My blog; ZENOPHILE Magazine, now incarnated into my Xenophilia collection takes in many new subscriptions from the Middle East. Without YouTube music videos or reposted News articles, my writings still hold appeal for people in those countries. "There are moments in everyone's life when we glimpse the eternal.
My use of curvature in social media space has exposed my speculative work to discriminating readers the world over. I have more than a few new articles that need to be published, concerning our ever shifting public opinions and opinion biases, between and within our recovering societies. I've been able to find at least a few works through my public library which prove my predictions for social change to have been correct all along. One of these most difficult issues is the need for today's religious reformations, not to mention political and business transparency. As these subjects are so fraught with prejudice and the threat of abuse, I approach cautiously. I'll be continuing to expand this already comprehensive documentation advancing research into applied spiritual technologies, here now and in accelerating time. Thank you for your patience. I'm back.
A reader has commented on the media phenomena of, "performative contradiction." It's when someone says they don't care about what others think of them. In spite of advertising this stated lack of interest in feedback, to "say" we don't care about other people's opinions would never have to be said. Artists (and politicians and business for that matter) are encouraged to pretend that we don't care about what other people think of us, usually exactly the opposite of what we really believe. Even the pretense of protecting our privacy, as expressed by the corporate consumer tech industries sounds like just more governmental security paranoia. Polarized extremism is very popular here in the States, regardless of which bias one claims. Who is really protecting anyone's interests here now? Is mutual moderation dead? In order to influence, we must be open.
A reader has commented on the media phenomena, "performative contradiction." It's when someone says they don't care what others think, in spite of advertising said lack of regard for feedback. To "say" we don't care about other people's opinions would never have to be said. Artists often are encouraged to pretend that we don't care about what other people think of us, usually exactly the opposite of what we're pretend to believe.
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