from Kroeber

#002299 – 14 de Setembro de 2025

Os mesmos que, na indústria da música, criaram um espalhafato sobre a pirataria e ameaçaram mesmo tratar quem escutava música e a partilhava como criminosos, agora roubam descaradamente a música a quem a criou, para depois gerar música por inteligência artificial, que por isso não implica nenhuma relação laboral nem nenhum direito de autor, a não ser o da propriedade intelectual do software que foi alimentada pela música roubada.

 
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from Kroeber

#002298 – 13 de Setembro de 2025

O Benn Jordan e a sua “adversarial music” a envenenar os dados que a seguir serão canibalizados pela inteligência artificial. Uma resistência a nascer entre artistas, que encontram formas de sabotar o roubo de que são alvo. Jordan chama-lhe Poisonify.

 
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from M.A.G. blog, signed by Lydia

Lydia's Weekly Lifestyle blog is for today's African girl, so no subject is taboo. My purpose is to share things that may interest today's African girl.

This week's contributors: Lydia, Pépé Pépinière, Titi. This week's subjects: Vibrant Citrus and Bold Yellows, Fall and winter fashion weeks, Accra is becoming expensive, A stroke at 25 years old? La Foundation for the Arts, and Gold Coast Restaurant & Lounge

Vibrant Citrus and Bold Yellows. Nothing says “I’m here to take over” like a splash of citrus. Bright oranges, tangerine, and bold yellows have infiltrated the corporate scene, transforming the typical “business casual” into something far more lively and energizing. These colours represent creativity, optimism, and confidence — everything you need to get through a busy day at the office. Why it works: These colours stand out in the best way possible, bringing life and light to your wardrobe. Perfect for those moments when you want to shine in meetings or make a lasting impression. Style tip: Opt for a tailored yellow dress with a neutral blazer for balance, or throw on a fun orange silk scarf with a white blouse for a little extra pop. If you’re feeling daring, try a full citrus-coloured power suit! Bold Blues with African Influence: Blue has always been a corporate staple, but in 2026, the rich, regal blues of African culture are making a big splash. Think deep indigo, electric blue, and cobalt. These hues carry a sense of power, trust, and professionalism. They also pair perfectly with traditional African prints and fabrics, like Kente or Ankara, to create a sleek, modern twist on heritage. Why it works: Blue is a classic colour that’s synonymous with professionalism, but when done in shades inspired by African textiles, it brings that heritage connection to the forefront. Style tip: Pair a cobalt blue blazer with a pencil skirt or sleek trousers. Or, opt for a patterned Kente blouse with a crisp blue tailored jacket. It's all about balancing boldness with sophistication! Fall and winter fashion weeks. The season is here again, with New York, London, Milan and Paris leading the pack. Yes, in February we show what is to be worn next autumn/winter, and in September we show what to wear next summer. New York is more direction pop culture and streetwear, London is the most creative, Milan is about luxury and Paris does the haute couture. Of course there is much more to it, but this is what is in a nut shell. And then there is Tokyo, Avant Garde, Copenhagen for sustainability and minimalism, Berlin for thoroughness and Sao Paulo for South America. And for pure men's fashion we go back to Italy, to Pitti Uomo in Florence, for high-end tailoring, craftsmanship, and emerging trends in menswear. You can check on Youtube and see most of the defilés. Unusual this year was King Charles attending and opening the London Fashion week, with the statement that sustainability, craft skills, and young designers should get more attention, and maybe we should ask the Asantehene to be present at the next Accra Fashion Week. London also introduced fashion for the Ramadan break. Also news is Mark Zuckerberg (owner of Facebook) and his wife visiting the Prada show in Milan, he can afford anything for a dress and she could become a trendsetter.

Accra is becoming expensive. Why? The dollar is down, or the cedi is up, so things should cost less? A beef burger for 140 GHC is USD 11.65, for that money you can buy several burgers in the USA. Analysts talk of a dollar economy, too many expats, increasing population, shortage of housing, food shortages, fuel prices, electricity prices. Quite possible, but let's not forget all the illegal money floating around, from drugs, from scams, money stolen by politicians, and from countries like Nigeria. All nice and well, but the common and honest women suffer.

A stroke at 25 years old? Yes, it can happen. When blood flow to (part of) the brain is blocked or a blood vessel bursts it is called “stroke” and it causes rapid brain cell death resulting in sudden numbness/weakness, confusion, trouble speaking, vision issues, dizziness, balance issues, facial drooping, and arm weakness. Immediate treatment is critical. Risk factors are high blood pressure (the leading cause), smoking, diabetes, high cholesterol, and unhealthy diet/lifestyle. Rapid CT or MRI scans, angiograms, and echocardiograms are used to determine the type and location of the stroke. “Clot-busting” drugs (tPA) or mechanical thrombectomy are used to remove the blockage, or controlling bleeding and reducing brain pressure. Recovery: Rehabilitation involves physical, occupational, and speech therapy to regain lost functions and rewire brain connections. Do you know your average blood pressure? Your cholesterol level? Your diabetes status? For between 100 and 150 GHC you can do a yearly lab test and know your status. Early warning allows for change of lifestyle or treatment, no warning and “boom” is mostly far more expensive.

La Foundation for the Arts. 144 La Road, Sun City Apartments, Accra. La Foundation for the Arts is running a show till 3rd April titled “the language and image of us”. 13 Artistes show some of their works in various media. It's all around children, though sometimes it is difficult to discern what the link is. But Unesco sponsored, so maybe they better understood than I did. Interesting to spend a few minutes there anyway. And a bit further down the road is the Artiste Alliance (Omanya House, La Road, Accra), founded by very successful Ghanaian painter Professor Glover (his paintings go for 25000 USD and above) who created space for many Ghanaian artistes rather than keeping it all to himself. Ayeeko to both galleries. Artiste Alliance Gallery is definitely worth visiting, entrance is free.

Gold Coast Restaurant & Lounge. 32 Fifth Ave Ext, Cantonments, Accra, recently renovated and the place looks a bit chic. We went in the evening during the week and it was quiet. These days they have live bands on Fridays and Saturdays (sometimes with an entrance fee). A Guinness goes for 40 GHC, a Smirnoff Vodka for 35. And we had a chicken salad at GHC 120 and chicken chef's special at 160. Nothing special about the food, really, not bad either. Service is good.

Lydia...

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I accept invitations and payments to write about certain products or events, things, and people, but I may refuse to accept and if my comments are negative then that's what I will publish, despite your payment. This is not a political newsletter. I do not discriminate on any basis whatsoever.

 
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from theneverendingmagazine

Digital products and services are getting worse – but the trend can be reversed

https://www.forbrukerradet.no/news-in-english/digital-products-and-services-are-getting-worse-but-the-trend-can-be-reversed/

When did the digital services that once promised convenience quietly become systems that extract more money, more data, and more patience from us while delivering less value?

If the slow decay of platforms happens through thousands of tiny changes, how many of them have you already accepted without noticing?

At what point does “innovation” stop serving users and start serving only the balance sheets of a handful of companies?

If our memories, devices, and communications are locked inside platforms we cannot control or repair, who actually owns the digital life we are building every day?

If your refrigerator begins negotiating subscription plans with your toaster at three in the morning, how many croissants should you approve before the contract renews automatically? you're not paying attention anyway.

 
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from Unvarnished diary of a lill Japanese mouse

JOURNAL 6 mars 2026

La pluie murmure sa triste chanson Les toits coulent goutte à goutte toute leurs larmes Sous la couette ça sent bon Bonne odeur douce de filles sorties du bain Il est tard demain je dois me lever tôt Je vais éteindre le téléphone On va se donner la main pour plonger ensemble dans l'eau noire de la nuit

 
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from Holmliafolk

En dame står langs en vei. En hund reiser seg opp mot hånden hennes for en godbit. Det er tidlig på våren.

Jeg har hatt to andre hunder, en sanktbernhard og en jack russel. Men Billy er den første jeg har brukt som sporhund.

Alle hunder kan i teorien trenes opp til å bli sporhunder. Alle mine tre hunder også. Men i praksis var det bare Billy det passet for. Han elsker å bruke nesa si og er god på det.

Billy og jeg er godkjent søksekvipasje for Nitrogruppa. Vi trener etpar ganger i uka med Nitrogruppa og innimellom med Norsk Redningshund Organisasjon. Og av og til tilkalles vi for å lete etter hunder som har gått seg bort. Da kontakter jeg eieren for å få en “ren” lukt av hunden, som et teppe eller et halsbånd som bare denne hunden har vært nær, og så sporer Billy etter den lukten og utelukker alle andre.

I vinter fant vi en valp som hadde vært på rømmen et døgn i ukjent terreng. Jeg synes det er veldig fint å kunne hjelpe til. Og det virker det som Billy gjør også.

 
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from Theory of Meaning

Humanity

The point is that you learn to see the humanity in the human being and that you don’t forget to see it. Until the last moment, right down to his last breath, and even in an insane person, and even in a person who is a hardened criminal, humanity remains.

Frankl, V. E. (2024). Embracing Hope: On Freedom, Responsibility & the Meaning of Life (English Edition) Kindle. p 6

 
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from wystswolf

how do you escape yourself? Beer. Lots of feckin’ beer.

I am here. And I left And went there.

I hated it too. So I packed my bag And sent my arse to a third

And it was worse than the first. Same after same, Wherever I went

Was the specter Of me — The shadow

Violet violence In a heart made for Love but doomed

To Be Alone.

 
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from Crónicas del oso pardo

Comenzó a darse cuenta de que al levantar el dedo para enfatizar algún aspecto de la conversación, ese algo se torcía. Para ser más claros, si decía -levantando el dedo- “soy una persona íntegra”, justamente se iba al polo contrario, decía alguna mentira y aunque de inmediato le parecía bien, su conciencia se lo reprochaba: “¿No te da vergüenza mentir?”, le decía. Y aunque trataba de no prestarle atención, luego se flagelaba en pesadillas.

Un día le contaron un cuento chino en la que el maestro le cortó un dedo a su discípulo. Aunque no lo entendió bien, por la noche, al recordar lo del dedo, algo le resonó en su interior.

Así las cosas, el sábado fue a una librería de segunda mano donde por poco dinero se llevó un excelente libro de cuentos chinos. Revisó el índice y mirando página tras página no encontró ninguna historia sobre el dedo.

Entonces volvió donde el amigo, le pidió que le repitiera la historia y al escucharla, apuntándole con el dedo, le dijo:

-Sí, sí, ese ya lo sabía.

Y el amigo le cortó una oreja.

-Ay, ay, así no es el cuento -le reprochó al amigo.

Y otro, cerrando la navaja, le dijo:

-Ya no lo olvidarás.

 
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from EpicMind

Thorvald Erichsen: Jorde skriver hjem

„Das ist gar kein Schreiben – das ist Tippen.“ Mit dieser spitzen Bemerkung soll Truman Capote einst die Prosa seines Kollegen Jack Kerouac kommentiert haben. Die Bemerkung war polemisch gemeint, doch sie trifft einen Nerv, der bis heute empfindlich ist: Verändert das Werkzeug, mit dem wir schreiben, auch die Art, wie wir denken? Meine Antwort lautet: Ja. Und wir unterschätzen diesen Einfluss systematisch.

Wenn ein Finger eine Taste drückt, passiert neuronal wenig Aufregendes. Jede Taste erzeugt dieselbe Bewegung – nach unten, zurück. Das Gehirn schaltet rasch auf Autopilot. Handschreiben funktioniert anders: Jeder Buchstabe muss aktiv geformt werden, die Hand bewegt sich in wechselnden Richtungen, Auge und Motorik arbeiten eng zusammen. EEG-Messungen bei Zwölfjährigen und Erwachsenen zeigen, dass dabei Hirnregionen aktiv werden, die mit #Lernen, Gedächtnisbildung und sensorischer Integration verbunden sind – und zwar deutlich stärker als beim Tippen [1]. Das Schreiben mit der Hand ist kein obsoleter Umweg. Es ist eine kognitiv dichte Tätigkeit.

Diese Dichte hat Konsequenzen. Wer in einer Vorlesung mitschreibt, kann auf der Tastatur fast wörtlich festhalten, was gesagt wird – und verarbeitet dabei kaum etwas. Wer mit der Hand schreibt, muss auswählen, verdichten, umformulieren. Der Stift zwingt zur Langsamkeit, und Langsamkeit zwingt zum Denken. Studien zeigen, dass handschriftliche Notizen zu einem besseren inhaltlichen Verständnis führen als getippte, obwohl – oder gerade weil – sie kürzer sind [2]. Das Gleiche gilt für Kinder im Schriftspracherwerb: Wer Buchstaben aktiv schreibt, entwickelt die Hirnstrukturen, die später beim Lesen benötigt werden, schneller und stabiler als wer sie nur antippt [3]. Die Hand lehrt das Auge sehen.

Die Hand lehrt das Auge sehen

Nun könnte man einwenden: Das haben wir schon einmal gehört. Als die Schreibmaschine in Büros und Redaktionen einzog, klagte der Philosoph Martin Heidegger, mit ihr gehe der unmittelbare Zusammenhang zwischen Hand und Denken verloren. Die Maschine siegte trotzdem – und die Literatur überlebte. Tatsächlich entstanden durch sie neue Ausdrucksformen, etwa die typografischen Experimente der Avantgarde. Neue Werkzeuge verdrängen ältere nicht einfach; sie verschieben, was mit ihnen möglich ist. Doch dieser Befund ist kein Freispruch für die Tastatur. Er ist eine Warnung: Wer annimmt, das Werkzeug sei neutral, irrt.

Handschrift ist dabei mehr als ein kognitives Instrument. Sie ist individuell. Zwei Menschen können denselben Satz formulieren, aber ihre Schriften werden ihn verschieden erscheinen lassen, werden Tempo, Druck und Stimmung verraten. Briefe, Tagebücher, handschriftliche Manuskripte vermitteln nicht nur Inhalt, sondern eine körperliche Spur ihres Autors. Digitaler Text ist typografisch uniform. Das ist für viele Zwecke ein Vorzug. Doch etwas geht dabei verloren: die Sichtbarkeit des Denkenden hinter dem Gedachten.

Das bedeutet nicht, die Tastatur zu verdammen. Sie ist für Produktion, Bearbeitung und Verbreitung von Texten unersetzlich. Wer heute einen Artikel, ein Dokument oder eine E-Mail verfasst, denkt zu Recht mit den Fingern auf der Tastatur. Aber Schreiben ist nicht gleich Schreiben. Die Tastatur optimiert Geschwindigkeit und Volumen. Die Hand optimiert Tiefe und Verarbeitung. Wer beides vermischt, versteht keines von beidem richtig.

Zurück zu Capote. Was sein Urteil über Kerouac interessant macht, ist nicht nur die Pointe – es ist der Sprecher. Capote tippte selbst. Er arbeitete jahrelang an der Schreibmaschine, später am Computer. Und er schrieb trotzdem. Sein Einwand galt nicht dem Werkzeug als solchem, sondern der Haltung dahinter: dem Schreiben ohne Formwillen, ohne Auswahl und ohne Verlangsamung. Das „Tastatur-Geratter”, das er Kerouac vorwarf, war kein technisches Urteil. Es war ein ästhetisches – und ein kognitives.

Handschrift ist in diesem Sinne keine sentimentale Reminiszenz an Schulfüller und Tintenflecken. Sie ist eine Praxis des Denkens, die das digitale Zeitalter nicht obsolet gemacht hat, sondern dringlicher. Wer schreibt, denkt. Und wer mit der Hand schreibt, denkt – das legen die Befunde nahe – oft klarer, tiefer, aber auch langsamer. Die Langsamkeit ist aber keinMangel, sondern Methode.

Capote irrte, was Kerouac betrifft. Aber die Frage, die sein Spott aufwirft, bleibt gültig: Schreiben wir – oder tippen wir nur?


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Quellen [1] E. O. Askvik, F. R. van der Weel und A. L. H. van der Meer, „The importance of cursive handwriting over typewriting for learning in the classroom: A high-density EEG study of 12-year-old children and young adults,” Frontiers in Psychology, Bd. 11, Art.-Nr. 1810, 2020, doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01810.

[2] P. A. Mueller und D. M. Oppenheimer, „The pen is mightier than the keyboard: Advantages of longhand over laptop note taking,” Psychological Science, Bd. 25, Nr. 6, S. 1159–1168, 2014, doi: 10.1177/0956797614524581.

[3] K. H. James und I. Gauthier, „Letter processing automatically recruits a sensory-motor brain network,” Neuropsychologia, Bd. 44, Nr. 14, S. 2937–2949, 2006, doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.06.028.

Bildquelle Thorvald Erichsen (1868–1939): Jorde skriver hjem. Vestre Gausdal, Kunstmuseum, Lillehammer, Public Domain.

Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet.

Topic #Erwachsenenbildung | #Selbstbetrachtungen

 
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from Kroeber

#002297 – 12 de Setembro de 2025

“I don't get all choked up about yellow ribbons and American flags. I consider them symbols and I leave them for the symbol-minded”.

George Carlin

 
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from Insomnia, Annotated

Written by: Epikurus | February 28, 2026, 03:28 AM

Introduction.

What is Truth? At first glance, the question seems simple. Yet the deeper we go, the more complicated it becomes. We live in a world saturated with information—news alerts, social media takes, political narratives, religious interpretations—and yet clarity often feels elusive. To think clearly, we must first distinguish between facts, beliefs, and opinions, and then ask how these relate to truth itself.
This distinction becomes especially important when we move into complex domains such as religion, politics, and media, where measurable realities intersect with unseen meanings and value judgments.

Defining Truth.

Truth can be defined as how things actually are, whether we like it or not, and whether we perceive it clearly or not. Truth is not determined by consensus or comfort. It simply is.
This aligns with what philosophers call the “correspondence theory of truth”—the idea that a statement is true if it corresponds to reality (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2021).
Literature echoes this idea. In The Sign of Four, written by Arthur Conan Doyle, Sherlock Holmes declares:
“When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.”
This statement captures the practical side of truth-seeking: eliminate what cannot be, and what remains—however uncomfortable—must correspond to reality.

Fact, Belief, and Opinion: Clear Distinctions.

A fact is something true independent of what anyone thinks about it. Facts can be checked, tested, or measured. For example:
  • “There is a book called Daniel in the Bible.”
  • “In Daniel 10, there is a story describing an angel delayed for 21 days by the ‘prince of Persia.’”
  • “The Earth orbits the sun.”
These claims are verifiable. One can consult a Bible, examine astronomical data, or analyze textual records. Facts exist whether or not we agree with them.
A belief, by contrast, is something a person accepts as true. It may correspond to a fact, or it may not. Beliefs live in the mind. Examples include:
  • “I believe my spouse loves me.”
  • “I believe this politician is honest.”
  • “I believe spiritual beings influence human history.”
Beliefs are not always directly measurable. They are often grounded in trust, reasoning, experience, or interpretation.
An opinion is a value-laden belief. It involves judgments about what is good or bad, better or worse, wise or foolish. For instance:
  • “This war is unjust.”
  • “This interpretation of spiritual warfare is healthier.”
  • “Framing politics as spiritual warfare is harmful.”
Opinions add evaluation. They move from what is to what ought to be.

The Problem of Access.

The difficulty is that humans never encounter “raw” truth directly. We receive information through:
  • Limited and biased senses
  • Other humans (who are also limited and biased)
  • Our own experiences, fears, and expectations
Thus, in practice, our task is not to grasp absolute truth in its fullness, but to ask:
Given what I can see, test, and cross-check, what is most likely true right now?
This epistemic humility is essential, particularly in domains that extend beyond direct measurement.

Spiritual Truth and the Limits of Measurement.

Consider the Book of Daniel, specifically chapter 10.
We can anchor ourselves in facts:
  • The text exists.
  • It contains a narrative of spiritual conflict.
  • Religious traditions interpret it as spiritual warfare.
Beyond that, we enter belief:
  • That these events occurred in unseen reality.
  • That spiritual beings influence human affairs.
  • That prayer interacts with those realities.
These cannot be tested in a laboratory. They are accepted or rejected through theological reasoning, trust in scripture, and personal experience.
And lastly, opinion:
  • “This view of spiritual warfare is comforting.”
  • “This interpretation makes God seem more loving.”
  • “This framework is psychologically healthier than doom-centered preaching.”
These statements express value judgments, not measurable claims.
Truth in this spiritual domain would mean: What is actually happening in unseen reality? Yet by definition, such matters cannot be directly measured. Thus, responsible engagement requires anchoring in verifiable facts, recognizing one’s beliefs, and distinguishing evaluative opinions layered on top.
Clarity comes from distinguishing layers, not collapsing them.

Politics, Demons, and Interpretive Lenses.

Take the belief: “Demons influence politics.”
Throughout history, people have interpreted political events through spiritual frameworks. The belief that demonic forces influence politics is not new; it appears across centuries of religious thought.
Fact:
  • Historical records show recurring patterns: propaganda, dehumanization, corruption, cycles of war. However, political outcomes demonstrably involve money, incentives, institutions, and psychology.
Belief:
  • Unseen spiritual forces may exploit human weaknesses to shape events. These claims are accepted on theological, experiential, or interpretive grounds, but they are not testable like a ballot count.
  • Prayer resists such influence is also a belief grounded in faith and anecdotal patterns rather than lab proof.
Opinion:
  • Viewing politics as spiritual warfare is either motivating or distracting. Such framing is either healthy or harmful.
Here, the key is not to collapse layers. Human-level explanations—greed, fear, trauma, ambition—account for much political behavior. A spiritual explanation may function as a metaphysical interpretation layered on top. It becomes dangerous when it replaces accountability or empirical reasoning.
A healthy approach maintains both levels:
  • Use facts for civic decisions (voting, policy evaluation, community action).
  • Hold spiritual beliefs as interpretive frameworks for meaning and prayer.

Practical Stress-Testing of Beliefs.

If one holds the belief that demons influence politics, a responsible approach includes testing its practical implications.
  • Ask what observable effects the belief predicts. If demons influence politics, one might expect coordinated deception, sudden moral collapses in leaders, or patterns that repeat despite rational explanation. Those are testable as patterns even if not as direct proof of spirits.
  • Compare explanations. Does a spiritual explanation add something that greed, fear, trauma, and power dynamics do not already explain? If yes, it might be doing real explanatory work; if no, it might just be a metaphor.
  • Keep both levels. Treat spiritual claims as interpretive frameworks for prayer and meaning, while relying on human-level facts for civic decisions.
A healthy version of this belief does not erase human responsibility. It says:
  • Demons exploit human sin, trauma, and greed.
  • Humans still choose.
  • Systems still have accountability.
  • You still have agency over where you give your attention, money, and rage.

Modern Patterns and Two-Layer Reading.

Consider recurring patterns in modern history:
  • Mass dehumanization waves through propaganda.
  • Leaders who shift from normal governance to paranoia and cruelty.
  • Repeating cycles across nations: corruption, scapegoating, war drums, collapse.
On a purely human level, psychology, power, and money explain much of this.
On a spiritual level, some interpret these as evil exploiting human weakness— “something riding those weaknesses and steering them.”
This creates a two-layer reading:
  • Layer 1 (Facts): money flows, laws, propaganda, incentives.
  • Layer 2 (Belief): spiritual forces egging those weaknesses on.
The danger lies in collapsing Layer 1 into Layer 2 and abandoning responsibility.
Modern news often blends reporting with interpretation. Consider outlets such as:
  • The Guardian
  • NPR
  • The New York Times
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • Washington Examiner
  • The Spectator
  • Reuters
  • Associated Press
A practical method for clarity:
  1. Assume everyone is selling something. Information often aims to move emotions or loyalties.

  2. Separate the layers:

    • FACTS: dates, numbers, quotes, concrete actions.
    • INTERPRETATION/BELIEF: “This proves X is evil.”
    • OPINION/EMOTION: fear, disgust, outrage, tribal loyalty.
  3. Triangulate. Compare sources with different leanings. Trust overlapping, boring facts. Treat the rest as interpretation.

  4. Add time and distance. First takes are often the noisiest. Slower, sourced reporting tends to clarify.

What survives across ideological lines is more likely factual. What differs is often interpretation or opinion.

Daily Choices Under a Spiritual & Practical Lens.

If one believes politics has a spiritual dimension, daily practice should not look like obsession. It should look like grounded discipline:
  • Be suspicious of content demanding instant outrage or dehumanization.
  • Ask, “Who profits if I’m terrified or furious right now?”
  • Guard your inputs. Limit doom-scrolling. Prefer long-form analysis over hot-take reels.
  • Aim small and local. Treat co-workers, patients, and family members with integrity.
  • Pray and act—not pray instead of act.
  • Refuse to outsource responsibility to demons.
Belief should not produce paralysis. It should produce steadiness. If truth corresponds to reality, then emotional frenzy is often an obstacle to perceiving it clearly.
A mature stance holds:
  • Humans remain morally responsible.
  • Systems require accountability.
  • Individuals retain agency in how they allocate attention, time, and action.
It’s reasonable to hold that demons could influence politics as a belief that helps make sense of recurring moral rot, but one should separate that from the hard facts about how power works and use both lenses – spiritual for meaning and practical for action. Thus, even if one believes spiritual forces operate in the world, daily life still centers on concrete actions: loving one’s family, practicing integrity at work, engaging locally, and contributing constructively. Belief in spiritual warfare does not require surrendering one’s cortisol to every headline.

Conclusion.

Truth is not whatever feels persuasive, comforting, or viral. It is how things actually are. Facts describe measurable reality. Beliefs interpret that reality. Opinions evaluate it.
Confusion arises when we blur these categories—treating beliefs as facts, or opinions as truths. Clarity emerges when we consciously separate them.
In religious and political life alike, wisdom lies not in abandoning belief, nor in pretending certainty where none exists, but in disciplined humility: anchoring in what can be verified, acknowledging interpretive layers, and refusing to let emotional manipulation replace careful reasoning.
Truth may remain partially hidden, and we may never grasp truth in its fullness. But by carefully distinguishing fact, belief, and opinion, we can move toward it with humility—and live sanely in the meantime.
Manipulation thrives on speed and emotion, not careful thought.

Sources.

Conan Doyle, A. (1890). The Sign of Four. London: Spencer Blackett.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. (2021). “Truth.” Retrieved from https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/truth/
The Holy Bible, Book of Daniel, Chapter 10.
 
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