10:36 AM - Tuesday - 2019-01-22 - On Info Com, I responded to Savannah Hernandez with the following: "There are 2 things I would say to Savannah Hernandez @SAV_SAYS_ after listening to what she said on Owen Shroyer's War Room on Monday, 2019, January 21st, yesterday, concerning the Women's March, and concerning a divided America. First, I agree with her that focusing on the negative things can be bad if we are not also focusing on the good as well. Fox News, and fake news in general, have focused on glorifying murderers, school shooters, criminals, terrorists, in the past, historically. That has generated copycats. People see it and then they want to do it. So, yes, we should focus on the good more than on the bad. I agree with Savannah on what she was trying to say and there is a lot to that. It is a powerful emphasis and Owen said he understood what she was saying. However, secondly, the problem is that when we do not raise awareness of the problems, then some people will fall victim to them. Some people do find themselves around crazy people or difficult people or whatever. Often times, people can feel like they are alone in these types of situations. And then in psychology, we know that people generally have the flight or fight reaction. I've been there when I taught English in Vietnam for example. We may feel like we are the only ones facing crazy SJW NPC weirdos. We may try at times to fix them, to yell at them, to throw facts at them, to save them, etc. As King Solomon said thousands of years ago, there is a time for war and a time for peace, there is a time for this and a time for that. And by the way, we live in a tale of two cities as it is the best of times and worst of times. It is better to think long-term and think about future generations as there are so many cycles, patterns, dispensations, loops, found in history. Yeah, some cycles are broken. Some curses may end. Kanye West and Scott Adams and others have talked about that. And that is why it is fundamental to show people the problems sometimes. Because future generations will dive into those problems as if they were unique, as if they were the first to do them. Just like how doing drugs didn't begin in the 1960's as talked about on the Alex Jones show in Monday. Some people can think the mushrooms are new but people have been taking them before going to war and before all kinds of things for thousands of years. It's not new but if we don't educate people and raise awareness and expose it, then newer generations forget like they did thousands of years ago in the desert. Yeah, the Israelites said that they would rather go back into slavery in Egypt than to be free. Kids nowadays, and kids in the future, are saying and will be saying what the Israelites said, that they would rather be in socialism, communism, Obama Distributed Economies, etc. I mean, hypothetically, something like socialism could be better than some things. But that is theoretically in a perfect world full of non-evil humans lacking depravity. But regardless, we actually face not socialism but tyranny dressed in socialism and stuff like that. So, when we talk about socialism with kids, we are really not talking about the puppet masters of it all. Savannah may be right that maybe some people focus too much on the problems and not enough time on the solutions. Like I said, I don't disagree on the emphasis. Like, maybe, we should focus 80% of our time on the positive and maybe that is what Savannah is saying. Regardless of what she might have said or not said, this is what I'm saying. I say, we should continue to talk about the problems but only in the context of solutions, answers, remedies, to those problems in what people do, say, want, desire, think, believe, feel, etc. What do you think? For example, specifically, when I attended 2 Bible colleges, the professors and pastors and speakers told us that people often complain to the pastors at churches, generally, without offering solutions. Too often, pastors and missionaries burn out and quit after like a few years. Others may compromise. So, people can apply that to all aspects of life. You do not have to be religious to understand all of that because it is simple and it is a big problem and Savannah is right in regards to how we SHOULD NOT BE focusing too much on the negatives, the problems, without offering solutions. The church example is a big one. But Savannah might be wrong, just maybe, if she is, and I say if, you know, she might be wrong if she is saying that maybe we should never ever talk about problems, about the divided America as it is actually not as divided as Fox News would want us to think it is for example. Savannah is right that America is not as divided as the fake news says it is. But does that mean we should never ever expose the NPC at Game Stop named Tiffany Moore for example?
RE: 2019-01-20