Posted in Philosophy

Denial: Affirmation Without Challenge

The Real TDS

Are we truly more in denial than previous eras, or does the abundance of information make denial more tempting and widespread?

That may be the uncomfortable question of our age. Human beings have always lived in a mixed atmosphere of truth, delusion, hope, fear, rumor, and self-protection. We hear what comforts us. We believe promises that flatter us. We reject bad news when it threatens the identity we have already bought.

The difference today is volume. Twenty-four-hour news, algorithmic outrage, curated feeds, and tribal media do not challenge our denial. They organize, affirm, and sell it back to us as courage.

Denial often starts with Avoidance, not peace. When facts threaten our identity, many choose silence over the courage of acknowledgment. It isn’t about conflict avoidance. We don’t want to have to talk about or acknowledge the problem, especially when the facts are stacking up against us.

Rather than face it, we earnestly struggle to find Justification. We find ways to rationalize behavior that is clearly outside our norms and moral window. We explain away behavior we would have condemned yesterday. The moral window shifts, but we pretend the house has not moved.

We quickly find scapegoats to Blame. We eagerly shift responsibility to other people, dehumanized organizations, or ‘unavoidable’ circumstances. Clearly, ‘fake news’ is reporting only the maleficence. The courts and elections are rigged. The experts are bought. The ‘enemy’ is mentally deranged. Once the scapegoat is chosen, conscience can go back to sleep.

Rather than exercising critical thinking, we look the other way when the behavior and comments show defiant Persistence. The pattern repeats, but repetition no longer alarms us. It numbs us. What once shocked us becomes background noise. What once disqualified a leader becomes “just how he talks.”

Then come the never-ending Promises. Ukraine will be resolved quickly. Affordability is coming. The debt will not matter. The files will be explained later. The war was necessary. The damage was total. And immigration enforcement will only target the “worst of the worst.” But even that phrase deserves scrutiny. If the policy is true, why do roughly 70% of people in ICE detention have no criminal conviction? That does not mean every detainee has a legal right to remain. It does mean the slogan is doing more work than the facts. “Worst of the worst” becomes less a standard of enforcement than a permission slip for public indifference, warrantless detainment, and deportation.

And when all else fails, we eagerly seek and are offered Distractions to turn our minds away from the uncomfortable truths being seen every day. We focus on unrelated activities to distract our minds from the problems. Another enemy. Another slogan. Another shiny bobble for our minds trained to ignore major failures.

Nations look away in installments. Not all at once. Not with one grand act of evil. But with a little silence here, a little rationalization there, and a little contempt for the suffering of people outside the tribe.

That is why Gaza matters. Whether one accepts the final legal label or not, credible international bodies have documented acts they characterize as genocide. That should be enough to stop moral people in their tracks. Instead, many ask which side benefits politically from saying it out loud, and many just say the claims are propaganda.

Yes, the Iran claims do matter. If a nuclear program is “obliterated,” but if ambition remains intact, does the threat remain? Does ambition alone warrant annihilation? The question is more of a moral one than a military one. Are we defending truth, or defending the story we were sold?

That is why threats toward Cuba, Greenland, and Venezuela matter. Not because every claim is equal, but because each tests whether we still evaluate power by principle, or merely by who is wielding it.

Yes, the national debt matters. Gross federal debt now exceeds the size of the entire U.S. economy, yet we still speak as if greatness can be financed forever on borrowed money and borrowed faith. We have tolerated elevated spending, tax-cutting, and political promises without demanding financial responsibility.

This is Truth Denial Syndrome — the real TDS — not the lazy dismissal of a so-called “derangement syndrome.” It is not confined to any one party, ideology, or tribe. It lives wherever loyalty becomes more important than reality. It grows wherever affirmation reigns supreme without challenge.

The cure is not outrage. Outrage is too easy. Instead, cultivating patience and critical thought can empower us to prioritize facts, country, and shared values first, and tribal loyalty a far distant third.

If we cannot face what is plainly in front of us, we will not solve our most pressing problems. We will merely keep applauding those who taught us not to see them. NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

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Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

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Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Sit quietly and listen for your inner voice that whispers, “Be quieter”—then let the stress melt away. 26.06.06

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Posted in Communication

Acceptance Begins at the Edge of Discomfort

If you want a hard truth heard, do not force it down a tribe’s throat. Put it at the edge of discomfort: enough to unsettle, not enough to trigger denial.

That is the persuasion problem of our age. People do not reject hard truths mainly because they are stupid. They reject them because identity is a jealous god. Push too hard, and the mind stops weighing evidence and starts defending the tribe. The goal is not to shrink the truth. It is to keep it alive long enough to be considered.

America today is tribally polarized. Roles harden. Citizens become partisans, partisans become enforcers, and institutions become stages for moral theater. Once people put on the uniform—left, right, patriot, victim, savior—they begin protecting the costume more than the country. That is when perception narrows. People stop seeing what is there and see only what their side allows and encourages.

Assumptions are now doing the thinking for us. We assume motive, assign malice, infer treason, and skip the harder question: are we defending truth or just our people, our tribemates? A culture built on bad assumptions is easy to manipulate because it is forever reacting to ghosts of its own making.

Politicians understand this perfectly. Their dilemma is simple: outrage pays better than honesty. The incentives reward escalation, not recognition. So they sell salvation by tribe. Every movement gets its redeemer, every grievance its gospel, every rival its devil. Once politics becomes a theology, evidence no longer persuades. It offends.

It is a patriotic act of citizenship to confront flag-wrapped deceit. It is betrayal to protect the propaganda because it flatters your side. Tribes rarely change when they are merely condemned. They change when they realize they have been used and duped. When loyalty and trust have been exploited and promises broken.

Credibility is the fulcrum. Not charisma. Not certainty. Not volume, but credibility. If the messenger is fair, restrained, and willing to judge friend and foe by the same standard, hard truths stand a chance. Without that, even truth sounds like contrived spin.

Perhaps the first duty of persuasion is not accusation but calibration: how do we tell people what they do not want to hear without pushing them so far into defensiveness that they cannot hear at all?  NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

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Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read
Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

It isn’t about completing the journey; it’s about starting it. 26.06.03

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Posted in Philosophy

Peace without Freedom: A Broken Covenant

Can’t have one without the other….

Freedom and peace are often treated as separate goods, as if one belongs to politics and the other to the soul. They are not separate. They are symbiotic. Without freedom, peace becomes submission. Without peace, freedom becomes a perpetual struggle for breath.

The mistake many states, movements, and even neighborhoods make is assuming that peace can be imposed by force. It cannot, at least not for long. Silence is not peace. Order is not peace. The absence of visible conflict is not peace; it is grievance-driven underground. People who believe their liberties have been diminished, ignored, or confiscated rarely accept that condition as final. They endure it, absorb it, disguise it, and eventually resist it. The smoldering ember remains, ready to flash into flame at the slightest gust.

But freedom alone is not enough. Freedom without restraint or mutual obligation becomes disorder, and disorder is the graveyard of peace. A society that insists on unlimited personal freedom soon creates a condition in which no one feels secure. And insecurity invites control and intervention. That is the old cycle: fear breeds coercion, coercion breeds resentment, resentment ignites conflict, and conflict destroys peace.

The only durable balance is consent and compromise. People will accept limits when those limits are shared, lawful, and transparent, and when they are accepted as the price of living together. They will not accept them when they are imposed by force, hypocrisy, or elite exemption. Peace built on consent can endure. Peace built on confiscation is only a ceasefire with better public relations.

The hard truth is this: freedoms voluntarily surrendered for common life may preserve peace; freedoms taken away in the name of peace usually poison it. The real question is not whether societies can have order without liberty, but whether peace can survive where freedom no longer exists.  NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

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Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read
Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Apathy is the only opening evil needs to succeed—doing nothing allows a lot. 26.06.02

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Common knowledge is killing our minds and curiosity. Let your mind live and explore where it is at risk, not where it is comfortable. There should be nothing common about knowledge; it should be constantly challenged and cutting-edge. 26.05.04

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

You don’t need to imagine it; within you is the truth. Set yourself free. 26.05.02

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Growth Through Strain…

Growth is more profound in the presence of provocation and discomfort. In tranquility, the body, mind, and soul remain docile—they are exercised and strengthened through strife. 26.05.01

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Posted in Communication

Assumptions Are Exhausting

Assumptions are exhausting because they require us to use energy on things we don’t really understand. They are those quiet, baseless conclusions we form from observation, experience, memory, and perception — often with less evidence than we’d like to admit. They may seem helpful or even protective, but more often they distort reality and hinder our ability to think and live clearly.

It helps to pause now and then to examine them. Many of our assumptions persist not because they are true, but because they are comfortable. They fit our preferred storyline. That’s why their challenge is uncomfortable. Our experiences shape us, from which, we build expectations about people, outcomes, and motives. But assumptions usually are about others’ intentions and actions. When we presume we understand someone else without understanding what shaped them, we set ourselves up for frustration, disappointment, needless conflict, and likely failure.

Assumptions are false knowledge which drain us as they give a false sense of preparedness. We rehearse a likely reaction, expect a certain outcome, and convince ourselves we know what will happen. Then life surprises us, and we must put in even more mental and emotional effort to adjust to what we never truly saw coming. The expense of recovering from false certainty is typically greater than the effort required to honestly assess uncertainty from the outset.

We live this out every day in small ways. That moment of surprise—’I didn’t see that coming’—is often when our assumption fell apart. Surprise is unavoidable, but unnecessary disappointment is not. The more we question our assumptions, the more flexible, calm, and clear-headed we become.

Recognize and avoid arrogant certainty. Question your perceptions. Reevaluate your beliefs and risks. Expect others to be more complicated. Plan for life to turn out differently than you expect. You might not avoid every surprise, but you can avoid falling for the exhausting illusion of assumptions false knowledge.  NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

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Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read