How To Tell
Real News From Useless Narrative Fluff
By Caitlin Johnstone
April 06, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - When Zen
teacher Issan Dorsey was asked to describe the
essence of Zen art, he answered, “Nothing extra.”
“Nothing extra” is also of course the essence of
Zen living itself: perceiving life as it actually
is, as opposed to perceiving it through a bunch of
believed narrative filters about yourself, about
others, about reality, and so on. These narrative
filters are an extra pile of layers that are added
on top of the actual experience of life, and they
give a distorted view which causes a lot of
confusion and suffering. Relinquishing belief in
them brings clarity and peace.
This is also the essence of clearly understanding
what’s really going on in the world. Like so much
else, the approach to the large is the same as the
approach to the small, which is to say the approach
to seeing clearly in the big picture is the same as
the approach to seeing clearly as an individual: you
need to learn to look at it without the extra
narrative overlay.
Because the news media are
controlled by plutocrats
who have a vested interest in
protecting the status quo
upon which their kingdoms are built, almost
everything in the news is useless narrative fluff.
It doesn’t tell you what’s really going on, it
rather tries to influence what’s going on
by manipulating the perceptions of the audience. It
does this by either (A) distracting from what really
matters by focusing on what doesn’t matter, or (B)
actively working to manipulate how the audience
thinks about a given issue.
When you strip away all the empty fluff and
manipulative spin, there are basically only four
often-overlapping pieces of information that really
matter in the big picture: (1) where the money is
going, (2) where the resources are going, (3) where
the weapons are going, and (4) where the people are
going. When it comes to understanding world
dynamics, accurate information about these four
things is the only real news you’ll ever encounter.
Everything else is empty narrative spin meant to
justify, distort, or distract from information about
these things.