Jupiter
Still under construction
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2018
- Messages
- 127
- Location
- Australia
- Joined SLU
- 07-05-2010
- SLU Posts
- 1617
Yeah, add me to the list as well.
The person I'm having the hardest time communicating with is my mom, who believes everything Trump and Fox News says. In recent months, she's started to post Islamophobic videos on her Facebook. Once I pointed out that a video doesn't show what she thinks it does (e.g. those are soccer fans rioting after a match, not Muslims), she actually said she believed it to be Muslims rioting. It showed me that she and others like her don't care about truths or facts, and if that's not what's going to change their minds, then I don't know what will.
It's very saddening. I like my mom and we live in different countries. I was in the habit of calling her every Sunday morning, but it gets harder. She is an angrier person now, the result of a steady diet of bad, fake news. We try to avoid politics, but it seeps in; it's wrapped up with our identities. She's always been conservative, but this is different. Republicans won and yet they are so enraged. It's very strange and distressing.
That aside, I try to place some parameters around my consumption of news (e.g. not on Facebook). I'm careful about what I consume, when, and how. For example, my husband watched the Kavanaugh hearings live, including the testimony from Christine Blasey Ford. I chose not to. I read about it and listened to wrap-ups and snippets later, going to sources that I trust and will just inform me without clickbait, scare tactics, or hyperbole.
I also really worry about what the political landscape is going to be like after Trump.
The person I'm having the hardest time communicating with is my mom, who believes everything Trump and Fox News says. In recent months, she's started to post Islamophobic videos on her Facebook. Once I pointed out that a video doesn't show what she thinks it does (e.g. those are soccer fans rioting after a match, not Muslims), she actually said she believed it to be Muslims rioting. It showed me that she and others like her don't care about truths or facts, and if that's not what's going to change their minds, then I don't know what will.
It's very saddening. I like my mom and we live in different countries. I was in the habit of calling her every Sunday morning, but it gets harder. She is an angrier person now, the result of a steady diet of bad, fake news. We try to avoid politics, but it seeps in; it's wrapped up with our identities. She's always been conservative, but this is different. Republicans won and yet they are so enraged. It's very strange and distressing.
That aside, I try to place some parameters around my consumption of news (e.g. not on Facebook). I'm careful about what I consume, when, and how. For example, my husband watched the Kavanaugh hearings live, including the testimony from Christine Blasey Ford. I chose not to. I read about it and listened to wrap-ups and snippets later, going to sources that I trust and will just inform me without clickbait, scare tactics, or hyperbole.
I also really worry about what the political landscape is going to be like after Trump.











