It almost seems like a *gasp* conspiracy!Fagotto said:I was just thinking the same thing. It seems terribly suspicious.Nimcha said:I like how many new posters this thread has attracted. I bet they all came from the same place on the web.
It almost seems like a *gasp* conspiracy!Fagotto said:I was just thinking the same thing. It seems terribly suspicious.Nimcha said:I like how many new posters this thread has attracted. I bet they all came from the same place on the web.
Dumb is not the same as sheep. I have yet to meet ANYONE who has never, ever done or said anything massively stupid in their lives. Catch it on tape and it becomes confirmation bias.WurmD said:lol how about these: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27QTX46XNLM#t=1m17s ?JMeganSnow said:Exhibit A being the people who believe this or any version of this.TheIronRuler said:Aye, but at the moment there is already a large amount of sheeple, slaves to either the government, a job or a debt.
You'd be surprised how narrow minded people are and how they allow others to make their decisions for them, even if most are made through subliminal messages.
If these "sheeple" are so common, why do I never meet any of them?
"They get fed this stuff, and they regurgitate it, and they don't even think about it."
and here's some just plain dumb people for teh lulz http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJuNgBkloFE
Couldn't agree with you more!believer258 said:...TheIronRuler said:I think it has something to do with basically letting machines control our lives and us living comfortably without the need to make any decisions, like the apple executive said a few days ago.believer258 said:Same question; I glanced at this on Wikipedia and it seemed to be a bunch of funky words that really explained nothing to me. What, in simple outsider's terms, the hell is this?MaxPowers666 said:What the fuck is the Zeitgeish Movement?
...
Fuck that. I make my own decisions, damn it, and I'll take every consequence that comes with it. Because if we let machines control everything, then what satisfaction can we have? We'd become mindless animalistic drones, able to do nothing more than sheep.
At least that's my initial reaction. Upon further investigation it may change but if machines controlling us is the idea, then it's, plain and simple, fucking stupid.
I really don't want to discuss anything about the first movie because it has no relation to the movement. I will only point to responses of said issues:Owyn_Merrilin said:No, see it was nothing but lies.
As if she was trying to imply that: "PLAY ON WORDS" [http://www.freethoughtnation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=4835#p4835]The whole God's Son/God's Sun thing only works in English
"proof by works of highly credentialed authorities" [http://freethoughtnation.com/contributing-writers/63-acharya-s/378-horus-is-the-sun-god ], Horace was not the god of the Sun (he was the god of the sky, Ra was the god of the sun),
he did not have 12 disciples,
Buddha also did not have 12 disciples.
he was not born on December 25th, and he was not crucified.
These and more are responded in great lengths at this thread. [http://freethoughtnation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=2609]For that matter, Jesus was not born on December 25th -- the date of the holiday was changed centuries after the fact in order to bring in some more converts by changing the meaning of an existing pagan holiday. The list goes on -- that video was spun out of wholecloth, and if you can't see it, you need to do some research of your own into world religions.
ZEITGEIST Part 1 & The Supportive Evidence [http://www.freethoughtnation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=2997]Oh, and from what I've heard about his sources? Known conspiracy theorists. Citations are only reliable if the sources picked are reliable. Anyone with even a basic understanding of ancient mythology could tell you just how wrong that section of the video is.
I'm going to quit arguing here, because you're one of the brainwashed "true believer" types, which I have had the sad misfortune of running into in the real world. But I'd like to point out that your citation is a forum post which makes no citations. Real reliable, there.Pendrokar said:I really don't want to discuss anything about the first movie because it has no relation to the movement. I will only point to responses of said issues:Owyn_Merrilin said:No, see it was nothing but lies.
As if she was trying to imply that: "PLAY ON WORDS" [http://www.freethoughtnation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=4835#p4835]The whole God's Son/God's Sun thing only works in English
"proof by works of highly credentialed authorities" [http://freethoughtnation.com/contributing-writers/63-acharya-s/378-horus-is-the-sun-god ], Horace was not the god of the Sun (he was the god of the sky, Ra was the god of the sun),
he did not have 12 disciples,Buddha also did not have 12 disciples.he was not born on December 25th, and he was not crucified.These and more are responded in great lengths at this thread. [http://freethoughtnation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=2609]For that matter, Jesus was not born on December 25th -- the date of the holiday was changed centuries after the fact in order to bring in some more converts by changing the meaning of an existing pagan holiday. The list goes on -- that video was spun out of wholecloth, and if you can't see it, you need to do some research of your own into world religions.
ZEITGEIST Part 1 & The Supportive Evidence [http://www.freethoughtnation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=2997]Oh, and from what I've heard about his sources? Known conspiracy theorists. Citations are only reliable if the sources picked are reliable. Anyone with even a basic understanding of ancient mythology could tell you just how wrong that section of the video is.
She is a Egyptologist, not a librarian [http://www.freethoughtnation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=2640]
So these reviews about her books don't exist? [http://www.truthbeknown.com/index.html]
http://zeitgeistmovie.com/Zeitgeist,%20The%20Movie-%20Companion%20Guide%20PDF.pdf
Since I am not a Egyptologist. Please respond at their forum, unless you view it as enemy territory.
---
Also it is often claimed that because the first part of the first movie is somehow anti-religious, then the movement is anti-religious. The whole fiasco was about authority over religion, not religion itself.
Dang man, if only I had had some alcohol on that bus trip where some zeitgeister managed to get the DVD on for the first third of the movie. He actually started it out with "this movie will change your life," even though the few who knew about it were saying "no, put on V for Vendetta instead" and everyone else started saying to put V on after they realized what the movie was about, and just how wrong it was.The Zeitgeist Movement drinking game! said:You figure somebody had to come up with one. Might as well be me!
Rules: browse TZM forums, official website, blogs/websites of supporters, or YouTube channels of TZM members or supporters.
Sip once when any of the following occur:
- A Zeitgeister praises Peter Joseph.
- A Zeitgeister bashes Jacque Fresco or says they're "disappointed" in Fresco's criticism.
- A Zeitgeister brownnoses a moderator, VTV or some other leader of the group other than PJ.
- The words "sustainable" or "sustainability" are misused.
- "Trolls" are referred to.
- CS or a regular of CS is bashed.
- The term "systems approach" is used.
- A Zeitgeister makes a reference to a conspiracy theory.
- A Zeitgeister either professes agnosticism about 9/11 or says that 9/11 "doesn't matter" or "isn't relevant."
- Someone repeats the claim that Douglas Mallette used to work for NASA.
- "Zeitgeist opened my eyes" or "Zeitgeist woke me up" or some other revelation-like epiphany is referred to.
- A Zeitgeister refers to "scientific method" without actually using it.
- A Zeitgeister rants about the money system.
- The schism is referred to as imaginary, overblown, no big deal, or the person referring to it professes not to be bothered by it.
- A Zeitgeister claims that 9/11 was an inside job.
- A Zeitgeister misuses or misunderstands the term "ad hominem."
- A Zeitgeister suggests a spamming campaign (Oprah, Colbert forums, HuffPo, etc.)
- "We have no leaders."
- "We're not about conspiracy theories."
- "Conspiracy theories detract from our message."
- Someone argues with someone who said "conspiracy theories detract from our message."
- "The movies aren't the movement."
Drink twice at any of the following:
- "____" (other than the movies) "aren't the movement."
- A Zeitgeister criticizes a moderator.
- A Zeitgeister asks for help in responding to a criticism raised by CS or other critics.
- Acharya S. is referred to directly.
- A Zeitgeister unwittingly uses Scientology acronyms or jargon, like "Comm" or "org."
- The schism is blamed directly on "trolls."
- A Zeitgeister is banned for denying or criticizing conspiracy theories.
Chug entire beverage:
- A Zeitgeister openly advocates violence, terrorism or criminal activity to advance the movement or an RBE.
- A Zeitgeister directly asserts belief in HAARP, chemtrails, Holocaust denial or other woo beyond the conspiracy theories raised by the movies.
- The word "Merola" appears on TZM forum or any pro-TZM-generated material.
- A Zeitgeister obliquely admits something the movement officially denies (that the movies aren't the movement, that there are no leaders, etc).
Add your own!
If I remember correctly the only sentence on it was "The son of god is in fact the sun of god.". So you're exaggerating.Also, you must not have watched the version of the movie that I did, because there was no play on words going on with the God's Son/God's Sun thing; they were literally saying that one led to the other.
I don't even need to ask from where.Found this on another forum:...
- CS or a regular of CS is bashed.
- A Zeitgeister asks for help in responding to a criticism raised by CS or other critics.
You sir deserve a cookie.JMeganSnow said:Exhibit A being the people who believe this or any version of this.TheIronRuler said:Aye, but at the moment there is already a large amount of sheeple, slaves to either the government, a job or a debt.
You'd be surprised how narrow minded people are and how they allow others to make their decisions for them, even if most are made through subliminal messages.
If these "sheeple" are so common, why do I never meet any of them? I do meet people who aren't particularly interested in certain intellectual issues (and even then, they have been known to surprise me), but that doesn't make them sheep. I'm not in a position to critically examine the merits of seventeen different types of lawnmower or insurance plan, because I don't give a crap about lawnmowers or insurance plans.
The only people I've ever met who actually approach "sheeple" status are the so-called intellectual elites who have become incapable of critically examining their own ideas even after repeated failures. Instead, they go around complaining that everyone else is too dumb, illiterate, or simple-minded to put their OBVIOUSLY perfect ideas into practice.
What TZM advocates is that a monetary system was useful to manage scarcity but can easily be made obsolete by using technology and especially automation to create abundance. Instead of asking "do we have the money to do something", what matters is "do we have the resources and know-how to do something" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvBKR5GPCWc]. That this statement even has to be made should show how off-track we are.SakSak said:Take money for example. It is an instrument of trade, meant to facilitate easy valuing of goods and services in relation to one another in an accesible way. Instead of having to carry your entire fortune with you and check exactly how many kilos of fresh grain and litres of milk a new pocketwatch is worth, we use money to indicate the value of all three. If money didn't exist, we'd have to invent it like we've done on at least 5 different, unconnected times and locations in ancient history.
Going 'back' to gold standard wouldn't help any - instead of simply having a piece of paper, you'd have a gold coin and instead of international exchange rates as well as variation in prices of goods, you'd have international exchange rate and variation in the price of gold - except you'd also have all the problems connected with metal-based monetary system in additiuon to the problems in the fiat system.
And yet, money is supposedly intrinsically 'bad' according to Zeitgeist and all our problems would be solved by abolishing it and exchanging resources directly.
I won't comment on anything related to the first movie (religion and conspiracy theory stuff) as I don't agree with most of it anyway.SakSak said:Also, their religious history sucks badly and they've apparently never heard of correletaion not equalling causation. Their explanation for christianity is plain nuts and the connection with older sun-based religions circumstancial at best. You almost get better information from creationwiki - and I'm saying this as an atheist.
Honestly, supposed 'controversy' is the only reason anyone is talking about this piece of crap.
What you said about money - true. Money isn't supposedly "bad" - that is a crude simplification. Money distorts human needs in a global sense. Financial indicators are equated to indicators of a country's well-being and overall progress. Within the system we have today it elevates inequality. Last of all, you call it BS, but I studied economics and the stuff you call "money" is actually (as the film accurately points out) a note of debt. It is an investement into a nation's economy. But I suspect you have a preconditioned sense of rebellion to these ideas, which I will not attempt to derail.SakSak said:Have watched all their films.
Laughed all the way, except until I started crying that some people actually are misinformed enough to believe the BS.
Classical conspiracy nuts, along with people with their heads on the clouds.
Take money for example. It is an instrument of trade, meant to facilitate easy valuing of goods and services in relation to one another in an accesible way. Instead of having to carry your entire fortune with you and check exactly how many kilos of fresh grain and litres of milk a new pocketwatch is worth, we use money to indicate the value of all three. If money didn't exist, we'd have to invent it like we've done on at least 5 different, unconnected times and locations in ancient history.
Going 'back' to gold standard wouldn't help any - instead of simply having a piece of paper, you'd have a gold coin and instead of international exchange rates as well as variation in prices of goods, you'd have international exchange rate and variation in the price of gold - except you'd also have all the problems connected with metal-based monetary system in additiuon to the problems in the fiat system.
And yet, money is supposedly intrinsically 'bad' according to Zeitgeist and all our problems would be solved by abolishing it and exchanging resources directly.
Also, their religious history sucks badly and they've apparently never heard of correletaion not equalling causation. Their explanation for christianity is plain nuts and the connection with older sun-based religions circumstancial at best. You almost get better information from creationwiki - and I'm saying this as an atheist.
Honestly, supposed 'controversy' is the only reason anyone is talking about this piece of crap.
No, people elevate inequality. You are mistaking a single tool used, out of many, as the cause.NotR said:Within the system we have today it elevates inequality.
Funny enough, I'm writing my Master's Thesis on uni, to the department of Industrial Engineering And Management. Major: Industrial Economics.Last of all, you call it BS, but I studied economics and the stuff you call "money" is actually (as the film accurately points out) a note of debt.
Let me guess, you are an american? Because you do realize there is a world of difference between the American FED and European central banking systems?It is an investement into a nation's economy.
I don't assume so, when it is much simpler to ask should I wish for a deeper discussion. That you assume, that I would assume, speaks volumes though.But before you instinctively throw me in with the "others" and the "fanatics", reactionary distinctions of your social awareness, I do not endorse every single little thing the movie states.
I personally view good information as an important aspect of life in modern society. But it has nothing to do with personal validation as far as I am concerned.If you view information as an asset for your identity's validation - you hence become very limited.
Again, that you assume that I haven't already actually done that, speak volumes. As does the word choice "insecurities." I would have much preferred to use the word "education" or possibly "facts", but that would have made you final words much less superior and more intellectually honest.And I assure you that if one were to watch these movies with a much broader view and whilst being less inclined to impose one's insecurities on the information the films have to offer - one would find oneself able to provide constructive criticism and analasys, and not the stuff I see being written here.
GoreTuzk said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrkrvAUbU9Y
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLBE5QAYXp8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dc3sKwwAaCU
Please tell me if you still maintain that opinion about money after being exposed to that information.
Case in point.SakSak said:except until I started crying that some people actually are misinformed enough to believe the BS.
Money does elevate inequality. I do not mistake it for a cause - it is an element which promotes inequality. How? By distorting human needs. A system which, in abstract, allocates resources from people dying from hunger to people who want a car - an exampe you might appreciate.SakSak said:No, people elevate inequality. You are mistaking a single tool used, out of many, as the cause.
If you remember your Hayek...
"We must face the fact that the preservation of individual freedom is incompatible with a full satisfaction of our views of distributive justice."
Friedrich August von Hayek
As for your thesis I can only wish you good luck and congradulate you on your achievements. I am not playing any sort of game, the origins of which lie within your perception of our current discussion. If you felt somehow "pressed upon" by my stating the source of my understanding of modern day economics - I can only relate that to a preconditioned tone of aggression.SakSak said:Funny enough, I'm writing my Master's Thesis on uni, to the department of Industrial Engineering And Management. Major: Industrial Economics.
So unless you've got a PhD on the subject, I'd stay out of the qualifications game. I happen to have decent good understanding of how money and economics works. But it's not like an Argument From Authority ever helped a case, so I suggest as friendly advice to drop the qualifications game. Let the arguments stand on their own merit.
It can be looked upon as a note of debt from a very accurate point of view:SakSak said:so...It can be considered a note of debt if looked at from an extremely limited point of view, but it doesn't have to be done so. In fact, it often isn't. Because above all else, money represent effort and value, as determined by the society. Now, in a purely capitalistic monetary system you would be closer to home - however no such system exits. Perfect market, like Ideal gasses, is a theoretical construct only.
Money is generated from "nothing" (see 1) and 2)), and to regulate the balance of payments - that is to manipulate the money supply and demand to stimulate import and export.SakSak said:Markets co-ordinate time, money and interest, as based on the past and predicted future, as well as the individual needs of the market participants. In essence, the entirety of macroeconomics can (simplistically) be considered a large market version of microeconomics.
This means that money cannot be generated from nothing - to claim otherise is to completely misunderstand the fiat system and very basics of economics. What do you suppose would happen if a country decided to simply 'invest into a nation's economy' by just printing money? Easy: The value of goods, as represented by that particular currency would plummet. But a kilo of cheese would still be worth 2 liters of milk or whatever. It simply changes the decimal place at the nominal price-tag and export receipts.
How does an economy then grow? Simple. More people, doing more jobs, more efficiently, producing more and increasingly valuable goods and services. The monetary systems is there to facilitate this growth by seamlessly and periodically matching the money in circulation with the increase or decrease in the value of that country's economy as dictated by the value of the goods and services it provides in both international and domestic markets.
No, I am not.SakSak said:Let me guess, you are an american?
Yes, my assuming that people would immediately scoff at someone who supposedly got swallowed in by a "concpiracy theory" is very surprising, taking into consideration the tone of this topic as seen so far.SakSak said:I don't assume so, when it is much simpler to ask should I wish for a deeper discussion. That you assume, that I would assume, speaks volumes though
Within a system upholding distinctive competitive functions any distinctive element therein (ie information) can serve as an asset within this functionality.SakSak said:I personally view good information as an important aspect of life in modern society. But it has nothing to do with personal validation as far as I am concerned.
Once again - if you intend to take everything as an infringement on your validity - there really is no argument is there.SakSak said:Again, that you assume that I haven't already actually done that, speak volumes. As does the word choice "insecurities." I would have much preferred to use the word "education" or possibly "facts", but that would have made you final words much less superior and more intellectually honest.
Zeitgeist is about information. If you have a broader view you might actually, with a certain degree of discernment, learn something of value.SakSak said:But since Zeitgeist is about propaganda and not truth, intellectual honesty in proponets is understandably somewhat harded to come by than an average Joe.
Removing money from the equation does nothing to solve that inequality. Nor does the introduction of it to a system where the preciding did not exist lead into it. That people are unwilling to allocate their money to charity, and instead buy a car, is a fault of society and speaks of it's values. It has intrinsically nothing to do with the monetary system, if any, the situation happens in.NotR said:Money does elevate inequality. I do not mistake it for a cause - it is an element which promotes inequality. How? By distorting human needs. A system which, in abstract, allocates resources from people dying from hunger to people who want a car - an exampe you might appreciate.
True. But on the internet, the moment someone brings out their qualifications, they are setting up themselves as superior authority of knowledge. In any remotely interesting discussion I feel it better to nip it down right from the bud, allowing for the cases where I have to apologise (like now), rather than take the chance of the argument degenerating into logical fallacies.I am not playing any sort of game, the origins of which lie within your perception of our current discussion.
And as seen, you are looking at it from a limited point of view. Top-down only, with focus on balances and securities between banks. That is not all there is, and those are hardly the only contributing factors to the health and (in)firmity of an economy. The capital structure for one is a key element your view seems to overlook. The distortion of it is hardly static accross the board for all types, and the wealth tied down on that capital on company-basis (as well as naturally their productivity) have a significant effect on the debt-repay value of the nation they are in.It can be looked upon as a note of debt from a very accurate point of view:
If you call expected future wealth-accumulation from production as well as interest in domestic investments 'nothing', then yes.Money is generated from "nothing" (see 1) and 2)),
No currency is created - this is a example case where money is treated as a debt. The SDR represents a potential claim for funds. Note that it was created under a fixed foreing currency exchange rate system, to facilitate for real currency valuation/devaluation. Once those were freed for direct comparison between currencies, the system became mostly obsolete. Of course, it has risen in importance in the last couple years due to obvious reasons.An easy example of a currency created out of thin air is - Special Drawing Rights implemented by the IMF. A currency which "speaks volumes" of the purchasers baskets you spoke of on a macroeconomic scale.
Interesting...So far, I've only met Americans who seem to argue a similar position.No, I am not.
Then it seems we both have made some erraneous assumptions about the other.Yes, my assuming that people would immediately scoff at someone who supposedly got swallowed in by a "concpiracy theory" is very surprising, taking into consideration the tone of this topic as seen so far.
I do not deny that. But we were talking of personal validation, were we not? As in, 'confirming the value (or truth) of a person'?Within a system upholding distinctive competitive functions any distinctive element therein (ie information) can serve as an asset within this functionality.
I do not see it as an infringement. I see it only as erraneous logic and false information. Since lies of these types serve nothing except the agenda their creator is pushing, I feel that information should be challenged if it becomes a topic.Once again - if you intend to take everything as an infringement on your validity - there really is no argument is there.
Well, badinformation. Sometimes warning examples can be learned from, I'll grant you that.Zeitgeist is about information.
Just having an open mind lets an awful lot of garbage in.If you have a broader view you might actually, with a certain degree of discernment, learn something of value.
I LOVE this explanation. I am going to write this down later.NotR said:I believe what you meant to say was it would be easier to do so.viranimus said:Having less demand on the same amount of finite resources would have a much more positive effect than trying to eradicate the nature of greed within humanity.
"Greed" is essentially the continuous increase of the human sense of need, or the continued persistence of it. The sense of need is in deep correlation with the sense of conflict an individual has with the environment (example: I want an apple. I am without an apple within the environment in which i perceive myself to exist. My perceived identity within the environment is in conflict with the environment). On the other hand, one who is in harmony with the environment can be identified as the one who has no need (or has it satisfied). One of the neglected conflicts of the identity is the need of an identity to feel "validated" by the environment. The identity inherits certain elements of distinction and functions within the environment and can see itself within the environment only by recognizing these elements. Otherwise, the identity does not "exist" (or is "unperceiveable"). It is a common existential crisis of the mind. Hence, the needs are dependant on the distinctive elements and functions within the environment. Here it becomes only a question of ability (or technology) to change the environment.
Disgusting how? Dangerous how (or to whom)?Nimcha said:Ah, yes. I would say their ideas are disgusting and very dangerous but thankfully nobody takes them seriously so it's not worth the trouble.
I agree that removing money from the equation doesn't solve inequality. I just want to go off on a tangent here.SakSak said:Removing money from the equation does nothing to solve that inequality. Nor does the introduction of it to a system where the preciding did not exist lead into it. That people are unwilling to allocate their money to charity, and instead buy a car, is a fault of society and speaks of it's values. It has intrinsically nothing to do with the monetary system, if any, the situation happens in.
To extend this in an example: in a painting - if one were to paint a flower - it would "exist" only by the distinctive elements of color. It would not exist if you were to adress the smell or taste of it.NotR said:"Greed" is essentially the continuous increase of the human sense of need, or the continued persistence of it. The sense of need is in deep correlation with the sense of conflict an individual has with the environment (example: I want an apple. I am without an apple within the environment in which i perceive myself to exist. My perceived identity within the environment is in conflict with the environment). On the other hand, one who is in harmony with the environment can be identified as the one who has no need (or has it satisfied). One of the neglected conflicts of the identity is the need of an identity to feel "validated" by the environment. The identity inherits certain elements of distinction and functions within the environment and can see itself within the environment only by recognizing these elements. Otherwise, the identity does not "exist" (or is "unperceiveable"). It is a common existential crisis of the mind. Hence, the needs are dependant on the distinctive elements and functions within the environment. Here it becomes only a question of ability (or technology) to change the environment.
I agree. But my point of view isn't limited. It's focused on the flaws (aka "realistic idealism"). But isn't that a very important element of the notion "progress"?SakSak said:And as seen, you are looking at it from a limited point of view. Top-down only, with focus on balances and securities between banks. That is not all there is, and those are hardly the only contributing factors to the health and (in)firmity of an economy.