Al Quaeda in Iraq and Cognitive Dissonance
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2007 3:48 am
I just don't even know where to begin with this one.
This is the first time that I can remember most media outlets jumping on the...
what's the word for what this administration does that most administrations would call PUBLIC RELATIONS?...
oh yeah...
bullshit coming out of the Whitehouse. But can they keep it up? Can they continue to broadcast the fact that the people they rely on for information are feeding them senseless crap? Won't people begin to realize that the Whitehouse will say whatever it wants us to believe, regardless of it's veracity, over and over and over again?
"It's my job to repeat things until they become true." --GWB
So I hear this thing on NPR about Cognitive Dissonance. The first question asked was pretty much "Can this explain why over half of Republicans still believe the President is doing a good job?" And the answer was an emphatic yes.
http://www.sciencefriday.com/pages/2007 ... 72007.html
We fight to reduce cognitive dissonance and the main way we do so is by denying that we are wrong. Unfortunately it is very difficult to change peoples' minds'. (That's prounounced "Mindses")
This is the first time that I can remember most media outlets jumping on the...
what's the word for what this administration does that most administrations would call PUBLIC RELATIONS?...
oh yeah...
bullshit coming out of the Whitehouse. But can they keep it up? Can they continue to broadcast the fact that the people they rely on for information are feeding them senseless crap? Won't people begin to realize that the Whitehouse will say whatever it wants us to believe, regardless of it's veracity, over and over and over again?
"It's my job to repeat things until they become true." --GWB
So I hear this thing on NPR about Cognitive Dissonance. The first question asked was pretty much "Can this explain why over half of Republicans still believe the President is doing a good job?" And the answer was an emphatic yes.
http://www.sciencefriday.com/pages/2007 ... 72007.html
We fight to reduce cognitive dissonance and the main way we do so is by denying that we are wrong. Unfortunately it is very difficult to change peoples' minds'. (That's prounounced "Mindses")