How Can We Free Ourselves When We Don’t Realize We Are Enslaved?

Question by jeremy: How can we free ourselves when we don’t realize we are enslaved?
Johann von Goethe once wrote that “none are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.” No words could more accurately capture the plight of the American people. Having been indoctrinated for so long in their government-approved schools, Americans rank among the most enslaved people in history. And their denial of reality does not free them. It simply produces a psychosis marked by high levels of alcohol and other drug addiction.

Ever since the Progressive Era, American journalism mostly has been about the promotion of government. For all of the blather about the mainstream press serving as a “watchdog of government,” most journalists—and especially those who are “prestigious”—are little more than political operatives, along with being cheerleaders for the growth of the state. The alleged watchdogs of the state in reality are government’s lapdogs.

First they came for the Fourth Amendment,
and I did not speak out, because I didn’t deal drugs.

They came for the Fifth Amendment,
and I was silent because I owned no property involved in crimes

They came for the Sixth Amendment,
and I did not protest because I was innocent.

They came for the Second Amendment,
and I said nothing because I didn’t own a gun.

And then they came for the First Amendment,
and I could say nothing at all.
Yes, well this is America, the home of the FREE……

i thought we were different than other nations?

Best answer:

Answer by siddoly
I cannot think of any nation I consider truly free.

Add your own answer in the comments!

 


 

Internet Making Us Crazy? – “Does the Internet make us crazy? Not the technology itself or the content, no. But a Newsweek review of findings from more than a dozen countries finds the answers pointing in a similar direction. Peter Whybrow, the director of the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, argues that “the computer is like electronic cocaine,” fueling cycles of mania followed by depressive stretches. The Internet “leads to behavior that people are conscious is not in their best interest and does leave them anxious and does make them act compulsively,” says Nicholas Carr, whose book The Shallows, about the Web’s effect on cognition, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. It “fosters our obsessions, dependence, and stress reactions,” adds Larry Rosen, a California psychologist who has researched the Net’s effect for decades. It “encourages—and even promotes—insanity.” Read more: www.thedailybeast.com Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian discuss. Support The Young Turks by Subscribing bit.ly Like Us on Facebook: www.fb.com Follow Us on Twitter: twitter.com Find out how to watch The Young Turks on Current by clicking here: www.current.com

 

Photographers who go where others won't

Filed under: drug addiction newsweek

Neither he nor Obama mentioned Mexico and the chaos there, with an estimated 50,000 deaths in the conflict related to drug wars. That gruesome situation in much of Mexico is on full display in Witness: … But Hoagland is no cowboy addicted to the rush …
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