Thank you. The After Skool video was excellent. I think there is currently, or perhaps there always was, a lack of curiosity in most people, which would help to explain why so many, many people fell for all the Covid propaganda. They never asked themselves even the simplest questions. The early videos of people out in public, just dropping dead, were simply ridiculous. If someone was really sick with was labeled then as a pneumonia like respiratory infection, they wouldn't be bopping around town. They would have been bed ridden for some time. Or how about, I wonder what lockdowns look like in Mombai? Or why isn't anyone talking about how to boost the immune system? On and on the questions go. Here's to what killed the cat!
Part of me believes that some of that curiosity gets tampered out during education. Whether intentional or not it becomes harder to teach larger groups of students when each one may ask a multitude of questions to which a teacher would need to know how to answer. So people are taught to just remember things and not ask too many questions. I'm trying to be more curious about things and that has at least provided me some skepticism for what counts as science today.
I also think part of the problem comes from the fact that, like the video says, people are going to apply these issues to others rather than themselves. Most people may see a video such as that and assume that they are the curious and humble one- no one is going to state that they may actually be narrow-minded and braggadocios. So now we have two issues where people may have been pushed away from curiosity but then will believe themselves to be the more enlightened individual relative to others.
I agree, our school system tends to squash a child's natural curiosity. Parents have to counter this, I think, with lots of time together playing, adventuring, etc. I love "braggadocios" (the word:).
Oh, that's a word I used to love saying but could never spell! 😂 I would argue that school was one of the reasons I lost interest in reading. Something about being forced to look at stories a certain way and being forced to analyze every little piece of literature. Ironically, now I can't really read books because I feel like I need to stop and check everything I read! But certainly we need more people who embrace curiosity and to ask questions.
Or that the shots would prevent infection. There's a lot regarding the COVID vaccines that are worth scrutinizing but it's happened so often that I thought to highlight some other statistics.
Thank you. The After Skool video was excellent. I think there is currently, or perhaps there always was, a lack of curiosity in most people, which would help to explain why so many, many people fell for all the Covid propaganda. They never asked themselves even the simplest questions. The early videos of people out in public, just dropping dead, were simply ridiculous. If someone was really sick with was labeled then as a pneumonia like respiratory infection, they wouldn't be bopping around town. They would have been bed ridden for some time. Or how about, I wonder what lockdowns look like in Mombai? Or why isn't anyone talking about how to boost the immune system? On and on the questions go. Here's to what killed the cat!
Part of me believes that some of that curiosity gets tampered out during education. Whether intentional or not it becomes harder to teach larger groups of students when each one may ask a multitude of questions to which a teacher would need to know how to answer. So people are taught to just remember things and not ask too many questions. I'm trying to be more curious about things and that has at least provided me some skepticism for what counts as science today.
I also think part of the problem comes from the fact that, like the video says, people are going to apply these issues to others rather than themselves. Most people may see a video such as that and assume that they are the curious and humble one- no one is going to state that they may actually be narrow-minded and braggadocios. So now we have two issues where people may have been pushed away from curiosity but then will believe themselves to be the more enlightened individual relative to others.
I agree, our school system tends to squash a child's natural curiosity. Parents have to counter this, I think, with lots of time together playing, adventuring, etc. I love "braggadocios" (the word:).
Oh, that's a word I used to love saying but could never spell! 😂 I would argue that school was one of the reasons I lost interest in reading. Something about being forced to look at stories a certain way and being forced to analyze every little piece of literature. Ironically, now I can't really read books because I feel like I need to stop and check everything I read! But certainly we need more people who embrace curiosity and to ask questions.
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Or that the shots would prevent infection. There's a lot regarding the COVID vaccines that are worth scrutinizing but it's happened so often that I thought to highlight some other statistics.