So I used to be a republican...

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  • čas přidán 28. 11. 2020
  • I found some old facebook statuses the other day and well... I used to be a republican...
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Komentáře • 3,7K

  • @ishaswamy
    @ishaswamy Před 3 lety +3490

    watch till the end guys lmaoo

    • @Qyver
      @Qyver Před 3 lety +9

      @@AxxLAfriku Dude, what the hell are you on about? What do you do?

    • @yoinksscoob4889
      @yoinksscoob4889 Před 3 lety +76

      Save the praise... for church haha

    • @kazeboiii
      @kazeboiii Před 3 lety +41

      @@yoinksscoob4889 sAVe teH PRiiasE
      I have died

    • @sakura9400
      @sakura9400 Před 3 lety +38

      For CHURCH

    • @jonathanfinan722
      @jonathanfinan722 Před 3 lety +8

      @@kazeboiii I’m sure that you don’t understand death or its consequences. You clearly haven’t died.

  • @meri3580
    @meri3580 Před 3 lety +3994

    The seatbelt argument is the same line of thinking people seem to apply to masks. Regardless of whether or not they think it’s helpful, they won’t do it because someone told them to. It’s so weird to me.

    • @aceatlasska4343
      @aceatlasska4343 Před 3 lety +17

      I like your pfp

    • @maryannc7223
      @maryannc7223 Před 3 lety +198

      It’s juvenile. Like a two year old.

    • @laurengraves3196
      @laurengraves3196 Před 3 lety +162

      I’m guessing the people who are anti mask feel about masks the same way I feel about waiters telling me to not touch my plate because it’s hot, like I wasn’t going to touch my plate but now that you told me not to I must however that only hurts me in the end, not wearing a mask is a public health hazard and could end up hurting others

    • @teresablue2553
      @teresablue2553 Před 3 lety +19

      I feel like a lot of the same people who dislike seatbelts also won't wear masks, and I can kinda admire the consistency. In order to function in this world we have to have some beliefs (absolute or with doubts) --whether in institutions, people, philosophies, or gods. I think these people have just have a worldview that fundamentally relies on different beliefs of freedom, truth and what gives life meaning. Arguably, life has no meaning if we give it none. And perhaps without complete freedom (whatever that may be) there can be no meaning. I'm not sure if they necessarily want a better life or a more complete one, but regardless of how BS their claims, the logic in this regard doesn't seem itself flawed or hypocritical. Mind you, I'm fine with some restrictions (and would like to see them enforced on everybody), but I think that's just my personal beliefs on putting people above abstractions most days of the week.
      PS, if anyone has any feedback on what I just said, I'd love to hear it. I think I've been going down some CZcams rabbit holes and could use some help getting out.

    • @ashtaylor4107
      @ashtaylor4107 Před 3 lety +85

      I honestly didn’t even know the seatbelt thing was a common argument until now. I thought it was just my grandpa, and he always pisses me off whenever it comes up. Even though he’s been in several car accidents, and one of which notably injured him severely, causes chronic and severe pain, and made him have to retire on disability. 🤦‍♀️ I will never understand the logic.

  • @lilyrivers3064
    @lilyrivers3064 Před 3 lety +2130

    A reminder again for americans, being a "liberal" isn't the same as being on the left lol
    Edit: Please stop telling me about politics in the comments to this lol

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Před 3 lety +141

      That's only true when you are talkin about non-American politics. American politics are, and probably always will be, an "either/or" situation, unless half the nation dies somehow in one fell swoop.

    • @SavageGreywolf
      @SavageGreywolf Před 3 lety +346

      Being a liberal doesn't mean you're left wing in America, either. It just means you're not AS far right-wing as the GOP, who are VERY right-wing. The closest thing to the 'left wing' in mainstream American politics are social democrats like Bernie Sanders and AOC, and in most of the rest of the world that's the center, or even center-right.

    • @beef_baby
      @beef_baby Před 3 lety +270

      Welcome to the American two-party system. We have:
      Right
      Middle

    • @colossus4219
      @colossus4219 Před 3 lety +98

      @@SavageGreywolf Bernie is as leftwing as the most extreme big "rightwing" political party in Norway. In other words, still leftist, but not much.

    • @gazw2100
      @gazw2100 Před 3 lety +119

      @@beef_baby Sorry you don't, you have a right wing party and a bat shit crazy extremist right wing party.

  • @sambradley9091
    @sambradley9091 Před 3 lety +1373

    The irony of seatbelt laws is they exist for the very people who oppose them

    • @kilgoretrout3966
      @kilgoretrout3966 Před 3 lety +17

      do you mean the dim?

    • @HelloHigogo
      @HelloHigogo Před 2 lety +47

      Well isn't that the reason for all laws? Would need laws against murder if there weren't people who would like to murder.

    • @tomservo75
      @tomservo75 Před 2 lety +3

      The irony of strong anti-drug laws is that they exist for the very people who oppose them.

    • @williammeek4078
      @williammeek4078 Před 2 lety +48

      @@tomservo75 Sadly no, anti-drug laws are really to suppress minorities as demonstrated by the highly unequal enforcement.

    • @tomservo75
      @tomservo75 Před 2 lety +4

      @@williammeek4078 Where is the data on that? There are so many variables, you can't just say that more black people in jail = more uneven enforcement. Disparate outcomes do not prove disparate intent.
      I'm against the War on Drugs too, my only point in making that comment is that someone was saying we need seatbelt laws to protect people from themselves but the same people likely oppose the War on Drugs. My point is stop with the nanny state. I'll say this to the seatbelt law proponents on the left as well as the anti-drug crowd on the right just as equally.

  • @kokohai6044
    @kokohai6044 Před 2 lety +939

    conservative families are like "don't believe everything you see online" and then literally do that 😭😭

    • @EmeraldKelsi
      @EmeraldKelsi Před 2 lety +4

      THIS ashjkl

    • @spectrumwarrior9560
      @spectrumwarrior9560 Před 2 lety +47

      FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFUUUU!!! omfg! legit got gaslit the other day by family because I dared to do my own research. was told "I'm being too emotional" "just a millennial" oh and my favorite, "I think you should take a break from who you're watching" I am, it's called critical thinking and research. TRY IT. not playing the game anymore.

    • @clausbohm9807
      @clausbohm9807 Před 2 lety +3

      @@spectrumwarrior9560 You are sounding too emotional ...

    • @LoriCiani
      @LoriCiani Před 2 lety +9

      It's not just right wing. My eldest brother sounds so alike yet he prides himself on being left wing. But he is so radical left wing. He believes Al Jezera and Russia TV and refuses to beleive they might have a political agenda of their own, no, no, they're the only ones telling the truth. Full of right wing conspiracies and when the people rise up against their oppression. Nobody dares oppose what he says because we're all being fooled. The guff that spills from my brother's mouth, the furiously angry rants at any opinions other than his own. I always wonder if he should of had psychological tests for conditions such as Autism. When I was a child there were angry arguments between my father and brother. When it came to my brothers declarations of "come the revolution..." my father would reply with "come the revolution you'll be the first one I shoot."

    • @clausbohm9807
      @clausbohm9807 Před 2 lety +2

      @@LoriCiani Sad, we need more balance in what is truth and what is lies.

  • @cosmicpaddlefish9748
    @cosmicpaddlefish9748 Před 3 lety +1925

    “Secret planet between Earth and the Sun” Venus and Mercury?

    • @overloookable
      @overloookable Před 3 lety +149

      Some ancient astronomers used to think there was a hidden planet between Venus and Mercury called vulcan that caused their orbits to be elliptical. Now we know that’s just how gravity and orbits work

    • @birkett83
      @birkett83 Před 3 lety +56

      The orbits of Mercury and Venus are between the Earth and the sun. The planets themselves very rarely are. You might expect Mercury, which orbits the sun once every 88 days, to pass between the earth and the sun once every orbit but the orbit of Mercury is inclined slightly compared to the orbit of Earth so they only line up around 13 or 14 times per century. When this happens (called a transit of Mercury), you can see the mercury passing across the disk of the Sun (but do not look directly into the sun). Transits of Venus are even rarer, they happen less than once per century.
      In general objects closer to the sun have to move faster to remain in orbit, so they can't stay constantly between the earth and the sun. But there is a special point called a Lagrange point (or L1) where the gravitational pull from the earth "balances" the gravitational pull from the sun and an object at that point would orbit at same angular speed as the earth. Unfortunately this orbit is not stable, so you don't find natural objects there. There are a few man made satellites at the L1 point but they are only a few metres across and 1.5 million kilometres away so the biggest telescopes on earth could barely see them. Since orbits at the L1 point are unstable, the satellites have to use thrusters to adjust their orbits to stay in position. I'm not sure how much rocket fuel you'd need to keep an entire planet in orbit at that spot but I'm guessing it's a lot...

    • @homedepot.
      @homedepot. Před 3 lety +13

      @@birkett83 that explained so much. Thank you!

    • @hareecionelson5875
      @hareecionelson5875 Před 3 lety +10

      @@overloookable Not ancient astronomers, nor between Venus and Mercury.
      After the discovery of Neptune which was perturbing Uranus' orbit , astronomers assumed that Mercury's discrepancies in its orbit must be due to a planet even closer to the Sun which they called Vulcan. They thought it had not been discovered, being so close to the Sun that the Sun's brightness obscured it.
      Einstein's general theory of relativity killed the idea of Vulcan.

    • @hareecionelson5875
      @hareecionelson5875 Před 3 lety +2

      @@birkett83 sixty symbols' video on Lagrange points is a CZcams classic, I have an urge to rewatch it now.

  • @CascadianExotics
    @CascadianExotics Před 3 lety +1730

    Man, if I had a dollar for every time I asked for a source, and got linked to a CZcams video that used the word "Sheeple," I'd be rich enough to drink the blood of children too.

    • @urmom.69420
      @urmom.69420 Před 2 lety +49

      @Rukoshii No because my dad literally posts that shit and there's a "fact checkers have determined the information in this post to be false: see why" at the bottom of almost every single one

    • @billylardner
      @billylardner Před 2 lety +39

      My uncle is becoming anti vaccine (he never used to be), which is funny as both his wife and 2 children work in the NHS (national health service for those not from the UK). His “sources” are random websites and professors - they do exist but they are opinions, not studies. It’s scary how common this is getting.

    • @EverettVinzant
      @EverettVinzant Před 2 lety +8

      @Rukoshii Isn’t is amazing how common it is for common sense to arrive at an uncommon answer?

    • @DragonXflyer
      @DragonXflyer Před 2 lety +6

      How sad is that, but so true and quite funny. But I personally know people like this and that is scary, like dangerous scary.

    • @EverettVinzant
      @EverettVinzant Před 2 lety +3

      @@DragonXflyer yes, the people you describe are usually the ones in the “hold ma beer an’ watch this,” camp.

  • @fluffycritter
    @fluffycritter Před 3 lety +384

    Math majors get so radicalized. Gotta get to the root of it.

    • @AIPTutorials
      @AIPTutorials Před 2 lety +42

      Division is being taught in these liberal colleges! Facts don't care about your irrational numbers.

    • @xymaryai8283
      @xymaryai8283 Před 2 lety +37

      No, they obviously get radicalised with raising things to power! campuses should deal with these square students, need to reduce factors that contributed to the decimation of others exponential potential

    • @DanT10
      @DanT10 Před 2 lety +26

      I think it is because they eat too much pi.

    • @Deschutron
      @Deschutron Před 2 lety +29

      @@xymaryai8283 the problem with these "radicals" is they always want to raise things to a higher power but their power is only fractional.

    • @Scriabinfan593
      @Scriabinfan593 Před 2 lety +3

      Beautiful

  • @ALBBproductions
    @ALBBproductions Před 3 lety +319

    I relate to this so much. I grew up in a conservative house and didn’t even realize how having Fox News on in the living room formed my opinions for me. Once I moved out, traveled, and met people outside my bubble, everything flipped. It’s now so hard for me to go home to family without going insane listening to all the new conspiracy theories. Beyond glad I got away and that others share similar experiences to me.

    • @AmberyTear
      @AmberyTear Před 2 lety +14

      Oh my god, I relate SO MUCH. Except my family doesn't watch Fox News which is rather bearable and civilised. They watch Russian propagandist channels which are, and I don't exaggerate one bit, WORSE than North Korean propaganda.

    • @kireikiku
      @kireikiku Před 2 lety +12

      It is so insane how there are different routes people in your situation (or one similar) will go. I had a friend who grew up with fox news every single night, was never exposed to diversity and hearing other people's experiences, and it hasn't caused her to self reflect on her ideologies. On the other hand I was raised by a lib gone conservative mother who blamed our poorness and suffering on other poor people. I've traveled, met people from all walks of life, took sociology and polisci classes in college, and now my mom believes I'm a "radical leftist" just because I started questioning the rhetoric she would use to speak about social issues.
      It's terribly sad that it really is as easy as "getting out of your bubble" and experiencing life from a different perspective. It makes your whole world shift if you do a lot less talking and a lot more listening.

    • @creativefantasybox2462
      @creativefantasybox2462 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AmberyTear RT

    • @AmberyTear
      @AmberyTear Před 2 lety +1

      @@creativefantasybox2462 yea, nazis had more tasteful propaganda...

    • @dr.corneliusq.cadbury6984
      @dr.corneliusq.cadbury6984 Před 2 lety +5

      Libtard sources are nearly as bad conservatard sources.

  • @brynmarie9655
    @brynmarie9655 Před 3 lety +1597

    You hit the nail on the head with the whole “I believe a conspiracy theory and thus I am smarter because I know something you don’t and am not a sheep for the mass media and the government” thing and I think it is a critical point that not enough people talk about.

    • @speedy01247
      @speedy01247 Před 3 lety +43

      I consider myself a skeptic of skeptics. I see the world and take it as it is. No secret world government or evil plots hidden in the depths. (Like bad things are happening, but it's not nearly as secret as people things)
      I may not be right about everything, but the nice thing is it doesn't matter as much.

    • @edwardbateman3094
      @edwardbateman3094 Před 3 lety +99

      @@speedy01247 it’s oxymoronic because on one hand they believe that there’s all these deep state conspiracies to take over the world, while at the same time believing all politicians are incompetent and useless...

    • @mr.anderson1454
      @mr.anderson1454 Před 3 lety +1

      those quotes are left wingers

    • @mainao3443
      @mainao3443 Před 3 lety +32

      @@mr.anderson1454 my friends a trump supporter conspirator and he pretty much said this to me, I can say for sure it's right wing people saying it

    • @mr.anderson1454
      @mr.anderson1454 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mainao3443 I don't belive the government or mass media. I'm a left winger.

  • @danpreston564
    @danpreston564 Před 3 lety +992

    I was outside recently and my neighbours were talking. One said ‘I’ve always carried an organ donor card, but they’re going to make it compulsory, so I’m not going to do it anymore.'
    I thought, wow, so it was never about the potential to save someone’s life, it was just about thinking you were better than other people, and now it doesn’t make you better than other people, so you won’t do it.

    • @thelegendarypandicorn1777
      @thelegendarypandicorn1777 Před 3 lety +40

      I mean... if it's mandatory, I'd stop carrying the card too. Wallet space is tight and if everyone's doing it, carrying it is more a vanity statement like "Oh I was planning on donating my organs before it was cool"

    • @danpreston564
      @danpreston564 Před 3 lety +93

      @@thelegendarypandicorn1777 it’s not about carrying the card, that’s just a figure of speech. The point was he would no longer agree to organ donation because the 'man' had made it compulsory.

    • @thelegendarypandicorn1777
      @thelegendarypandicorn1777 Před 3 lety +20

      @@danpreston564 That's a lot of information to pick up from a neighbor saying "I’ve always carried an organ donor card, but they’re going to make it compulsory, so I’m not going to do it anymore". How much were you listening in on your neighbors?

    • @danpreston564
      @danpreston564 Před 3 lety +29

      @@thelegendarypandicorn1777 I didn’t need to hear more, and I may have abridged and paraphrased his words.

    • @Gilberto90
      @Gilberto90 Před 3 lety +34

      It's more about the principle, I don't like the idea that the state has a default claim on my organs: it has unfortunate implications (looking at you China).
      My organs belong to me and I'll do what I like with them. Now excuse me while I drink this gallon of Whiskey and smoke this carton.

  • @verify6329
    @verify6329 Před 2 lety +149

    The only thing scarier than believing extremist theories is when you stop believing and realize your family is crazy

  • @JackgarPrime
    @JackgarPrime Před 3 lety +450

    "DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH!" How many times do you see that battle cry of the conspiracy theorist online? And without any further elaboration.

    • @josiahsophia8938
      @josiahsophia8938 Před 3 lety +50

      It’s deflection. It’s like, I have a million dollars in my pocket, I won’t show it to you, but just trust me

    • @lancewalker2595
      @lancewalker2595 Před 3 lety +13

      It's interesting that this conversation is only being entertained now, yet similar sophistry has long characterized more mainstream conspiracy theories; to be blunt, the number of times I've been told by someone who believes in "patriarchy" to "educate myself" is definitely on par with anti-vaxers and other right-wing conspiracies that have appeared over the years.

    • @geministargazer9830
      @geministargazer9830 Před 3 lety +19

      The funny thing is that I did that. I got a bit concerned about some of the antivaxx stuff that was going around about 11 years ago. The kind of reasonable middle ground stuff like delayed schedules and such. So I went and did my research. And found that they were all full of shit and then went and got my kids vaccinated. Talk about a backfire. I actually researched. I read papers on viral loads and adjuvants and all sorts but I got them from actual peer reviewed journals.

    • @geministargazer9830
      @geministargazer9830 Před 3 lety +27

      @@lancewalker2595 the patriarchy isn't a conspiracy theory, it's a term invented to describe our patriarchial society. Which IS patriarchal, that's why we take the father's name and not the mother's, and why women were second-class citizens for so many years. Honestly, if you think it's a conspiracy theory you SHOULD educate yourself.

    • @lancewalker2595
      @lancewalker2595 Před 3 lety +2

      @@geministargazer9830 The reason children take the father's name is to give the father an explicit relation to his offspring, it is to establish a more equal relation between men, women and their shared offspring. Contrary to popular belief, men actually want and need families just as much as women do.

  • @NOAHFINNCE
    @NOAHFINNCE Před 3 lety +2220

    LMAOOO HIDDEN PLANET

    • @aceatlasska4343
      @aceatlasska4343 Před 3 lety +16

      Hey Noah!

    • @notjustwarwick4432
      @notjustwarwick4432 Před 3 lety +11

      I thought they said hidden plant XD

    • @BeingTheHunt
      @BeingTheHunt Před 3 lety +103

      Men are from Mars, women are from Venus, non-binary folk are from the hidden planet kept secret by Obama's chemtrails.

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd Před 3 lety +2

      Trust me, that's nothing! I've put it in my comment, but go watch CoolHardLogic's World of Batshit series. And his geocentrism, flat Earth, homeopathy... Just watch him.

    • @aceatlasska4343
      @aceatlasska4343 Před 3 lety +8

      @@BeingTheHunt don't forget "girls go to college to get more knowledge, boys go to Jupiter to get more stupider". The irony being that "more stupider" is incorrect to say in English. Oh and the genders obviously switch depending on who's singing the song. There was also a version where the girls went to "Mars to get more Mars Bars", which annoyed me as it didn't flow well, and so I changed it to "girls go to Mars to get more bars" as in they own bars so they make money as opposed to the boys becoming stupid on Jupiter 😂. Come to think of it, I'm pretty sure I wasn't the biggest fan of Mars Bars when I was in P6, so that might've had something to do with it too...

  • @chany6336
    @chany6336 Před 3 lety +211

    When your freedom takes away from someone else's, it's called entitlement.

    • @elir842
      @elir842 Před 3 lety

      I have to preface this with the fact that I'm libertarian. I agree that your freedom can't take away someone else's but I have only seen people talking about freedom use mask and seat belt laws as examples. Those don't take away other's freedoms. Is there something else you are talking about? If this seems rude, I don't want it to be

    • @chany6336
      @chany6336 Před 3 lety +14

      @@elir842 heya!
      Honestly I'm it quiet sure anymore why I specifically answere drhis to this video as it was a little while ago, but I think we might be in the same page here;
      My argument in regard with the masks is that if it doesn't do you any harm, but it potentially can harm others , I don't agree with you saying it's your ' freedom' that's threatened. Same with vaccinations. Same with seatbelts. By making them mandatory, it protects a majority of the population which, let's be honest, sometimes need common sense 'forced' on them to survive.
      I'm not quiet sure what you want to say but I'm more than happy to keep this conversation going until we both understand what it is about lol 😅🙂

    • @elir842
      @elir842 Před 3 lety

      @@chany6336 I can see vaccines and masks but I don't agree. However, I don't understand seatbelts, they can't protect others cars or even others in the same vehicle

    • @THE_Mirage
      @THE_Mirage Před 3 lety +15

      @@elir842 1 human corpse moving at 50 miles per hour through a windshield slamming into a bystander lol

    • @shadow_of_thoth
      @shadow_of_thoth Před 2 lety

      @@elir842 I can't tell if Libertarianism actually rots your brain, or if idiots are just more likely to become Libertarians... 🤔

  • @AW-xc1xc
    @AW-xc1xc Před 2 lety +68

    I read this as: "So I used to be a reptilian"

  • @emawesterfeld306
    @emawesterfeld306 Před 3 lety +724

    I’m still thrown by the seatbelt law thing. I did not know this was a real thing that people cared about

    • @saschabeth1852
      @saschabeth1852 Před 3 lety +69

      I know someone (an adult) who brought this up recently w me while explaining why he doesn't like that masks are mandated. It's so weird because this person isn't one of those people who thinks covid is all a hoax, he's extremely cautious of it and does a lot more to protect his family than most are doing (and I'm pretty sure he wears his seatbelt too), he just hates the government telling him what to do and thinks it should be up to everyone to protect their individual safety how they choose.

    • @Varksterable
      @Varksterable Před 3 lety +34

      IIRC seatbelts had strong opposion right from the start, (even before the laws; which is why they were needed) as have many other safety features.
      It's not necessarily political either.
      Many people seem to value "this is how it has always been, and I'm ok so far" over (what is percieved as) an inconvenience, even though it demonstrably improves safety.
      Same thing often applies to any kind of change. There seems to be a general perception that the population, as a whole, is incredibly gulible.
      But some studies have shown that not only are many overly cynical, but that this can also be at least as harmful.
      Makes you think, doesn't it?
      (At least, I hope so.)

    • @IceMetalPunk
      @IceMetalPunk Před 3 lety +48

      It's a psychological phenomenon called reactance. When someone tells you to do something, you're more likely to rebel against doing that thing than if you thought you decided to do it on your own. And plenty of people who don't realize they're doing that will often rationalize their behavior by deciding that everyone would do the right thing on their own if "the government" didn't force them to do it.

    • @ellencameron3775
      @ellencameron3775 Před 3 lety +17

      It's an aspect of behavior that is more common with conservative mindsets, "don't tell me what to do." Now, just about everyone has this to some degree or another, none of us like being told to do something we'd rather not, but for some people this attitude becomes quite strong, to the point of immediate contrarianism no matter what they are told to do or how good it would be for them. They have an innate inability to accept command from outside of themselves, though there is a weird hypocrisy which often comes with it of following strong authority figures as long as that authority figure is blaming someone else for whatever bad stuff is going on. Hence why 70 million+ Americans voted for Trump.

    • @sofiamorehead418
      @sofiamorehead418 Před 3 lety +14

      @@saschabeth1852 i hope he knows that masks don’t protect the wearer; they protect others from the wearer. masks filter what you breathe out, not what you breathe in. you are not safe in a crowd if you are wearing masks and no one else is.

  • @ylla_
    @ylla_ Před 3 lety +820

    Ok but why does that seat belt conversation sound like something an anti masker would say

    • @ramywiles
      @ramywiles Před 3 lety +142

      It's the same argument, freedom to make your own choices is more important to them than public and private safety

    • @diablo.the.cheater
      @diablo.the.cheater Před 3 lety +75

      @@ramywiles When freedom threatens the ultimate freedom that is life it is no longer freedom.

    • @JackgarPrime
      @JackgarPrime Před 3 lety +47

      @@diablo.the.cheater Even more so, when your freedom of choice imposes on someone else's freedoms.

    • @10Vernonplace
      @10Vernonplace Před 3 lety +40

      And the "personal freedom" anti seat belt, anti maskers are against letting an NFL players kneel during the national anthem.

    • @iceblaze3043
      @iceblaze3043 Před 3 lety +3

      Now apply the mask rules for seatbelts and you can see why a person might think masks are stupid.
      You have to wear your seatbelt unless your eating or drinking you have to wear a seatbelt unless your 6 feet away from a person. You have to wear a seatbelt but it is okay if the seatbelt is made from strings. You have to wear a seatbelt but it is encouraged that you use the same seatbelt and put your mouth on it every time you use it. You have to wear a seatbelt unless your driving to a protest.
      These double standards are y some people are angry.
      One less one.
      You have to wear a seatbelt unless your a politician.

  • @FunnyMemes-dr3se
    @FunnyMemes-dr3se Před 2 lety +33

    The US political system, tax system, prison system, and everything else is pretty flawed.

    • @kireikiku
      @kireikiku Před 2 lety +3

      Louder for the people who forget to blame lobbyists in the back please!

    • @belkyhernandez8281
      @belkyhernandez8281 Před 2 lety

      And so if every other system.

    • @bradley8575
      @bradley8575 Před 2 lety +2

      To be fair everything in every Country is pretty Flawed too.

  • @EmotionallyExhaustedPuppy
    @EmotionallyExhaustedPuppy Před 3 lety +314

    I was raised deeply conservative, and I use to have some seriously questionable ideas about how the world works. I agree that the bubble effect applies to a large extent, but there's also the issue with how our education system has been warped over the last few decades. Anything requiring creative thinking (art, music, etc.) is considered unnecessary, leaving only the rigidity of the "memorize and regurgitate" model. Having found my way out of that mindset, I've been able to notice that many of the ideas of the right wing are short, easy to remember, and constantly repeated. Memorize and regurgitate, just as they were taught to do. What's correct isn't as important as what feels right, when it comes from someone you trust. Questioning it often doesn't even enter into the equation because it's just the default position for them. Thanks for this video. It's always nice to see others who have learned how to move on from how they were raised. :)

    • @shuheihisagi6689
      @shuheihisagi6689 Před 2 lety +11

      Its sad that the conservatives disencourage education and critical thinking. I have never seen a Trump supporter at my college or Univeristy, it sucks that they are so wraped in their thinking we can't even have academic/intellectual conversations about our nation.

    • @kireikiku
      @kireikiku Před 2 lety +12

      Not to mention, rural red states do not have education on the forefront of their priorities. Most people come from schools that teach curriculum with extremely skewed perspectives of slavery or American Imperialism as just a few random examples.

    • @belkyhernandez8281
      @belkyhernandez8281 Před 2 lety +9

      The Christian Coalition and similar groups targeted school boards back in the 80s to change curriculum and text books. And right wing Libertarian Republican politics cheered the idea of defunding schools.
      It's all related.

    • @nametbd233
      @nametbd233 Před rokem +1

      Most subjects, including math, require creative thinking at the highest level, if one is to discover anything new in those subjects.

    • @patty4349
      @patty4349 Před rokem

      Robber Barons somehow became Captains of Industry between 1983 and 1997....

  • @maisha3086
    @maisha3086 Před 3 lety +655

    saw the title and thought “oh a reverse coming out video” i hate myself for this

  • @harleygagnon1893
    @harleygagnon1893 Před 3 lety +701

    My parents always refused to talk about politics around me when I was younger because they were adamant that I formed my own opinions. I live in a pretty diverse area so I went to school with and became friends with people across the political spectrum, and I remember at lunch we would always have in depth discussions about certain topics. They never really got heated and none of us got angry, we just shared our opinions and moved on. I didn't fully develop the skills I needed to think critically about these issues until the end of high school and my views have changed since then, but I think having these conversations was a good first step for me and I feel lucky to have had that experience.
    tldr: It's important to talk to people you disagree with, as long as you're willing to listen to each other

    • @annabellex3559
      @annabellex3559 Před 3 lety +20

      Love this! Totally agree, and I had the same from my parents, I think its great x

    •  Před 3 lety +14

      My parents tried it but we did talk about politics when I was in highschool, they never told me who they voted for until then tho (there are about 5 major parties in my country)

    • @oakstrong1
      @oakstrong1 Před 3 lety +15

      I got OK upbringing: my atheist dad took me a communist youth club when I was ten (get them young) and my mum took me to a Sunday school from eight years. In high school I had fierce political arguments either Social Democrats and Conservatives and at Communist Party committee meetings with the "old hands", arguments about the right to believe - or not to believe - without being harassed; with my dad about meat eating vs veganism. When I say argued, I mean debated: there was never any ill feelings or grudge afterwards. But when I was a kid, web browser with easy to type URLs and WiFi weren't invented yet: Internet was only for the military and select few university boffins, white text against black or green via VERY slow telephone lines and modem that couldn't cope with sound.... We all had the same the same national papers delivered and an additional one according to political leaning and we had only few TV and radio channels to choose from, all striving to present the news with a neutral tone: it was practically impossible to stay in a bubble for any length of time, likewise left wing, right wing or religious radicalisation was uncommon.

    • @gregweatherup9596
      @gregweatherup9596 Před 3 lety +9

      It wasn’t till I was an adult that I found out my dad was registered with a particular political party - and to this day there’s really only a very small handful of times that I’ve ever overheard him discussing politics - and me and him only ever had one very brief conversation about politics and that was only brought on because of the crazy-ness that was the 2016 election.

    • @MalikaSmile
      @MalikaSmile Před 3 lety +18

      But how do you listen and talk to someone who thinks that there is a hidden planet behind chem trails ? I am at a loss here, a loss for words that is.
      Am I closed minded because I don't really want to talk to people who believe such stories ? Vicarious shame is real. Hearing this story on youtube already makes me cringe ? Can you imagine in real life ? Someone that I would know ? I would think they are ready to be admitted into a psychiatric hospital. I wouldn't even know where to start having a conversation about this.

  • @LudvigIndestrucable
    @LudvigIndestrucable Před 3 lety +195

    Wearing a seatbelt is actually safer for everyone else, a human hurtling through a windscreen in an accident can actually kill someone else, even if that person was sensible enough to wear a seatbelt.
    As always, your freedom to be an idiot doesn't trump the safety of others

    • @tybooskie
      @tybooskie Před 2 lety +24

      My anatomy teacher showed the class slides of a crash victim with teeth lodged into the back of their head who was killed because the backseat passenger wasn't wearing a seatbelt.

    • @WhiteLionProd15
      @WhiteLionProd15 Před 2 lety +1

      i see what you did there

    • @ELCinWYO
      @ELCinWYO Před 2 lety +16

      Yeah, they don't understand that. I'm really tired of living in a red state where people will say they'll fight for their social security, but don't think socialist ideas work.

    • @johnnychandler325
      @johnnychandler325 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ELCinWYO some work others don't.

    • @ELCinWYO
      @ELCinWYO Před 2 lety +3

      @@johnnychandler325 I know that, what I was saying is that they don't understand that it is a socialist idea.

  • @queenannsrevenge100
    @queenannsrevenge100 Před 2 lety +103

    “If it really were the best course of action, people would do it freely”
    One of those core life lessons that are part of becoming an adult is understanding that this is in no way true 😄
    Thank you for this fantastic video to help explain how once perfectly-reasoned people wind up in such dark spaces.

    • @skarbuskreska
      @skarbuskreska Před 2 lety +6

      Right otherwise alcoholics, drug users, gamblers etc wouldn't exist either

    • @mastertrams
      @mastertrams Před 2 lety

      Are you thus saying Evan's dad isn't an adult, simply because he's missed off one of these "core life lessons"?

    • @queenannsrevenge100
      @queenannsrevenge100 Před 2 lety +6

      @@mastertrams oh, there’s plenty of adults who haven’t learned their core life lessons - I’m watching a news clip right now about grown people in a small U.S. town literally praying for an end to COVID - while refusing the free vaccine and refusing masks. Pretty much the same sort of lesson from this very video.
      Hell, I didn’t learn my lessons about properly managing money until I was in my 30s, so even I missed a few until later on.

    • @mechengr1731
      @mechengr1731 Před 11 měsíci

      If there's a rule for it, there's probably a reason.
      When we went to New Orleans, my mom and step-dad had Bill Engvall playing through the car radio.
      He was doing his, "Here's your Sign" skit.
      Perfectly sums up the seatbelt law

  • @tuxegirls
    @tuxegirls Před 3 lety +1469

    Funny how the claims you bring up from like 2009 are still things I hear word for word from my conservative parents. it’s such an echo chamber that never progresses

    • @MittensZora
      @MittensZora Před 3 lety +39

      Same... my mom and stepdad are both conservative

    • @cryingeyebrows2773
      @cryingeyebrows2773 Před 3 lety +77

      My grandparents dont believe global warming is real SIMPLY BECAUSE, if it was real it wouldnt have been renamed climate change...

    • @owenhunt
      @owenhunt Před 3 lety +16

      Their views aren't supposed to progress if they believe they are right..

    • @slavecek
      @slavecek Před 3 lety +69

      I don't know that it never progresses: The satanic child-blood drinking, adrenaline harvesting cult thing seems to be a pretty recent development. Not sure if we can exactly call that progress, but the fact that so many in the echo chamber do seem to believe it sounds genuinely terrifying to me. Once you view the people on the other side of the debate as child molesting murderers, they are no longer human to you and anything and everything you might do to "stop them" is justified in your eyes. That's what scares me.

    • @ellax325
      @ellax325 Před 3 lety +41

      I mean if conservatives changed their opinions, they wouldn't be conservative anymore. They would be progressive and they can't have that now can they lol

  • @ninjadudeofficial
    @ninjadudeofficial Před 3 lety +487

    This kinda reminds me of my Tory parents claiming, extremely confidently, that there are cities and towns in the UK genuinely governed by sharia law. So that's fun.

    • @owenwinn2821
      @owenwinn2821 Před 3 lety +35

      I can think of one, a small town called Saville Town had at one point two Sharia courts operating in it as the population was 93% Pakistani muslim...very strange place. To say that cities are being controlled by them is stupid, but Muslims do use underground Sharia courts across the country.

    • @MrAapasuo
      @MrAapasuo Před 3 lety +64

      @@owenwinn2821
      They do but thats the thing, they are "underground"
      They rely on members of community upholding their peers to pressure in order to have any influence
      Which makes rising negativity to muslims sad as integration, making people feel they are part of collective of UK and british, is best way of breaking the sharia courts by having them adopt more open british way of life.
      This is of course an outsiders view but it seems like far right lives in self fullfilling prophecy, they fear others and discriminate them, making them in turn radicalized which just further fuels the far right

    • @owenwinn2821
      @owenwinn2821 Před 3 lety +19

      @@MrAapasuo They aren't coming here to integrate, they cling to Eastern values and implement them within their communities; letting backwards cultures bastardise our own is why Europe is in an international period of crisis.

    • @MrAapasuo
      @MrAapasuo Před 3 lety +76

      @@owenwinn2821
      yes small wonder why they wont integrate when people treat them like they never could from beginning
      you really dont see how that mentality drives these insular cultures do you?

    • @thegorgon7063
      @thegorgon7063 Před 3 lety +27

      @@owenwinn2821 bit like the Jewish courts that have existed in the UK for centuries then (the Beth Din)?

  • @geministargazer9830
    @geministargazer9830 Před 3 lety +44

    We need to normalise changing your mind and admitting you were wrong

  • @tomrogue13
    @tomrogue13 Před 3 lety +132

    College probably was where I shifted my thinking too. Just being in a different environment allowed me to look at things from new perspectives and realize I'm not always the center of every problem

  • @pjmeis5226
    @pjmeis5226 Před 3 lety +142

    One of the funnier things I’ve experienced was that my parents were like “oh, you’ll get more politically right as you grow older” and I’m sitting here having gone pretty darn consistently left 😅

    • @Artemi099
      @Artemi099 Před 2 lety +7

      You have to be boomer old

    • @pjmeis5226
      @pjmeis5226 Před 2 lety +28

      @@hellohello-tp4mb It wasn’t left wingers storming the capitol on Jan 6th in military larp and weird shaman getup.

    • @marksmadhousemetaphysicalm2938
      @marksmadhousemetaphysicalm2938 Před 2 lety +2

      You probably haven't moved as much as you think....its the parties that have move to the extremes...there used to be a middle ground...a large group from both parties that cooperated and actually got stuff done and moved the country forward...🤷‍♂️ they are still there...but are far fewer in number...now nothing gets done...I remember when both side could give a little and it wasn't the end of the universe if Democrats and Republicans got something out of a deal. So sad today's political environment.

    • @hanshotlast
      @hanshotlast Před 2 lety +8

      @@pjmeis5226 it wasn’t right wingers burning down cities for months, killing and harming innocent people and police officers

    • @seitanbeatsyourmeat666
      @seitanbeatsyourmeat666 Před 2 lety +3

      Same. I was Republican until 2016, now I’m left and going harder left every year. I’ll be 50 soon

  • @UoAProductions
    @UoAProductions Před 3 lety +521

    When it comes to arguing any point to a conspiracy theorists, I have said this before and I'll say it again. Unfortunately arguing with idiots is like playing chess with a pigeon. At the end of the day it doesn't matter how good you are at chess the pigeon is just going to knock over all the pieces, defecate on the board and then strut around like it won the game.

    • @lorettaoverholt8038
      @lorettaoverholt8038 Před 3 lety +18

      Pigeon.

    • @UoAProductions
      @UoAProductions Před 3 lety +16

      @@lorettaoverholt8038 thanks for that, I didn't realize I had spelt it wrong lol. I have updated to fix the spelling :-)

    • @danpreston564
      @danpreston564 Před 3 lety +64

      You can’t argue logically with positions reached without logic.

    • @diablo.the.cheater
      @diablo.the.cheater Před 3 lety +27

      @@danpreston564 But you sure can argue illogically, you can make them believe in a conspiracy theory that the real aliens are making up all the other conspiracy theories to weaken the planet or something like that, just appeal to their emotions and wishes of hidden knowledge instead of their logic and manipulate them to your wi... i mean correct their incorrect beliefs.

    • @sarahl500
      @sarahl500 Před 3 lety +15

      You are absolutely right, its futile trying to discuss anything with these people. Even when you debunk their theory and present them with evidence to prove what they think isn't real, they cling to their belief.
      Then they usually start calling you names and saying you should think independently 🙄🙈

  • @tyleralmquist7606
    @tyleralmquist7606 Před 3 lety +79

    I had this happen with my uncle. I had to do a school project on conspiracy theories and I decided to look into a right-wing Conspiracy and I was telling him about it and he said “do you believe it?” And I said “no” because That’s the conclusion I had come to and my uncle just shook his head like I was some poor little child who was to dumb to understand the real world. It was a really weird moment because my uncle is a pretty level-headed dude and I was really surprise he believed in it since I thought it was pretty cut and dry.

    • @tyleralmquist7606
      @tyleralmquist7606 Před 3 lety +17

      @Gurnaj Virk it’s a political conspiracy and I’d rather not have this reply section turn into a political debate. That’s why I didn’t name the conspiracy in the first place (No, it’s not Q-anon or anything like that)

  • @NenaKPlans
    @NenaKPlans Před 2 lety +21

    He really hit the nail on the head with the "I'm smarter than everyone" bit - I too was very close to falling down several conspiracy rabbit holes

  • @bekah9344
    @bekah9344 Před 3 lety +266

    YES. I feel this 100%
    I was raised in a conservative home and heard a lot of "exclusive knowledge" that the "corrupt media" wasn't going to share. I see the same kind of communication pattern happen in problematic churches too. There's a religious rhetoric that makes it really easy to disbelieve or worse, pity, the other side.
    Thanks for being willing to share your experience and shift in thinking on the internet. You're def not alone!

    • @horizoon
      @horizoon Před 3 lety +22

      you might wanna try their own phrases on them... like when they drop racist/mysogenist/homophobe remarks say "brother I see you don't love your neighbour as is commanded in scripture. I will pray for you." their faces!! xD

    • @kilgoretrout3966
      @kilgoretrout3966 Před 3 lety +8

      It is frighteningly cultish.

    • @carakellmeyer5037
      @carakellmeyer5037 Před 2 lety

      I grew up like this too.

  • @johndejontench4994
    @johndejontench4994 Před 3 lety +403

    I saw this title and clicked immediately....I put my literature essay down and just devoted myself to it...niceeee

  • @codyanglin3758
    @codyanglin3758 Před 3 lety +82

    As a Conservative that had this video pop up on their suggestions for some reason, I wholeheartedly agree with you and wish more in the Republican Party, just the right in general really, would call this kind of stuff out. I have definitely had to critically assess and determine why I believe what I do, and in doing that ended up changing my views on several things. I too attribute this to having gotten out of my bubble (the military and hobbies in this case) and being exposed to more beliefs. It's kind of funny, but also sad, that many of the people I grew up with or around (mostly family) would call me a RINO or traitor today if they would even have much of a conversation about it at all.

    • @nataliethomas444
      @nataliethomas444 Před rokem

      It's crazy how people go on about "RINO"s now when the people they're calling RINOs are just more traditional conservatives that haven't completely let the internet and other media drive them insane. Aren't they supposed to like tradition?

  • @amallen94
    @amallen94 Před 2 lety +22

    This is literally my same exact problem. I was raised by conspiracy theorists and it scared me spitless to hear things my parents were saying.

  • @Jimmy-Mc
    @Jimmy-Mc Před 3 lety +139

    This video turned the frogs gay.

  • @bellaball1293
    @bellaball1293 Před 3 lety +523

    Father Evan: That my son is why I don't wear seatbelts
    Son Evan: WAT

    • @mandlerparr1
      @mandlerparr1 Před 3 lety +7

      Funny thing is that this particular train of thought is not just on the republican side. there are democrats that think this too.

    • @beatrix1120
      @beatrix1120 Před 3 lety +4

      This is unironicly why I don't wear a bicycle helmet. Even though it's legally required in Australia

    • @tracychristenson177
      @tracychristenson177 Před 3 lety +7

      @@beatrix1120 Why do you do that when you know it's a terrible idea and makes you sound really dumb? Are you just a really paranoid person who gets panic attacks when someone tells you to do even really simple things, or do you have self-esteem issues that cause you to feel like you need to assert yourself in nonsensical ways just for the sake of being needlessly contradictory? Or is it about trust issues because, for most of your life, you've been surrounded by people who are just really untrustworthy and bad examples in everything to the point where you now instinctively distrust even the most basic things anybody ever says to do? Or are you just one of those people who routinely do stupid things thinking that it will make you look smart just for being different from everyone? Gah, people like you break my brain! I can never figure out which of many things is the real thing that's wrong with you!
      I know that's a tirade against you, but honestly, this petty stuff for no reason just blows my mind. If you really want to be independent-minded, why can't you just do some simple things right because they are the right things to do, regardless of whether you were told to or not? If you intentionally make every single petty decision in your life the wrong one just to stick it to whoever is telling you the right thing to do, you're still basing every little aspect of your life on someone else's decisions, just in kind of a reverse or negative way. Why not just make the decision yourself based on what the right thing to do is, regardless of who said it, and if it happens to agree with "the man" or whoever you're trying to stick it to, who cares?

    • @beatrix1120
      @beatrix1120 Před 3 lety +4

      @@tracychristenson177 I believe that everyone should have the right to decide for themselves, what risks are acceptable in their day to day life; as long as they're not jeopardizing the health or safety of other people.
      For example, my brother rides a motorcycle. Motorbikes are about 38 times more lethal than cars. I would never ride one for this reason. I've even told my brother this. But I still don't think I have the the right to force him to stop.

    • @slome815
      @slome815 Před 3 lety +3

      @@tracychristenson177 Because it's not annoying, especially in the summer. If you are just commuting, I don't see why you would wear a helmet. All serious cyclist do of course wear it. But for just riding around at low speed, no, i'll take the extra risk.
      It's safer, yes, but by that logic you can abolish all extreme sports. Law's to protect other people are OK, laws that protect only yourself are not necessary. I drive a motorcycle, and since a couple of years you have to wear full protective gear when doing so here in belgium. When I was driving around in Italy people where riding along in shorts and T-shirts. That looked so much less stifling and sweaty, It looked so much more fun. I miss the time when I was allowed to do that. Now fireworks are abolished here too. I really liked setting off fireworks. It's like one by one they are taking away things I liked in the name of public health.

  • @hutchison3379
    @hutchison3379 Před 2 lety +34

    Bro, that feeling you described about having "special knowledge" is part of what cults provide. This kind of thing runs deep in many political circles but its a staple on the right because religion is already part of the infrastructure on the right. Breaking that kind of conditioning is hard to do, so congrats.

  • @turma8eac
    @turma8eac Před 3 lety +82

    I also used to be way more economically liberal and politically right wing than I currently am. Having to deal with a right wing government during a pandemic showed me the error of my ways.

    • @shinon748
      @shinon748 Před 2 lety +18

      It's all good dude. People can grow and change. Makes us human. Better late than never to burst through that bubble. But yea our government response during the pandemic was abysmal to say the least.

    • @STScott-qo4pw
      @STScott-qo4pw Před 2 lety +3

      i'm right outta The Enlightenment, that's why so many american religious, economic and political conservatives don't like me. then again, "progressives" and i have an especially deep mutual loathing.

    • @LearningTheStixx
      @LearningTheStixx Před 2 lety +4

      Your blaming the right? How so?

    • @devforfun5618
      @devforfun5618 Před 2 lety +1

      h1n1 was such a non event in my country, that only now i discovered they vaccinated 45% of the population in 3 months, and that is why i dont even remember how bad it was, it wasn't bad at all

  • @mcdreamysbabe1170
    @mcdreamysbabe1170 Před 3 lety +453

    I saw the title and I am immediately intruiged🧐

  • @Showsni
    @Showsni Před 3 lety +203

    "It's definitely safer to wear a seatbelt, but because someone told me to, I'm not going to do it!" Talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face...

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Před 3 lety +21

      One thing you have to remember about 40 percent of the US population is this. They basically think, "No one on Earth can tell me what to do if I don't like it unless it's the Bible and then I must do it and like it permanently". These are also the people who think that they have an absolute case by case right to refuse help to anyone and everyone based upon their religious zealot idea of "morality" and do so without a consequence that they wouldn't like. They also think that it's your own fault if you fail and if you can't succeed alone, you should basically just die and get out of the way of everyone else who did succeed or, if you somehow don't die, you should just stay sick and miserable and also in huge debt and simply obey them until you die.

  • @GigiLuigi437
    @GigiLuigi437 Před 2 lety +17

    my parents thought my catholic high school made me more leftist even though it just came from having an education and meeting foreign exchange students from all over the world

  • @Godsgrampa38
    @Godsgrampa38 Před 2 lety +156

    I don't see a "dumb republican" I see "a victim of indoctrination".

    • @jelatinosa
      @jelatinosa Před 2 lety +19

      I see both. You have to be some level of stupid to become a full grown adult and still not have the mental capacity to question and realize that many of the conspiracies, fairytales, hateful/harmful beliefs, make little sense and have no basis in reality.
      If I could start to question all my indoctrination at age 12, you have to be really stupid to continue believing stupid shit late into your 20s and beyond.
      I didn't want to question things, I wanted to feel safe and like everything was fine. I was obviously still dependant on those who did the indoctrination, and yet I couldn't not question and realize how so many things didn't make sense. It was very difficult, I became depressed. I would totally understand why children would cling to indoctrination till later on in life.
      It would have been so much easier if I could have repressed that till I went to college and was independent.
      So, no, I see no valid excuse for grown people to believe in ridiculous garbage, except if they were mentally ill and stupid.

    • @beepbopboop7727
      @beepbopboop7727 Před 2 lety +10

      Welll right wingers tend to score lower on IQ tests so ...

    • @Godsgrampa38
      @Godsgrampa38 Před 2 lety +5

      @@jelatinosa Sorry. I was in no way trying to excuse these adults for their actions, and I can see how my words might come across as excusing their ignorance. My primary objection was about labeling it "stupidity", when anybody with a background in psychology or sociology could tell you that intelligence has nothing to do with acceptance of conspiracy theories.
      So I disagree with you on that aspect, but I felt it important to acknowledge that these people are still personally responsible for failing to challenge their indoctrination, and ESPECIALLY if they perpetuate their harmful beliefs onto others.

    • @kireikiku
      @kireikiku Před 2 lety +3

      @@jelatinosa I do agree with you, however I see a lot of common right wingers as victims of cult mentality. Steven Hassan (clinical therapist and former member of the Unification Chuch) goes into crazy detail about how the historically recent surge of conservatism (thanks to Trump) could be a political cult. He has a ton of interviews online and so many videos going into depth but his books are incredible and definitely offer a new perspective of how republican leaders are typically malignant narcissists who peddle some patriot dogma to people who are insecure about the state of America and feel their safety is threatened by progressiveness as a whole.

    • @qwertyqwrtyqwertyuio
      @qwertyqwrtyqwertyuio Před 2 lety

      Same for democrats, both are shit

  • @brittnigregory3181
    @brittnigregory3181 Před 3 lety +322

    I miss the days when it was considered a “joke” and it was “hilarious” to be a conspiracy theorist. 😓

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Před 3 lety +17

      Once the internet became a big thing, those days were over.

    • @juliehansen5696
      @juliehansen5696 Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah I have a friend who thinks Trump was hiding mailboxes to impact the election. Crazy conspiracies out there.

    • @truedarklander
      @truedarklander Před 3 lety +22

      @@juliehansen5696 more like Trump actually reduces funding for the USPS right before an election that had massive mail in turnout after making sure his base voted in person in a majoritarian fashion

    • @juliehansen5696
      @juliehansen5696 Před 3 lety

      @@truedarklander except that’s not actually true. I know you want it to be because CNN and the WaPo reported on it like it was but it’s just a silly conspiracy theory. ( I guess my friend isn’t the only one who believes it). Funding for USPS has been set for years and has been decreasing because use has been decreasing as people use web services for.
      Also, the President doesn’t even have that power. Congress sets the budget.

    • @truedarklander
      @truedarklander Před 3 lety +16

      @@juliehansen5696 You're putting the thumb in the scale by ignoring the fact that the postmaster general is appointed by the president and answers to the president, and he controls where the money goes. Very tiny detail that's hugely important

  • @MadenskySquare
    @MadenskySquare Před 3 lety +235

    This video is great - I really like the acknowledgement that our beliefs, political or otherwise, SHOULD change and evolve as we get older and gain a different perspective on the world. It doesn't mean that our previous beliefs/opinions were necessarily wrong, but that our experiences will shape us, and our priorities will shift. I think there's a lot of expectation that people should know exactly who they are and what is "right" as soon as they are adults, but you change hugely over time, especially in your late teens/early twenties. For me now at 25, I would hugely disagree with myself at 18 on so many topics. That doesn't make my 18 self an idiot, or a bad person, just young, and without much exposure to the world beyond my home town and social circle.

    • @fakenamington6747
      @fakenamington6747 Před 3 lety

      Damn right. This is also a good arguement for cancel culture.

  • @John-xe3rc
    @John-xe3rc Před 3 lety +27

    Man this resonated with me. I was a psych major at a university know for being very conservative and came out the other side as a liberal. It's not universities, it's life experience that made me the way I am.

  • @EpicKate
    @EpicKate Před 2 lety +30

    It's always such a hopeful thing, to hear people talk about how they changed and grew.

  • @gabrielschaat6448
    @gabrielschaat6448 Před 3 lety +233

    I know it's just his light reflecting off the window but for the night setup I will continue to make it a moon in my mind.

    • @evan
      @evan  Před 3 lety +46

      I shot this at 3:30-5 so welcome to winter in England

    • @angelsubliminals2543
      @angelsubliminals2543 Před 3 lety +36

      Nahh it's just the hidden planet

    • @reeba4824
      @reeba4824 Před 3 lety +4

      Haha glad im not the only one who saw the moon 😆 or hidden planet???? 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔😄

  • @ellacummings4493
    @ellacummings4493 Před 3 lety +140

    It makes me sad that my granny believes in crazy conspiracy theories and doesn't believe that climate change exists. It makes me sad that I get angry when she visits us and that I can't just enjoy her company.

    • @anitaposa9164
      @anitaposa9164 Před 3 lety +26

      Don't talk to her about it. Leave it alone. No point in trying to change very old people's opinions. Getting worked up over it won't help anyone. Just ignore it if she opens up those topics. Laugh it off and let her have her ideas. I've learned that things like that are losing battles, and I just get myself worked up over nothing.

    • @Nightwatcher20
      @Nightwatcher20 Před 3 lety +5

      However, these climate activists do greatly exaggerate and love to shout and scream instead of actually doing something to help the planet. Yes, we know the planet's not doing too good, but they're not suggesting anything constructive-- nothing sensible, anyway.

    • @ellacummings4493
      @ellacummings4493 Před 3 lety +34

      @@Nightwatcher20 Climate activists don't have the power to change our planet. They're shouting and screaming so world leaders who have the power to make changes can hear them.

    • @Nightwatcher20
      @Nightwatcher20 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ellacummings4493 but they do have the influence on individual people. They could make a massive difference if they focused on educating people on what lifestyle choices they could make (e.g. recycling, shopping locally, less consumerism etc.), but instead climate activists focus on "solutions" that will only destroy the economy and then the world will end up in chaos... such as endorsing the Green New Deal, which costs an *initial* estimated $93 trillion.

    • @ellacummings4493
      @ellacummings4493 Před 3 lety +14

      @@Nightwatcher20 Okay, I'm not going to argue with you because this will just go on forever.

  • @missionledcontent
    @missionledcontent Před 3 lety +2

    This is so well articulated. I've wrapped my head around this for a long time but you describe it so well.

  • @FirstLast-dd5bx
    @FirstLast-dd5bx Před 2 lety +15

    I had a friend that I hadn't seen for about 5 years, and when I visited him I found that he had gone completely conspiracy nut. He bent my ear for an hour and a half before I stopped him to ask him a couple of questions. I said, suppose you are right? How is it helping you? He didn't have an answer, so I answered for him. It's not helping you. After he told me that government agents were surveilling him while he was doing dishes, I said, good to see you, I gotta go.

    • @jjescorpiso21
      @jjescorpiso21 Před 2 lety +6

      Sounds like he has some form of paranoia. Poor guy

  • @beng6044
    @beng6044 Před 3 lety +277

    Visiting other countries and experiencing cultures (for longer than just a holiday/vacation) should be mandatory imo

    • @adambyrne1201
      @adambyrne1201 Před 3 lety +41

      A lot of people can't afford that though. I'd be all for it if holidays are government subsidized

    • @beng6044
      @beng6044 Před 3 lety +20

      @@adambyrne1201 yea I know. Every country has the issue of cultural insensitivity and forming extremist political echo chambers, but I think it's become most prominent in large countries (USA, Russia, China) because you don't need to leave the country (and the culture) to experience a different geographic environment away from home. Add to that the cost of international flights for water locked countries that can't easily land-travel to other countries and you increase the effect yet again. The United States has done an incredible job at unifying such a large
      (geographical and population wise) country's culture together it also unintentionally created a larger echo chamber for conspiracy theorists to thrive in.
      I don't believe there is a solution. Not even government subsidised holidays will really help.

    • @elizabethnahu3422
      @elizabethnahu3422 Před 3 lety +13

      I don't think it needs to be mandatory, but a culture thing. I live in New Zealand - which, realistic, is one of the hardest and most expensive places to travel from, but many people still do because we devolped a culture around it. Often not even for holidays, but for several years in their 20s people will go work overseas. All my cousins have done it for instance, some several times. However, not everyone will be able to afford this, which is its own problem

    • @beng6044
      @beng6044 Před 3 lety +5

      @@elizabethnahu3422 just as political as cultural - there would need to be visas designed for this like NZ has, and some countries are far too anti-immigration to allow that

    • @elizabethnahu3422
      @elizabethnahu3422 Před 3 lety +2

      @@beng6044 yeah, but far cheaper then paying for + maybe will be easier to enforce because making people go on holiday is a treat to their free will

  • @runarandersen878
    @runarandersen878 Před 3 lety +170

    When he mentioned European media speaking about divided USA I thought he was going to say it is not so bad. Shocking to hear it is much more worse.

    • @robertgronewold3326
      @robertgronewold3326 Před 3 lety +31

      Lets just say that there is a solid 15% of Americans who are quite...... questionable about what they do or don't believe.

    • @berniethekiwidragon4382
      @berniethekiwidragon4382 Před 3 lety +33

      I've been keeping tabs on the USA for a very long time. There are some very notable cracks between Americans, with a sizeable proportion of her population divorced from reality, and are belligerent about it.

    • @Catlily5
      @Catlily5 Před 3 lety +5

      @@robertgronewold3326 Crazy beliefs on both sides!

    • @robertgronewold3326
      @robertgronewold3326 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Catlily5 Well, I was putting all the crazy people into a single category.

    • @user-om5tv5fd9s
      @user-om5tv5fd9s Před 3 lety +16

      Well considering that it is officially being debated to use military forces to ensure trumps victory without any Alarm bells ringing that should be concerning. If that doesn’t scream a path towards dictatorship I don’t know what does.

  • @raib942
    @raib942 Před 3 lety +13

    I never gave a single shit about politics for a majority of my life until recently when my father dove head first into the election was stolen conspiracies and pushed me to really start looking into what was going on. To this day he thinks it was stolen and whenever I try to push back and have him watch sources that aren’t blatantly republican and conservative he always tell me that of course they aren’t talking about it, they got it and now they have to keep everyone’s mind off it so they don’t get caught. It’s honestly terrifying to see so many people falling into such wild conspiracies and that it’s becoming the norm here.

    • @via3600
      @via3600 Před rokem

      I didn't care about politics for the longest time either until I realized I was gay and I kinda have to pay attention now cause like, my rights are at stake or somethin :')
      I don't like it I wish I could go back to ignoring everyone with their politics and insane takes
      I miss not understanding how Insane my stepmom is
      Yeahh.. ignorance is bad.... but I'm allowed SOME pointless unreasonable wishing sometimes

  • @sams3015
    @sams3015 Před 3 lety +11

    I love you’re freely talking about this, I think specifically in America there is this you’re on our side or their side. It really annoys me when people jump down people’s throats for not 100% agreeing with them. It’s tribalism really

  • @firecracker1711
    @firecracker1711 Před 3 lety +231

    I'm privately educated, surrounded by tories all my life. All it did was make me more 'left'. I guess i was the rebel 😂

    • @horseygirlsec25
      @horseygirlsec25 Před 3 lety +32

      I live in Canada, where my province is known as "The Texas of Canada", and our Premier is the Trump of Canada. Each year I have moved more and more to the left- so much so that I get called a socialist now- it's glorious.

    • @thelaziestu2397
      @thelaziestu2397 Před 3 lety +31

      @@youtubeaccount1718 That's not what they're actually like but sure go off

    • @Kikiranka
      @Kikiranka Před 3 lety +5

      @@horseygirlsec25 just curiosity, which province is Texas of Canada?

    • @gaildahlas
      @gaildahlas Před 3 lety +12

      In my experience, lots of people at private schools are actually left-leaning and/or fully left wing, especially when said private school is in a dodgy area and teaches its students to think critically. Contrary to popular belief, they're not actually full of ultra-rich and ignorant elitists.

    • @soniaemmanouilidou1139
      @soniaemmanouilidou1139 Před 3 lety +14

      @@horseygirlsec25 it is mind boggling that someone beeing or beeing called a socialist is something dirty in North America

  • @lisaratley4858
    @lisaratley4858 Před 3 lety +166

    During the Me Too movement my step father, who raised four girls and would have never said such insane things, said ‘well, women wear thongs, make up, and read Fifty Shades of Grey, so they must want the attention’....

    • @monkiram
      @monkiram Před 2 lety +36

      My mom used to be extremely apolitical, to the point where it was like part of her identity to never involve herself in politics. But then over the last 10-ish years, ever since she joined facebook, she's become slowly more and more radicalized by her group of friends (one of her friends is a conservative member of parliament) to the point where she now is very conservative. She now believes a lot of things that she used to believe the opposite of and is an angrier person overall. She used to think for herself and base her beliefs on her own moral conclusions and now she just parrots all the same popular right-leaning phrases.
      I wish there was something I could do about it, it makes me so sad. I feel like it's my fault because it was my idea to get her an iPad which is what facilitated her going on facebook all day. I try to explain to her why I disagree with some of the things she says, but it causes us to argue sometimes and I feel like I'm the only dissenting voice in her life compared to so many that agree with the conservative worldview that it's not enough. Older generations also have a tendency to write off the opinions of younger generations thanks to "lack of experience", so that doesn't help. I think it's a lost cause.

    • @mioafox
      @mioafox Před 2 lety +7

      @@monkiram I am sorry to hear that. I hope that she comes around at some point.

    • @Em-._.-
      @Em-._.- Před rokem +2

      @@monkiram my dad is like that but on the opposite end. If it weren't for me, my siblings, and my mom he would definitely be those old right-winger parrots... But instead he's just the same but doesn't like Trump, parroting left wing arguments without really understanding them and constantly putting down "the other side"

  • @jadespades4237
    @jadespades4237 Před 2 lety +7

    Dude, your story is like my story only my dad died and I'd listen to those programs religiously to feel a connection. I remember the moment I realized I didn't have a single opinion that was my own and it was because I finally dared to disagree about something. It blew my mind.

  • @GirlWthGlasses
    @GirlWthGlasses Před 3 lety +17

    I grew up with grandparents teaching me to be sceptical of things and question everything and to only listen if other people can give solid proof backed by facts and scientific evidence along with legit sources and the data they have.
    I don't and can't believe something that is based off of a conversation.

  • @JoshuaHillmanatorHillman
    @JoshuaHillmanatorHillman Před 3 lety +159

    It can be hare to realise your in an echo chamber if your used to the echoes. Many people won't realise their parroting other people's arguments until they finally meet someone who says no

    • @Supvia
      @Supvia Před 3 lety +2

      Yes. I don’t like right echo chambers, but left echo chambers can be terrible as well, I’ve been in both... 😬🙈 I have no idea in which echo chamber I am now...

    • @Youboremenow
      @Youboremenow Před 3 lety +4

      @AllGuts NoGlory for me it's the right that's more scary. The left echo Chambers a typically limited to the college kids and social media types. Whereas the right ones are actually influencing policy. Weren't there like 3 or so q anon people that got voted In let alone all the people who believe trump won the election.

    • @Youboremenow
      @Youboremenow Před 3 lety +3

      @AllGuts NoGlory trans people got voted in.. To do what. To serve their community while being trans? You don't see the difference between that and electing people who believe in q anon. Oh which reminds me one of the qanon guys got caught with possession of the porn he was advocating against. Not to mention most charities that focus on kids disavow qanon and sey they are doing more harm than good to what they purportedly care about. But yes a trans politician is equivalent to those people.
      Hmm trump the separate kids at the border guy. The one who has never had any compunction about jumping from point to point if it meant he came ahead did something self serving? Colour me shocked.
      Not gonna engage in the immigration debate. If you want there are plenty of pros and cons that can be discussed rationally. Nothing to do with the echo Chambers unless you wanna reach.
      Damn I mean that's your take away? As long as they look like you, you don't care where they come from but if they look different they don't belong? Thanks for unmasking yourself took only a single comment.

    • @diablo.the.cheater
      @diablo.the.cheater Před 3 lety

      I know of only one echo chamber that is myself, for i still have to encounter someone with the same ideology as me who belives that a utopian ai powered robo-communist global state that micromanages each aspect of each individual lives with the machines being both masters and slaves to humanity run the goverment automatically to maximize happines and human life without a will of their own, eventually the robo comunist government would develop FTL space travel and conquer all the universe for us humans while we relax seeing how all other species in the universe get enslaved.
      Basically, i want the means of production to own themselves, to own us, to run the government, and to serve us with a space-imperialist agenda.

  • @alexismunoz8852
    @alexismunoz8852 Před 3 lety +134

    wow, didn’t think this would come from you, but it’s neat to see how your mindset changed over the years. great video, lighting beautiful as usual

  • @JannPoo
    @JannPoo Před 2 lety +19

    What disheartens me even more about that episode with your brother is not the complete irrational conspiracy theory, but the fact that at this point people can't enjoy a piece of art for what it is, they need to check the bio of whoever produced that art and only accept it if they fall under the same political spectrum as them, even if the product itself has absolutely no political message.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Před 2 lety

      Well, if I did truly believe something like that I think it's not such a stretch to not enjoy their are they make anymore.

  • @GCVolt
    @GCVolt Před 3 lety +17

    I’m not even American but my dad is just: this.

    • @animejesus8940
      @animejesus8940 Před 2 lety +1

      i’m not American either and my brother is exactly like this too :/

    • @GCVolt
      @GCVolt Před 2 lety

      I can never understand why my dad is so interested with American politics. He doesn’t know what the parties of our country stand for, but he believes every single alt right conspiracy theory people tell him.

  • @hederahelix4600
    @hederahelix4600 Před 3 lety +48

    Wow! I have so much respect for you for changing and allowing change. For listening to others and being open enough to not dismiss ideas that went contrary to what you were comfortable with. This was a surprising and very important video. Thanks for that!

  • @montyollie
    @montyollie Před 3 lety +119

    There is a documentary called "The Brainwashing of my Dad" about an otherwise Kennedy lovin' democrat who listened to too much talk radio and got lost in the Alt Right sinkhole. Worth a watch.

    • @montyollie
      @montyollie Před 3 lety

      @photag216 Not sure... you will have to google.

    • @tomservo75
      @tomservo75 Před 3 lety +5

      Why do you assume that brainwashing ONLY happens on the right? This video, and the comments, seem to imply that the truly enlightened are on the left, once they get away from the right wing bubble. If you don't realize that just as easily you can have a Republican parent listen to "too much" NPR be brainwashed toward the left, then you're not as tolerant or open minded as you think.

    • @ThatOneGuy0006
      @ThatOneGuy0006 Před 3 lety +16

      @@tomservo75 You sound defensive.

    • @tomservo75
      @tomservo75 Před 3 lety

      @@ThatOneGuy0006 Whatever.

    • @kilgoretrout3966
      @kilgoretrout3966 Před 3 lety

      Cults, by their very nature are quite compelling, especially for those looking to belong, wish they were more educated, and assorted barriers of entry to the life they wish they had...i have a secret knowledge idea...Read books, particularly Histories and Biographies. Following such a despotic, Cult of Personality fool will get one nowhere. Once they get from one what they want, one are used up spent jet-trash to them.

  • @jessajuly5513
    @jessajuly5513 Před 2 lety +7

    “I know things other people don’t /I am the smart one/ I am the woke one/this is me/ everyone else is wrong” you were spitting bars there son lol straight 🔥 somebody put a beat on that please

  • @ttintagel
    @ttintagel Před rokem +2

    As a person coming from the rural U.S., I identify with this so much. The bubble is real.

  • @A_Oda27
    @A_Oda27 Před 3 lety +91

    "Truck Driver"
    I immediately yelled out Rush Limbaugh. Disappointed, but not surprised.

  • @zahrasaid7137
    @zahrasaid7137 Před 3 lety +103

    Evan being the ‘I’m not like other girls’ 😂😂

  • @jananias2985
    @jananias2985 Před 3 lety +5

    I’m a leftist, and my family are all solid right - far right it’s scary. They get all their “news” from whatsapp and facebook - often with photoshopped images and obviously fake videos (sometimes taken from films lmaoo). I can’t talk politics at home, because whenever I say “These policies are terrible for the working class” they go “what did Congress do? Why are you always attacking the BJP?” I AM 19. I WASN’T EVEN OLD ENOUGH TO MAKE OPINIONS WHEN CONGRESS HAD GOVERNMENT. JESUS CHRIST. (I’ve given up on talking to my family about their xenophobia, Islamophobia and casteist veiws, it leaves me mentally drained.)

  • @sierrarose8727
    @sierrarose8727 Před 3 lety

    The way you keep the first bit of audio from the next clip onto the end of the last one is so soothing and nice to watch

  • @honeyw6036
    @honeyw6036 Před 3 lety +63

    I love how it looks like the moon is staring in your window

  • @HillierSmith
    @HillierSmith Před 3 lety +55

    The irony of reality is that everyone has a different perception of it.

  • @xeniebaby
    @xeniebaby Před 3 lety +5

    I went through a very similar experience. Thank you for talking about this

  • @robertpearce-bailey5576
    @robertpearce-bailey5576 Před 3 lety +2

    Good for you man, personal growth can be hard and so many won't even engage with people who think differently. Great video

  • @sarahwood991
    @sarahwood991 Před 3 lety +35

    I cannot stress this enough : Speak to people who are different to you, there is no limit to what you will learn and how much more kind and empathetic you can become.

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Před 3 lety +2

      About 40 percent of the US population associate "different" with evil and "sin" because if you're not different, "You're not doing anything we disagree with now".

    • @Ray03595
      @Ray03595 Před 3 lety +6

      I'd like to agree, but many "different" people are just people who waste your time. The chances of you getting through to somebody who genuinely believes Obama is hiding a planet from us by creating more clouds is close to zero. I have nothing to learn from this person. And all I can do is hope they eventually come back to reality.

    • @moonshade3730
      @moonshade3730 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Ray03595 but after a while of talking with them you will notice that it was never about logic and that the origin of the belief lies somewhere completely else, that your entire approach to it was ineffective because it never touched the matter and therefore you learned something about what people lead into this way of thinking and how to actually go about it...but that will only happen if you go into the conversation trying to understand before you are trying to convince. Otherwise it will be a waste of time, because you never intended to have a conversation but only intended to be the smarter one, trying to show someone whilst the other person is trying to be the smarter one trying to show you something...neither of both sides have actually been doing what OP (as I assume, can’t look into their head) tried to get through by saying you need to speak to people in order to learn and raise their empathy (and general understanding of how people actually work) but instead only talked to over-talk the other.

    • @ltraina3353
      @ltraina3353 Před 3 lety +3

      As a bartender (pre-pandemic), I completely agree with you. I was always super interested in other cultures and foreign languages since I was about 5 or 6, and my parents raised me to treat others how I would like to be treated, so I had a pretty solid base. But I have to say that my bartending career REALLY emphasized the values of interpersonal relations. It’s actually my favorite part of the job, getting to talk to people from all walks of life. Different backgrounds, races, faiths, jobs, outlooks, etc. And I’ve worked everywhere from dive bars, resort hotel, restaurant, club, most recently an airport. You can’t believe all the amazing conversations I’ve had! Of course, MANY times I don’t agree about something, or anything, but because I’m on the job, it behooves me to keep things pleasant and friendly. It taught me that I can get along with just about anybody, even when I don’t like them, for the most part. I just have to find the thing I do like, and relate on that level. It also taught me that it’s possible to dislike someone, but still interact in a civil way, or even get along.
      I like your comment bc it reminds us that everybody has a story!

  • @edenoforion
    @edenoforion Před 3 lety +167

    As a small child I remember picking up on the fact that mom would lock the door when in a “bad neighborhood” because it was “dangerous” as if a black person would attempt to snatch us from a moving vehicle 🙄. I remember being at the park at five years old and a kind black girl my age was trying to play with me and I was genuinely scared. Mom and I have come a long way. My older sister (born from my mother) is half black. It is not impossible to be racist with a black child and with a black man. We have all grown very much growing up. We are all very much not republican and very much anti-racist. But yes as a child my own beliefs and opinions were formed off of my parent and grandparents beliefs and opinions. Because as a child you do not question what authority figures may say because they’re always right. Right?

    • @Patrick-sz7uk
      @Patrick-sz7uk Před 3 lety +17

      Shouldent you always lock the door?

    • @DavidHenderson1
      @DavidHenderson1 Před 3 lety +28

      @@Patrick-sz7uk A few weeks ago, a sketchy white lady tried to open the door of the car in front of me at a red light. And when she found out that door was locked, she moved on to my car. So, yes, lock your car doors no matter where you are, cuz anyone at any time could go neurotic. 😬

    • @seanhoare7639
      @seanhoare7639 Před 3 lety +7

      Because as a child you do not question what authority figures may say because they’re always right. Right?
      And that is why religion still exists to this day...

    • @forwhy8723
      @forwhy8723 Před 3 lety +13

      Why do so many racist white people have biracial children? It's disgusting. The poor girl has to grow up knowing her own mother was a racist. Absolutely disturbing.

    • @eugenelubbock5478
      @eugenelubbock5478 Před 3 lety +1

      @@seanhoare7639 so true

  • @Shaydoereme
    @Shaydoereme Před 2 lety +1

    First time ever watching your videos and 16secs in i wanted to subscribe. Just due to the speed, and light comedic tones in the first few sentences.

  • @zqxzqxzqx1
    @zqxzqxzqx1 Před 2 lety

    You put it brilliantly, and I was entertained. Bravo!

  • @bonniehosey2002
    @bonniehosey2002 Před 3 lety +115

    The same thing happens in the UK with tabloids and grandparents, then it all kicks of at Christmas

    • @shanehughes3511
      @shanehughes3511 Před 3 lety +10

      Yeah, its certainly a lot less an issue this side the Atlantic though. Its not as extreme.
      Here in ireland tabloids are the problem too but they don't have even a fraction of the power the right wing media has in the US

    • @Aithis.
      @Aithis. Před 3 lety +19

      @@shanehughes3511 it’s crazy because here in Ireland if you’re one of those conspiracy right wingers you probably didn’t get that from some Irish news or tabloid really but probably got it just from listening to American alt right commentators and American news and media which shows how powerful the US media is when they’re hundreds of miles away

    • @valentinafangirling
      @valentinafangirling Před 3 lety +17

      Have to say extreme-right wing cults are sort of growing everywhere globally. Which is extremely depressing. I do think the US having a president that encouraged it allowed it to grow EVERYWHERE. But for me what has been scary has been sort of realizing that those cult like conspiracies are not only everywhere, but they have *been* around for ages. Is just now that hate groups feel strong enough to be super loud and proud of it publicly. But they’ve been there.

    • @JRRossi101
      @JRRossi101 Před 3 lety +3

      @@shanehughes3511Bud the far right in the US is very very bad, however there are also issues on the left as well. Insular bubbles with increasingly extreme positions are a problem for both sides limiting either sides ability to unite and understand one another. Eliminating critical thinking, external sources of new information and accountability. All elements of the media, social media and our selves on that and this side of the pond are to blame for that.
      Apologies, rant over 😂.

    • @mikelitorous5570
      @mikelitorous5570 Před 3 lety +1

      Its weird cos my granda believes everything in the paper but he’s actually educated on a lot of stuff but he’ll still believe any old shite

  • @amyburcher863
    @amyburcher863 Před 3 lety +107

    So, this has made me think a bit. I'm from the UK- so this will all be UK politics based. I've had two really close friends who've been properly conservative (I've also had the same core friend group for like 5 years and most of them are politically apathetic the rest of them are left leaning- like I am) I enjoy political debate and argument and so I've been happy to talk and chat with them. One of them had come from a all boys school, was a member of the conservatives and used to canvas for them. They came to our mixed sixth form, in a more diverse area, where several of the students including close friends were out. We used to have heated political debates and some of them got quite heated. But over the time that we were friends his opinions started changing. Jokes he used to think were funny just became awkward and he stopped making them. I'm not so close any more with uni and life- but when I saw them just after the election they hadn't voted conservative, they'd voted lib dem. They were never going to be fully left wing, but had changed their mind about several things.
    The other person I was close with who was a conservative I met at uni. We also had a lot of political conversations often they'd bring up various vague sources and if I asked for more detail they'd say they didn't have them to hand. Fair enough. If I bought up a source they wouldn't believe it was real until I bought it up on my phone. I'd send him a link but they said they couldn't be bothered and that I was nagging. Having studied politics at school sometimes I'd bring up political theory and they'd say it wasn't relevant because it only mattered what the public thought. I'd say that doesn't make it true but they'd refuse to listen. The clinching points in that friendship were two things. When we had a debate and got to the nitty gritty of a point and they told me to my face- Human lives don't have intrinsic value. Nothing has value. You only value people's lives because you think you have to. I'm happy for people to die if it makes my life easier.
    That was such a shift in value system to me. To think Human lives are worthless.
    The other clinching point is when we argued again and they'd often say things and I'd rephrase them slightly and they'd say 'That's not what I said' - but also never clarify. Again and again and again.
    This person I stopped being friends with- for other behaviour too, but partly because I realised that they''d never listen to me and refused to ever challenge themselves. So yes, please do have open and candid conversations with people- especially if you disagree. I've changed my opinions about certain things through being challenged by friends. But also don't put your time and emotions into talking to someone who refuses to respect you, because at the end of the day they aren't really your friend. (sorry for the rant)

    • @mynamejeff3545
      @mynamejeff3545 Před 3 lety +32

      Oh lord, the fact right wingers don't value human life hits close to home. I literally can't wrap my head around it. I once point-blank asked my brother "Don't you think it's unfair that some people are condemned to a life of poverty just because the conditions of their birth, and that homeless people freeze to death on the streets of the richest countries on earth?"
      He literally shrugged, and said "It's not my fault they're homeless". It's fucking sociopathic.

    • @ladykat637
      @ladykat637 Před 3 lety +20

      @@elee522 "we are all here due to survival of the fittest" well, and collaboration in your group species. It is funny how people always forget collaboration. It is essential for a species to survive. If it is only survival of the fittest, the flaw in this logic is quite basic and then there were none. Nature is competitive and collaborative.

    • @ghostofjohnandre9136
      @ghostofjohnandre9136 Před 3 lety +1

      The problem with government in general is that it is a necessary evil. Some people feel one side is better at playing that role. Sadly opinions like anti-science anti-global warming are not mainstream views but that is what is spread about the right in mass media. But on the other hand we are also told that the left are a bunch of whining group of lazy adults who never surpassed adolescence and expect everything handed to them on a plate. It’s crazy that just because you prefer one group of people over another that you are seen as an enemy and do not have any intellect or reasoning. Just yesterday I, a right wing leaning Libertarian (I support the conservatives because I support about 20% more of their policies compared to Labour but only 15% more than the Lib Dems) and I happen to enjoy watching Ben Shapiro and Tucker Carlson for a laugh, to my ‘friends’ or to be more correct people I thought were open minded enough to accept a difference of opinion so was friends with them, to my friends I then embody everything wrong in the world and support everything that those people say. Just yesterday we were discussing university, one of these students said she wanted to be a teacher so that she could teach kids not to be like me, so they don’t like capitalism or anything right of the aisle. I’m not saying that the conservatives have the solution to everything but I think they are slightly better than their opposition with the task of being a necessary evil. However by having this opinion as oppose to their opinion I am somehow the scum of the earth. Tolerance only works if it goes both ways.

    • @Lily-ni5po
      @Lily-ni5po Před 2 lety +8

      @@elee522 if you haven't drank up a litre of bleach by now to decrease your carbon footprint for the good of the survival of this planet, then you probably value your own life. Thus, you now have to justify why YOUR life has inherent value, while others' do not. Failing that, you must accept that all life has the same value, and if you're not willing to take your own, you cannot justify taking another's.

    • @jungkooks_microwavephobia
      @jungkooks_microwavephobia Před 2 lety +1

      @@elee522 Well you certainly aren’t one of fittest. “Fit” doesn’t just include physical strength or how much you possess it just means how well adapted you are to your environment in order to survive. One of the most essential ways our species has evolved to reign our planet the way it does today is though is improved social intelligence which some people and maybe even you don’t possess, the same people some have wisdom teeth and some don’t, so with that being said fuck your entire gene pool💕💕

  • @grcarie
    @grcarie Před 2 lety +7

    After 2016, I changed my voter's registration to "independent - no affiliation"

    • @jjescorpiso21
      @jjescorpiso21 Před 2 lety

      Wait, you have to register your affiliation??????

  • @wolf1066
    @wolf1066 Před rokem +2

    "Where's my bloody blood!" I'm dying, here.

  • @mia-sh2lg
    @mia-sh2lg Před 3 lety +93

    the lighting looks stunning btw :)

    • @evan
      @evan  Před 3 lety +20

      Thank :)

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 Před 3 lety +14

      But the little light people!!

  • @pianobooks42
    @pianobooks42 Před 3 lety +215

    I’ve been actively answering questions (no matter how rude) about my disabilities and sexuality for my entire life, and I’m so tired. I’m only 22, but I’m so tired. Yeah sometimes I open eyes. But most of the time I get threatened, ridiculed, and scared. I want to raise awareness and help the next generation so they don’t have to do this as much. But honestly, I’m struggling to keep up with myself. I’m tired of fearing for my and my loved one’s safety. My wish for this world before I die is for politics and human rights to finally be seen as separate things. I just want the freedom that my republican parents promised me as a child. I want the home that America promised me.
    If you’re a republican reading this, remember that the far right ideals against lgbt people, disabled people, and people of color aren’t just affecting your jobs or taxes. Its killing people. Every day. I’m tired of being so scared. And I’m tired of watching my loved ones die. Please stop the cycle. You can be republican. I don’t care if you tax me to death or make petty China take their pandas back or whatever. I just want to be free.

    • @markjacobs1086
      @markjacobs1086 Před 3 lety +29

      Dang, that's rough. As someone with a physical disability I'm just glad I live in a country with a way better political system that caters to the majority of voters without being either extreme end (government is always somewhere around the middle).
      Hopefully everyone can some day enjoy a political system that pursues a healthy living environment for the majority (both left & right wing parties).

    • @maxhughes7810
      @maxhughes7810 Před 3 lety +24

      I’m republican, and I’m sorry you have to go through that. I just want you to know we hate the people on the alt right just as much as the left does.

    • @imani7979
      @imani7979 Před 2 lety +19

      @@hellohello-tp4mb what tf is wrong with you?

    • @vickymc9695
      @vickymc9695 Před 2 lety +3

      @@benjaminramsey498 the Chinese government uses loans of Pandas to zoos around the world, to try and influence governments to pass pro Chinese policies. Does it work, not even vaguely. Is this the reason Edinburgh zoo lost a successful breeding program, yes. XD

    • @ea7109
      @ea7109 Před 2 lety +8

      @@maxhughes7810 Well, it's nice to hear that but many of your counterparts chose NOT to openly debate with the more right-wing members of your party, thereby implictly agreeing with the stuff they spew...

  • @siranoush6999
    @siranoush6999 Před 2 lety +2

    This is a wonderful and insightful piece. I subscribed because of this video.

  • @Shadow75
    @Shadow75 Před 3 lety +9

    Growing up in Texas, this was point for point exactly what my experience was like growing up. It wasn't until my mid-twenties that I finally had enough varied life experiences that I finally realized how closed minded i had been for all of those years.

  • @runarandersen878
    @runarandersen878 Před 3 lety +41

    I think it was a retired Norwegian professor who said in his wisdom: Some people I have been very disagreeing with, have been right. I think that is a very good and deep wisdom and acknowledgment.

  • @Matty442
    @Matty442 Před 3 lety +141

    You've hooked me in lol spill the beans

    • @evan
      @evan  Před 3 lety +48

      here we go

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 Před 3 lety +7

      But not on the toast, never on the toast.

    • @sunnybunny6275
      @sunnybunny6275 Před 3 lety +16

      @@lucie4185 always on the toast

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 Před 3 lety +6

      @@sunnybunny6275 well maybe with some melted cheese.

    • @Tami_Kat
      @Tami_Kat Před 3 lety +3

      @@lucie4185 I love a good toasty with beans and melted cheese inside 😋

  • @terryhayward7905
    @terryhayward7905 Před rokem

    I have watched quite a few of your videos, and I think that you do a great job at comedy. BUT, this is the first time that I have heard you talk seriously, and you just went up 10,000 points for your clarity of thought.
    Great video.

  • @alexcb016
    @alexcb016 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks my man! You touched on something super important. The most common thread I have noticed with these conspiracy theorists is that they believe they have some exclusive knowledge.
    I am curious if this is more prevalent in certain areas do to the population homogeneity and the echo chamber effect. It may also attract certain people who may have struggled with things like science or math. They do not have the background knowledge to question the claims of conspiracy theories and are also (subconsciously) attracted to the lack of critical reasoning they contain.
    Conspiracy theories present a situation that concurs with their existing beliefs and give a narrative explanation to certain occurrences that the person doesn’t inherently understand.

  • @wesjales5578
    @wesjales5578 Před 3 lety +144

    I used to be a Republican too, but then I graduated high school.

    • @colmlooney5843
      @colmlooney5843 Před 2 lety +23

      I used to be a Conservative for like 3 years, then I turned 4

    • @wesjales5578
      @wesjales5578 Před 2 lety +9

      @@colmlooney5843 I used to be a republican, but then I got hired.

    • @colmlooney5843
      @colmlooney5843 Před 2 lety +7

      @@wesjales5578 I used to be a Republican but then the church burned down

    • @dyslexicbatnam1350
      @dyslexicbatnam1350 Před 2 lety +3

      Just proves how defective college is

    • @polari7658
      @polari7658 Před 2 lety +3

      I used to be a conservative, but then Santa stopped coming to town.

  • @j.a.mccready9273
    @j.a.mccready9273 Před 3 lety +30

    I assume that admitting to once being Republican is the equivalent of a Scotsman admitting they voted Tory? 😁😂🤣

    • @George-bb9kr
      @George-bb9kr Před 3 lety +3

      I don’t get that cuz the Tory party isn’t as right wing as the Republican Party. Biden would be a Tory if he lived here.

    • @benmaddox5777
      @benmaddox5777 Před 3 lety +1

      @@George-bb9kr Well Biden is actually pretty right wing even in America. Boris Johnson is similar to Biden on some things but more right/left wing on other things so it’s hard to compare. But yes, the UK is generally more left so people like Trump seem very right wing.

  • @patchso
    @patchso Před 2 lety +3

    This is the best of your videos I've ever seen. You make some excellent points about how people become convinced of ideas.
    I would say that there will always be those who benefit from the spread of misinformation and that certain people, in certain circumstances, are more susceptible to being conned. Calling someone 'stupid' is insulting and counter productive. Calling someone 'gullible' can sometimes be a reasonable observation to make.

  • @tiabarnard8330
    @tiabarnard8330 Před 3 lety

    My mother had that same seat belt conversation with me. Thanks for sharing that.

  • @ericdouglas87
    @ericdouglas87 Před 3 lety +9

    Thanks for the video. I was raised in a very right-wing religious family in the midwestern U.S. Church three times a week, no movies, no dances, nonchristian music wasn't allowed. As a young adult, I was a republican. Like you said experiencing life and talking with others changed me. Going out seeing the world for myself scared the crap out of me. The fear the church puts into many of these people so ingrained it is hard to escape. I would see everything in the world as something assaulting the good Christian morals blah blah blah.
    However, it became impossible to reconcile what I had been old about certain people and how those "out to get me, America and God" people actually treated me. More and more I found these vilified groups were just everyday people trying to make the best for themselves and their families. I agree with you that this situation is much worse than we see on the news. It saddens me to see so many of my friends go down this dark path I grew up on.
    The left seems to expect people to be of perfect political lineage and often will have purest tendencies like I experienced when I was on the right. Although having been on both sides I think the right by far acts out on more extremist behaviors and today are far a greater threat to American freedoms than the left I do see how the left could become just a purest. Critical thinking is needed more than ever.

  • @gretchenhefner3225
    @gretchenhefner3225 Před 3 lety +14

    the best piece of advice i've ever gotten came from my college chemistry teacher. when you look at something, ask yourself, "does this make sense?" i tell ppl that all the time and they're all probably sick of me, but i will continue to do so until ppl learn to use their common sense again. lol

  • @Gobbledi_Gook
    @Gobbledi_Gook Před 2 lety +1

    Omg haha I was like "how do I know this guy??". A few years ago I was deep into learning German and I watched your Duolingo videos! Cool to see you again 😁

  • @baileymiller1644
    @baileymiller1644 Před 3 lety +4

    11:00 Thats what politics is supposed to do, you’re a liberal because it makes you feel like you have a sort of moral or intellectual high ground, same way it did when you had republican belief, like you said you develop your thoughts from those around you so living in Europe, your more exposed to liberal ideology reinforcing your own biases same way it was when you were living with your parents...