"...Yuon, a term for Vietnamese most consider derogatory" -- despite the
fact:
(1) the term is neutral;
(2) has only been propagandized to be
"racist" during the Vietnamese occupation;
(3) many Cambodian scholars
and leaders have formally responded to its neutral meaning, reminding us
all the distinction between what is "politically correct" and what is
"offensive" (derogatory);
(4) it is the same term Yuon / Yuan that the
Thai have for Vietnamese but it's a non-issue there as it
should be a non-issue anywhere;
(5) only written "most consider
derogatory" a stock phrase in the English-language papers -- mainly
written, all edited by non-Cambodians AFTER OCCUPATION; the use of the
term was never or rarely called out as "derogatory" prior to occupation; and
(6) whereas "most" Cambodians do not consider it derogatory, save the
CPP for obvious reasons and the one or two non-CPP loners because they
want to be politically correct with their foreign friends and
interviewers.
All speak to foreign hubris, particularly this last one
dismissing the bulk of the Cambodian population and giving credence only
to themselves the guests
Seen and heard on Ms. Theary C. Seng's Facebook accounts:
www.facebook.com/theary.c.seng
www.facebook.com/theary.c.seng
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images |
Want to Make a Lie Seem True? Say It Again. And Again. And Again
Wired | 11 February 2017
You only use 10 percent of
your brain. Eating carrots improves your eyesight. Vitamin C cures the
common cold. Crime in the United States is at an all-time high.
None of those things are true.
But the facts don’t actually matter: People repeat them so often that
you believe them. Welcome to the “illusory truth effect,” a glitch in
the human psyche that equates repetition with truth. Marketers and
politicians are masters of manipulating this particular cognitive
bias—which perhaps you have become more familiar with lately.
President Trump is a “great businessman,” he says over and over again. Some evidence
suggests that might not be true. Or look at just this week, when the
president signed three executive orders designed to stop what he
describes—over and over again—as high levels of violence against law
enforcement in America. Sounds important, right? But such crimes are at
their lowest rates in decades, as are most violent crimes in the US. Not exactly, as the president would have it, “American carnage.”
“President Trump intends to build task forces to investigate and stop
national trends that don’t exist,” says Jeffery Robinson, deputy legal
director of the American Civil Liberties Union. He’s right that the
trends aren’t real, of course. But some number of people still believe
it. Every time the president tweets or says something untrue,
fact-checkers race to point out the falsehood—to little effect. A Pew Research poll
last fall found 57 percent of presidential election voters believed
crime across the US had gotten worse since 2008, despite FBI data
showing it had fallen by about 20 percent.
So what’s going on here? “Repetition makes things seem more
plausible,” says Lynn Hasher, a psychologist at the University of
Toronto whose research team first noticed the effect in the 1970s. “And
the effect is likely more powerful when people are tired or distracted
by other information.” So … 2017, basically.
Brain Feels
Remember those “Head On! Apply Directly to the Forehead!” commercials?
That’s the illusory truth effect in action. The ads repeated the phrase
so much so that people found themselves at the drugstore staring at a
glue-stick-like contraption thinking, “Apply directly to MY forehead!”
The question of whether it actually alleviates pain gets smothered by a
combination of tagline bludgeoning and tension headache.
Repetition is what makes fake news work, too, as researchers at Central Washington University pointed out in a study
way back in 2012 before the term was everywhere. It’s also a staple of
political propaganda. It’s why flacks feed politicians and CEOs sound
bites that they can say over and over again. Not to go all Godwin’s Law
on you, but even Adolf Hitler knew about the technique. “Slogans should
be persistently repeated until the very last individual has come to
grasp the idea,” he wrote in Mein Kampf.
The effect works because when people attempt to assess truth they
rely on two things: whether the information jibes with their
understanding, and whether it feels familiar. The first condition is
logical: People compare new information with what they already know to
be true and consider the credibility of both sources. But researchers have found
that familiarity can trump rationality—so much so that hearing over and
over again that a certain fact is wrong can have a paradoxical effect.
It’s so familiar that it starts to feel right.
“When you see the fact for the second time it’s much easier to
process—you read it more quickly, you understand it more fluently,” says
Vanderbilt University psychologist Lisa Fazio. “Our brain interprets
that fluency as a signal for something being true”—Whether it’s true or
not. In other words, rationality can be hard. It takes work. Your busy
brain is often more comfortable running on feeling.
You are busy, too, so let me get back to Trump’s latest executive
orders, which are mostly symbolic. They certify that the government will
do what it can to keep law enforcement officers safe. They contain
vague language that civil rights advocates worry could lead to the
criminalization of protest. But while perhaps unnecessary, the orders
are hardly pointless—they reinforce the idea that America is unsafe,
that law enforcement officers are at risk, that the country needs a
strong “law and order” president. Data be damned.
As with any cognitive bias, the best way not to fall prey to it is to know it exists. If you read something that just feels right, but you don’t know why, take notice. Look into it. Check the data. If that sounds like too much work, well, facts are fun.
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