There is a cure for 'Information Disorder'
And neither medical nor pharmaceutical measures are required for this.
After reading the recent posts by Tessa Lena ("Information Disorder") and Lioness of Judah Ministry ("Dr. William Makis: Corruption in the Canadian Medical Establishment"), which discuss the “psychiatric diagnosis” of the unvaccinated and, in the latter, the Canadian government’s intention to force the unvaccinated to undergo psychiatric treatment, I thought it was time to launch a counteroffensive. There is indeed something like an information disorder, but I see it clearly on the side of the propaganda media. And since these media will certainly not undergo psychiatric treatment, I have summarized below a few pieces of advice on how best to protect yourself from information disorders or cure them in yourself.
The 7 Golden Rules for Navigating the Information Ocean
1.) Nothing is one-dimensional and nothing is monocausal. Everything is interconnected.
The sooner you understand this law of nature and make it your - let’s call it - basic rule, the easier it will be to recognize complex interrelationships, which are often presented in a highly simplified or mutilated way for propagandistic reasons. So, learn it!
»Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.«
~Mahatma Gandhi
2.) Question everything that governments, corrupt officials, bought scientists & experts, unelected leaders of global institutions & NGOs (incl. Vatican and other religious entities), super billionaires, philanthropaths and other greed monkeys emit into the infinite reaches of the propaganda universe to dissuade you from your course.
We live not to believe but to learn. ~Dalai Lama
3.) Don’t trust information that repeats itself too often and too uniformly and too loudly and too aggressively and too colorfully and too obviously over and over again.
Truth does not need propaganda – totalitarianism does.
4.) Regularly make a comparison between information of any kind with the reality that surrounds you. Amazing insights await you. Including that reality never lies.
5.) Also read between the lines - because often what is not said is more interesting than what is said. And if something is not said, just so that no one finds out, that only makes it more interesting.
6.) Take off your black/white good/bad glasses. The most sensible course lies somewhere in between, if not somewhere else entirely. And a clear, unfiltered view of reality makes navigating much easier.
Even a black and white photography captivates with its shades of gray, so it is not black and white. (Author unknown)
7.) Find the right course not via Google and the like, but with the help of your mind, your courage and your determination. And then navigate yourself according to your own inner compass through the vastness of the information ocean. Because we definitely need more good navigators out there to eliminate the real information disorders. And beware of the sirens!
“And forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair” –Khalil Gibran
Good advice!