Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Self-Education and Choosing Political Leaders


Wars are fought against imaginary enemies created by leaders seeking more power. The problem isn't that those leaders have a voice to speak evil but that they're able to find an audience. All it takes is for one delusional President to spread lies for a friendly country to turn into an enemy.

Enough is enough...

Because I spend a great deal of my time on self-education, I'm now able to identify some of the absurdities being shared by Dictators. If more people prioritized their self-education, those charlatans would never be given positions of power let alone be able to spread their lies.

Would a Country benefit from screening their political leaders?

Some workplace require employees to go through security clearance, drug test, internal reviews... wouldn't it make sense to implement the same for our political leaders? Before we give a leader keys to a Country's secret, couldn't we ask:
  • An analysis by a renowned psychologist to determine what are the ulterior motives (if any) of the individual..
  • A security clearance...
  • A physical evaluation to determine if the individual is fit to lead...
  • Drug test...
  • test test test...
Is this too much to ask? In-lieu of screening exercises, we get bickering under the guise of "political debates" and that's how we're supposed to choose our leaders.

“If we can’t think for ourselves, if we’re unwilling to question authority, then we’re just putty in the hands of those in power. But if the citizens are educated and form their own opinions, then those in power work for us. In every country, we should be teaching our children the scientific method and the reasons for a Bill of Rights. With it comes a certain decency, humility and community spirit. In the demon-haunted world that we inhabit by virtue of being human, this may be all that stands between us and the enveloping darkness.“
-Carl Sagan

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Creating our Ideology

"Mere education, however, is not enough. The important thing is the kind of education. We often hear that "education is power", but we need to remember that it may be power for life and human welfare or power for death and destruction. We can teach people to be selfish and narrow, or we can give them an education which broadens their outlook and makes them cooperative members of a world society."
-P. 212 of "Living Issues in Philosophy" book by Harold H. Titus and Marilyn S. Smith

As a kid going through school we don't really think about what sort of education we're getting. Are we directly, or indirectly, programmed to hate specific groups? Are we being influenced beyond words and numbers? Are we getting a good education?

Everyone has an ideology, including teachers, that they either consciously or unconsciously push unto others. Our responsibility is to create an ideology of our own based on experiences and what we teach ourselves.

While it's great that we live in a country where education is free, the responsibility to learn falls on us. We are responsible to take in what make sense and cut out what doesn't in order to live the sort of life that we want to live.
What is offered, for free, is essentially the basic. If everyone knows what you know then you're not standing out above the crowd. What you learn is important.

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

College Talking Points


Some people go to college not because they want to but because they feel they have to. What they really want is the money tied to the career and not the career itself.

When I was in college, I recall instances of people talking about how fed up they were about the subject they were studying. I didn't realize it at the time, but choosing a college degree is committing to make the subject the main area of your life for decades to come. If you don't like talking about it, while you're learning about it, then what are the chances that you're going to enjoy it as a career? It's definitely not going to be the last time the subject is brought up!

Don't rush into a career you're not really passionate about. Don't feel bad about taking a sabbatical, work a few jobs, before committing to a subject.
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