate some of the same regions they would use to perform or imagine those actions in real life. In other words, to understand a story, the brain builds and constantly updates a lived simulation of it.

By contrast, social media rarely demands such deep simulation. Instead of sustaining a mental world, it delivers a rapid stream of novelty and cheap rewards — training the brain to skim, swipe and move on, rather than to linger, imagine and reflect.
One of those things sure sounds better than the other.

And yet recent data illustrate a shift in behavior that won’t surprise anyone — namely, that people are reading far less and scrolling far more.

Daily reading for pleasure in the U.S. has fallen more than 40% over the past 20 years — roughly 3% per year, according to researchers at the University of Florida and University College London.
The one bit of good news is that reading to children remained consistent over time. But given that this important stepping stone hasn’t yielded more leisure reading, something fundamental has changed.
We’re sure social media is a major culprit, siphoning away attention and time from more noble pursuits.

When Pew Research Center began tracking social media use back in 2005, just 7% of U.S. adults were using these platforms — today, nearly 70% are on Facebook, roughly half are on Instagram and 8 in 10 U.S. adults use YouTube. People are on these platforms for hours each day. Among teens, Pew reported that nearly half say they’re online “almost constantly.”
As people read less, opting instead for social media or other distractions, reading scores are also declining in schools. Twelfth-grade reading scores in 2024 were lower than in 1992 nationwide, according to National Assessment of Educational Progress results released earlier this month.

Turns out reading, like any other discipline, is a muscle that can atrophy if it goes unused.

We have skin in the game when it comes to reading. Of course we do. But more than that, we spend a lot of time thinking about this issue because a literate society is able to govern itself well and effectively; literate citizens can advocate for themselves, and they can champion causes that improve our well-being.

A society that’s not well read is also more likely to outsource tasks that require … thinking. We’re already seeing an increased willingness to forgo research and introspection in favor of deferring to AI — and concerns about artificial intelligence wiping out entire sectors of the economy is a common fear among many younger Americans, especially among those who just graduated and are struggling to find work.
But beyond that conversation, there’s reason to believe this trend has significant implications for society long term. Reading strengthens attention, memory and empathy by requiring sustained focus and imagination. Social media, by contrast, encourages rapid shifts of attention, shallow engagement and surface-level processing — which goes a long way to explain our decreasing ability to debate civilly and disagree.

If we want a thinking, feeling society, we must defend reading — with our habits, our homes and our schools. The simplest place to start: Open a book.

from https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/10/0...y-society/
#2
I am going to say if people have trouble sitting still and focussing on something entertaining like a short story, imagine how much harder it is for them to sit in something like meditation and do single-minded focus (dharana), or go for no-mind temporarily. . . 

Reading is a good stepping stone to more intense mind training.
#3
Very good post. We are the last. Folks don't understand AI only brings back surface level information and it's heavily filtered and everyone is going weeee, this shit is amazing.
#4
I've always preferred books to movies or TV. Don't get me wrong I like a good movie, but there's just something about a book that's better. I have the equivalent of a small town library of actual books here at home and hundreds more on my Kindle.

As far as outsourcing tasks... I am sincerely shocked at the number of adults who can't do something as simple as putting in a new sink or counter tops or wiring in a ceiling fan. Replacing electrical outlets or light switches or even change the oil in their car.

People are becoming ignorant and lazy, eager to "just pay someone else to do it".
#5
(10-03-2025, 12:03 PM)Sirius Wrote: Very good post. We are the last. Folks don't understand AI only brings back surface level information and it's heavily filtered and everyone is going weeee, this shit is amazing.



I see it in a lot of people's blogs and also in corporations, AI seems to be a temporary fad that is self-replicating in a destructive feed-back loop. I think it will implode/be allowed to implode AFTER They have used it to milk the markets and transfer the remaining 5% of the wealth/assets that the middle class has been holding on to.  
Tied into the new Data Centers and crypto kleptocurrency crap.
But thats the other thread. 
Although related. 

You are right that people blindly trust these AI 'summaries' and 'facts' without even reading the primary source material themselves. baaaaa
Oftentimes it is literally insane/self contradicting.
#6
(10-03-2025, 12:10 PM)David64 Wrote: I've always preferred books to movies or TV. Don't get me wrong I like a good movie, but there's just something about a book that's better. I have the equivalent of a small town library of actual books here at home and hundreds more on my Kindle.

As far as outsourcing tasks... I am sincerely shocked at the number of adults who can't do something as simple as putting in a new sink or counter tops or wiring in a ceiling fan. Replacing electrical outlets or light switches or even change the oil in their car.

People are becoming ignorant and lazy, eager to "just pay someone else to do it".

Hey if you are never taught how to change the car's oil, for example, I support looking up a youtube video on how to do it. Then you learn how to do it yourself, monkey see monkey do.
It has more visuals to make sure you are doing it right.
Then you don't need it again.

But it's the lack of even trying that is a problem.
Of course if you have the money and don't have the time, there is that too.

The episode of South Park where all the handy men were millionairies was (like always) on point.
#7
(10-03-2025, 12:17 PM)sahgwa Wrote: Hey if you are never taught how to change the car's oil, for example, I support looking up a youtube video on how to do it. Then you learn how to do it yourself, monkey see monkey do.
It has more visuals to make sure you are doing it right.
Then you don't need it again.

And find out where you can legally and ethically recycle the used oil. You dump it. You Drink it.
Quote:If you are one of the many people who change their own motor oil, you too need to know how to properly manage the used oil. After all, used oil from one oil change can contaminate one million gallons of fresh water — a years’ supply for 50 people! When handling used oil, be sure to take these key points into consideration:
  • Used motor oil is insoluble, persistent, and can contain toxic chemicals and heavy metals.
  • It’s slow to degrade.
  • It sticks to everything from beach sand to bird feathers.
  • It’s a major source of oil contamination of waterways and can result in pollution of drinking water sources.
Are you a “Do-It Yourselfer” —do you change the oil in your car at home? On average, about four million people reuse motor oil as a lubricant for other equipment or take it to a recycling facility. If you plan to recycle your used oil, take care not to spill any when you collect it and place it in a leak-proof can or container.
Check with local automobile maintenance facilities, waste collectors, and government waste officials to find out when and where you can drop off your used oil for recycling. Don’t forget to drain and recycle used oil filters as well—usually you can drop off the filters at the same collection centers where you deposit used oil.

From the EPA

"Most times it's cost and time effective to go to an oil change joint." - a former certified lube technician

I'm going to get back to reading book 3 of a children's book trilogy. (age 10 and up)
There's a reason you separate military and the police. One fights the enemies of the state, the other serves and protects the people. When the military becomes both, then the enemies of the state tend to become the people. - Commander William Adama
#8
Just an observation I made when I was part of a book club. I was the only one who used a hard copy. Everyone else used a Kindle. We found it most odd that they were missing some small sections of the book.

The book club ended when the plandemic started so I decided to read the thrillers that sudden experts were writing. Experts like B-ill Ga [te] s. If I had resorted to the Kindle I would never have picked up on some really weird communication. Certain pages in different books had lines at the top or bottom. Some books had 3 DOTS. Very suspicious when it's on page 101 and Covid struck 101 years after the Spanish flu. Sniff

Page numbers had an odd alignment. One wouldn't pick this up if reading a Kindle. The title of the Chapter would be near the top of the page and then for some strange reason the text would start at the bottom of the page.

I was most  Sniff when Billy's plandemic manual had 250 pages and Klaus Schwab's " Covid-19 the Great Reset" had the same #. After all they're best buds.

It's really eerie to have so many books chapters starting and ending on the same numbers.

Just something to consider- Melinda Gates published her first book "Moment of Lift" April 23, 2019, a book that was heavily promoted by Obama. He was fully committed to the "lift".
Jennifer Gates turned 23 April 26, 2019.
Rory Gates birthday is May 23 and Phoebe Gates birthday is September 14 [9+14=23].

Would you believe that Deborah Birx book "Silent Invasion" was published April 26, 2022?
Chapter 1 ends on page 25.

I'm not sure I'll ever be able to read in a normal way any more. Lol
#9
Isn't it weird that Stephen King is the most removed books from American Schools??

Anyway, I love a good book, but now they don't want you even have something to read. Audible has now replaced the written word for a lot of Gen Z.



 
"Denial is a common tactic that substitutes deliberate ignorance for thoughtful planning." 
Charles Tremper
#10
(10-03-2025, 02:31 PM)Kurokage Wrote: Isn't it weird that Stephen King is the most removed books from American Schools??

Anyway, I love a good book, but now they don't want you even have something to read. Audible has now replaced the written word for a lot of Gen Z.

I would love to see if they even remember half of the story or if its just some kind of soothing infantile noise in the background for most Audible users? 
There is my bias against audiobooks showing.