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A Nation Of Echo Chambers: How The Internet Closed Off The World

In 2012 the Actor Rob Schneider, famous for something or another was interviewed by an California TV station about AB 2109 the California law that required parents to seek a doctor's permission to refuse vaccines for their children (something that no physician in the world would ever be able to approve). I found this interview a few days ago. It's amazing. It's almost possible to keep up by following Schneider's history of his browser as he rambles about; there's the mom's message board, there's the InfoWars Things They Do Not Want you to know thread, and this blog by the physician with the degree-bymail who can be the one who will to inform parents of the truth. It's clear that Schneider has been up all night in preparation for this interview, writing down the phrases that he wanted to emphasize "efficacy," "toxicity," "Nuremberg laws," "forced sterilization. Schneider even concludes with "people have to stand up and get educated. Know all the facts. In this video I think that you could summarize the past two decades of American culture. To believe that vaccinations are the cause of autism, that doctors are part of an enormous conspiracy to target our children in order to make their pals from the pharmaceutical industry play golf, and that the government views vaccinations as an advance towards forced sterilization, and ultimately death panels, and that no one in the world should ever put on the cape ... one way to be convinced of this is by speaking specifically and only, with people who already believe the same. To believe such a thing is to disregard every piece of research in the field and to create hypotheses that call for an unimaginable level of coherence and conspiracy in a nation that cannot even understand HTML and to ignore every tidbit of evidence that is contradictory. It is imperative to get the child you love is clear and well documented that believing it is a complete abstention from everything that is contrary to your own narrow view of the world. You must be constantly tryingto make it up. Many people believe that you shouldn't vaccine your children! 20 percent of Americans, according to a University of Chicago study who believe that vaccination can cause autism yet force shots on children regardless. It's the kind of untruebelief to believe in. The answer could simply say "well, those people are idiots," and I'm sure that's the best explanation. But I think it's much more than that. I believe they're convinced that they're right, because they're only speaking to people who believe they're right. They've blocked out oppositional voices, because they know they will. If you're an anti-vaccine zealot You can find lots of "information" supporting your position which, it is possible to determine, you're on the right side. Schneider is talking about in the news in the "get educated" business. Schneider does not see these ideas as theories, or being "beliefs:" He sees them as facts. About something in which Schneider is so obvious he's in error. Here's my question: How come 20% of the population could be so wrong on something that is so obvious (and dangerous) like child vaccination in the first place, because they have the power to pick yourevidence in preference to theevidence ... What does anyone have? Because the world around us is a much more complicated and confusing than deciding whether or not you should vaccinate your child. Chris Rock, when he was on his huge Truth Bomb press tour to promote the Top Five Chris Rock, during his tour, made remarks that were interesting about the differences between the presidents of Bush and Obama. Obama. Chris Rock described Bush an "cable network" President but, in contrast to Obama the former president only catered to his customers. Rock in addition, with a sharp eye, mentions that "whoever's the next president will do what Bush did.

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