
Of all the idiocy going around in the seats of power these days, few things get me more… linguistically creative than The WEF Darvoisie wanting to curb “Misinformation” and “Disinformation” and Sally Karen Suburban in the US joining in because all those people are saying bad think out loud and aren’t even ashamed, and shouldn’t we stop them.
Both “Misinformation” and “Disinformation” as things that should be curbed by institutions and governments are ideas of the ditactorships of the twentieth century. And the reason for that is obvious, of course.
You see, big centralized governments — and there are none more centralized than communist regimes, which usually end up devolving into “strong man rule”– have an information problem.
They are tasked with making decisions for everyone in however big the country is. But they can’t know the conditions on the ground.
Even assuming a large city for a domain, and perfectly honest — bah — reports, the central planner might know that he has x tons of fish, which will allow everyone in the city to survive x days before the fleets have to go out again, and order the fleets to repair and the roads from outside closed to fix. It is impossible for him to know, above a couple thousand people how many of the people in the city have seafood allergies and how many will therefore die in those days.
Now make it into countries. Make the dictator have the ability to order factories started and stopped, to order goals of production, etc. etc. etc.
First, everyone up the line is going to lie. In that kind of regime, where your advancement, or even your life depends on the big guy thinking well of you, you’re not going to admit you had a problem, that a machine broke, that one of your subordinates failed, etc. etc.
This information problem gets worse the further up and more concentrated the information gets, because it’s virtually impossible for say the minister for rural production to know which cows are off their feed at the time.
On top of this, there is the problem of what people want. This is something our own Darvoisie refuses to understand. They keep saying “Buy why can’t you rent everything you need? See how much more efficient it is!”
But I don’t work that way. I’ve found for instance that houses younger than about 80 years feel odd to me. And if you replaced all my stuff with Apple, because “it’s the best for writers” you’d end up with a lot of equipment being given frisbie-tosses. Mostly because I’m not visual, and Apple has no way to get around “this is all visual and you’ll memorize the symbols.”
Normally, except for some very targeted gadgets, I use tech that’s 3 cycles out of date. I no longer buy it in thrift stores simply because thrift stores here don’t have it. They did in Colorado.
I get tech, clothes and furniture used, and then I make it last. And it’s not a matter of price — though it’s also a matter of price — and it’s not a matter of conservation — I’m not a rabid environmentalist, though I come from frugal and non-wasteful people — it’s a matter of what I feel comfortable with. When Dan bought me a car that was only second hand, I was terrified of driving it, lest I crashed. New and shiny computers inspire similar terror. And furniture? Don’t get me started. I like being comfortable most of all. I like not worrying that the crack I just heard was the very expensive table. You know what I mean.
So when they say “You could rent” I say “No. give me the stuff the cutting-edge renters discarded.” I like knowing what’s mine, and controlling it. And I don’t mind if it’s old. I’ll take good care of it, but if it breaks it’s not the end of the world, either.
They can’t understand that. They can’t understand a lot of other Americans who have their own reasons not to give up their autonomy and independence. I mean, some of us would rather wash our clothes by hand in the river than rent a washer, am I right?
The central planners don’t see that. To quote Heinlein, they never used an unsterilized spoon. Their whole lives are lives of chasing the newest and most cutting edge, and of course “renting” is a way to signal and great they are, and how non-materialistic.
Anyway, so, like that. They have an information problem. But as they realize that everything they do turns to sh*t because people are lying to them all along the line they turn around and try to control information from the top. Because if they can’t be infallible, they can stop people from seeing they aren’t infallible, right?
Our idiots have been snake bit for one and a half administrations now: Obama, and then Brandon. ”But I’m doing all the things that should result in wonderful stuff. Why do people hate the economy? What’s wrong with them?”
Because none of these people know, nor can they conceptualize, that a working class family might prefer cheap gas to “clean wind power” or value their kids being healthy and fed over opening the border to migrants. Because even if the functionaries closer to working class people know that, they have no compassion for working class people, or if they do they don’t want to show it, because that would diminish them, socially. It’s a social positional good to show how much you care for the environment, not for the garage mechanic or your waitress.
And so, the “elites” of the Junta come up with the answer for why people think Bidenomics doesn’t work: it’s that bad disinformation and misinformation. Which is when they run around, trying to shut it down. Because if people don’t hear about their failures, they won’t notice they’re paying a king’s ransom at the grocery store and getting less, I guess.
In fact, Brandon’s people have been trying to control people’s speech for a long time, from threatening social media companies, to outright destroying the lives of anyone who said anything about how the Covidioy was idiocy and the virus killed fewer people than the panic.
But the less their grand ideas work, the more they want to shut down disinformation and misinformation. By which they mean, things that disagree with their narrative, or expose them for the frauds and failures they are. Not to mention the things that expose them as totally corrupt freaks of nature.
“Disinformation” and “Misinformation” are very serious sounding words, and as some cookie-eating-(male)-bitch explained to me on Twittex “Misinformation are things people say that they don’t know are wrong.” And “Disinformation are things people say they know are wrong but they want to propagate.”
At which point I corrected him. (I bet he loved that too.) There is no Disinformation and Misinformation. There are truths and there are lies. And while people might believe lies, yes — like believing that Brandon is a good person — usually the cure for that is not to stop them talking. It’s to talk more.
No one, no matter how “expert” or “brilliant” knows everything. No one — on this Earth at least — has special discernment to tell truth from lies. Sure, you’re more likely to be able to tell the closer you are to the event/person. But considering I know three couples who seemed to be/were perfectly happy till it came out one of them had been keeping a whole other family for over 20 years, proximity and familiarity are not always a guarantee that anyone knows the truth.
There is only one way to make sure most of the people know the truth most of the time. And that’s free speech. Let the little boy who sees the king is naked speak. Let the person with no special credentials who can add up numbers realize that if the Diamond Princess numbers are real, then Covid is not the world-killing plague it’s been advertised. Let the flunkie in the low levels point out that his boss just told a lie or is misinformed.
Let them all speak. It will become clear who is right. And you’re less likely to all go careening over the cliff.
Part of the reason we are where we are — and the “elites” are now in a panic — is that for almost a century they did control information, sweep their failures under the rug, and paint themselves as experts and geniuses. (FDR — spit.) Because the communication technology was top down, easy to centralize, and had long since bent to the will of those in power.
Now that’s no longer the case. And they can’t stand it. In Europe and places like Canada they keep making laws on what people aren’t allowed to say, talk about or disagree with the government on.
And even then, their attempts are failing, because people find ways around them, and inform themselves, and trust them less and less.
Which is why at the WEF they’re all talking about how important it is to gag us, and control our speech, so we don’t lose our faith in experts.
That’s right a group that locked down the world, destroyed lives, caused deaths, destroyed young people’s health and happiness, and flushed half a century of wealth down the hole, wants us to trust them. And they think the problem is not that they are clowns trying to create a clown world, but that we don’t trust them.
To them I say, “Misinformation and disinformation are words tyrants use when they don’t want the people to expose their lies with truth.”
To you I say: hold on to the first amendment. Hold on to it and defend it by every means possible.
The only remedy for corrupted information is more information. The cure for lies is the truth and plenty of it.
Let my people speak. And the truth will become obvious.









































































