this post was submitted on 15 Jan 2024
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WWW Opera, Fin Wake Indra Net

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#WWWOpera #FinWakeIndraNet

Finnegans Wake + Indra's Net of Gems and Jewels.

Toronto Canada Professor Marshall McLuhan's 1968 book "War and Peace in the Global Village" teaching in 2024.

Rolling Release, publication started December 16, 2009. Multiple social media platforms and websites!

See also: www.WakeIndra.com
www.IndraJāla.com

Enjoy - RoundSparrow

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"Tower of Babel" is core to Finnegans Wake by James Joyce that was published from 1927 onward. "The Fall" of mankind from the "Tower of Babel" that divides interpretation. How language and media consumption divides people. This article by Megan Garber is very much about "media ecology" that FInnegans Wake is likely the best tool for teaching and understanding.

Megan Garber uses the term "loss", when James Joyce would use the metaphor and term "Fall".

 

You might have come across the articles (“I Lost My Dad to Fox News” / “Lost Someone to Fox News?” / “‘Fox News Brain’: Meet the Families Torn Apart by Toxic Cable News”), or the Reddit threads, or the support groups on Facebook, as people have sought ways to mourn loved ones who are still alive. The discussions consider a loss that Americans don’t have good language for, in part because the loss itself is a matter of language: They describe what it’s like to find yourself suddenly unable to speak with people you’ve known your whole life. They acknowledge how easily a national crisis can become a personal one. At this point, some Americans speak English; others speak Fox.

Political theorists, over the years, have looked for metaphors to describe the effects that Fox—particularly its widely watched opinion shows—has had on American politics and culture. They’ve talked about the network as an “information silo” and “a filter bubble” and an “echo chamber,” as an “alternate reality” constructed of “alternative facts,” as a virus on the body politic, as an organ of the state. The comparisons are all correct. But they don’t quite capture what the elegies for Fox-felled loved ones express so efficiently. Fox, for many of its fans, is an identity shaped by an ever-expanding lexicon: mob, PC police, Russiagate, deep state, MSM, MS-13, socialist agenda, Dems, libs, Benghazi, hordes, hoax, dirty, violent, invasion, open borders, anarchy, liberty, Donald Trump. Fox has two pronouns, you and they, and one tone: indignation. (You are under attack; they are the attackers.) Its grammar is grievance. Its effect is totalizing. Over time, if you watch enough Fox & Friends or The Five or Tucker Carlson or Sean Hannity or Laura Ingraham, you will come to understand, as a matter of synaptic impulse, that immigrants are invading and the mob is coming and the news is lying and Trump alone can fix it.

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