History of the Blue Pill: Disneyland
Published 03/11/16 by Burritohunter [1 Comments]


Summary:

Not many on TRP seem very knowledgeable of the historical shift that allowed the Blue Pill narrative to become a mainstream phenomenon, taking over the media and entertainment industry. However, this shift in public perception has been well documented by historians. In this post I will analyze a scholarly article written by Gary Cross, published in the Journal of Social History, titled Crowds and Leisure: Thinking Comparatively Across the 20th Century.

Body:

To start, one of the most useful terms that Gary Cross uses to describe modern amusement parks is the term “industrial saturnalia,” a reference to worship of the old Roman god Saturn. He defines this term as a modern return to saturnalian customs: “food and drink in excess, social inversion, mockery, and a fascination with the supernatural and abnormal that provided psychological release for people who daily endured the rigors of scarcity, tedium, and the humiliation of authority.”

The important phrase to note in this definition is social inversion. The Blue Pill indoctrination system had its beta release in theme parks such as Disneyland. Disney pioneered many ways of playing on people’s emotions in order to draw in a larger crowd. These tactics will later be utilized by governments in what we now know as Blue Pill.

According to Cross, large leisurely crowds during the 1950s were seen as dirty, loud, and above all lower class. Disney’s main goal was to create a “cleaning up” of the playful crowd, in order to once more popularize large, crowded theme parks. In order to do this, Disney’s main priority was obviously to physically clean up his park, and to remove much of the seemingly “dirty” and “dangerous” attractions presented in other amusement parks, such as freaks, barkers and thrill rides.

However the second strategy employed by Disney is the key here. Disneyland allowed the “emotional release” of fantasy and abandon, while also tempering it with “childish romance and science fiction fantasy.” Sound familiar?

Cross goes on to explain that Disney “not only cleaned up the pleasure site, but reconstituted the playful crowd by inviting its individual members to focus on… the wondrous innocence of their children.” Disneyland represented a place where adults could throw off their social responsibilities, and revel in their own “inner child,” a phrase that was practically coined by Disney and his cartoons. Through these marketing techniques, “Americans learned especially well how to associate emotions and satisfactions with the stories and characters of the mass media and especially of Disney.

As /u/Neoreactionsafe tends to point out, Disney represents a major turning point in modern culture. Many historians are inclined to agree with him. Disneyland creates a fantastical place where adults can throw off their responsibility and become children again, reveling in the carefree innocence of their youth. The link to Blue Pill indoctrination techniques should not be too hard to make, since many TRP posts explicitly detail how even adult women will commonly act like children. This shrugging off of responsibility leads to the modern beta male as well, because the beta was promised a fantastic, wonderful life through the media, and when this life does not magically appear, the beta simply lashes out like a child, instead of taking responsibility for his happiness like an adult should.

Lessons Learned:

The Blue Pill is not a new phenomenon, and was pioneered by the marketing techniques used for Disneyland.

Disney was one of the pioneers of associated emotions and satisfaction with his own entertainment programs.

The Blue Pill doctrine works through a return to old saturnalian customs, primarily social inversion, or turning an adult back into a child.

[1 Comments]
How to Write Like a Man: Using Active Voice in Writing
Published 03/06/16 by Burritohunter [1 Comments]

Summary

While many comments on TRP decry poor writing skills, I have seen very few posts that go over actual techniques to help improve writing. This post will explain a very common technique in writing: passive versus active voice.

Body

Utilizing active voice in writing immensely improves clarity and readability of one’s thoughts. Used primarily for non-scientific writing, active voice tends to make writing easier to understand, and lowers the amount of words necessary to relate a point. The core principle at work in active writing relates back to the subject of a sentence. In active voice, the subject of the sentence will perform the action, whereas in passive voice, the subject of the sentence receives the action.

For example, here are a couple sentences that relate the same information in both passive and active voice.

Passive voice:

It is believed by the candidate that a ceiling must be placed on the budget by Congress.

Active voice:

The candidate believes that Congress must place a ceiling on the budget.

Passive voice:

The man was bitten by the dog.

Active voice:

The dog bit the man.

The simplest and most straightforward use of active voice begins with the removal, or at least the purposeful use, of being verbs. Quite simply, one can define a being verb as any variation on the verb “to be.” Notice the passive sentences above use the verbs “is,” “be” and “was,” whereas the active sentence removes these verbs. These verbs and phrases invoke passive voice by distancing the subject from the action in the sentence. Here’s a short list of common “being verbs”:

Has been

Will be

Been

Being

Be

Are

Were

Is

Am

Was

Including these words in writing will not always detract from the writing, however in order to write actively, one must choose specifically when to include passive voice in a sentence, and avoid the trap of relying on being verbs to relate a point. There are many good reasons to use passive voice in a sentence, however the majority of writers tend to rely on passive voice to make a point, instead of coherently deciding when and where to use passive voice versus active voice in their writing. For a more in-depth guide on changing passive sentences to active sentences, here’s a link from Towson University on the subject:https://webapps.towson.edu/ows/activepass.htm

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Lessons Learned:

[1 Comments]