Cognitive
dissonance: writer James Atherton calls it “a psychological phenomenon which
refers to the discomfort felt at a discrepancy between what you already know or
believe, and new information or interpretation. It therefore occurs when there
is a need to accommodate new ideas, and it may be necessary for it develop so
that we become ‘open’ to them.” It’s that queasy feeling that rises often in
your gut online and screams, “I DON’T BELIEVE THAT!”
It’s what happens
“if someone is called upon to learn something that contradicts what they
already think and know -- particularly if they are committed to that prior
knowledge -- they are likely to resist the new learning. Even Carl Rogers
recognized this. Accommodation is more difficult than Assimilation, in Piaget’s
terms,” writes Atherton.
“And --
counter-intuitively, perhaps -- if learning something has been difficult,
uncomfortable, or even humiliating enough, people are less likely to concede that the content of what has been learned is
useless, pointless or valueless. To do so would be to admit that one has been
‘had,’ or ‘conned.’” Folks, could that be anyone you know? Well, give them some
understanding.
It’s what one
brilliant reader wrote to me after reading my Lobotomizing
America article. “The true lobotomizing took place in the populace in their
K-12 schooling. Now, excruciating cognitive dissonance effectively protects all
but the most hardened skeptics from seeing and critically interpreting what our
dear leaders have done and are continuing to do.
”People do not want
to believe the truth. Unfortunately, I believe those of us who want to expose
the truth must have something viable, palpable, and feel-good enough to
substitute for what we try to take away from people: Their false notions of or
preferred ignorance of what is really happening.
”I read all the
alternative news and forums and blogs of those who are digging into the truth
and presenting evidence for the trail of horrendous acts. But it wears me down,
and I've turned negative, reclusive and hopeless. Luckily, I'm really old
so it doesn't matter much . . ."
This woman’s
observations pierced me, so much so that I wrote back to her, “As to your being old, it doesn't much matter. That sounds
like your own cog dis. As far as I can see, your mind works beautifully. So use
it. As the expression goes, what you don't use you loose. We wouldn't want that
to happen. America needs every awakened mind it has, young, middle-aged, old,
or positively ancient.
“FL
Wright did the Guggenheim at 80, lived to 90 to see it almost completed.
Paul Newman at 80 plus is not only a top actor, but runs a huge food
enterprise, which yields the money for summer camps around the world for
kids with fatal diseases. Onwards, my dear, and Further, as Ken Kesey would
say. We need all the cage-shakers we can get. One must fight back or suffer the
depression of the defeated.”
Meeting a Cognitive Dissonant Disaster
Do I
love the people that write in or do I love them? Even this Cognitive Dissonant
dude, the one who wrote in as soon as Online Journal ran my article, “Why Larry
Silverstein can’t get it up.” He said, “Jerry, I just read your editorial/report on the current
and history of the WTC, mostly with mouth open in disgust.” There’s an image
for you.
”First off, let's
just get this out of the way because you are a little vague: do you think 7WTC
was taken down (by US interests) on purpose?” Duh, I didn’t think I was vague.
That’s what I was saying, yeah, yes. Well, “If your answer to that is ‘yes or
‘maybe’ please just stop reading and don't bother responding. I have no
intention of starting a discussion with an insane person. Ok, so you are
presumably sane since you are still reading.” How does he know I’m sane if I’m
still reading? Is he playing
with a full deck?
He then says, “Your
next claim that is absolutely crazy is that the PA wanted to tear down the twin
towers! Please provide some proof of this besides vague claims.” Gee, I thought
I said they couldn’t demolish it because that was against the law. That’s not
vague. They could only dismantle it girder by girder and the cost of that was
prohibitive. To quote me, “Demolishing prohibited by law but doable by an act
of god or godlessness.”
I guessed he missed
it, because he asks: “Do you actually think the PA would want to tear down the
(cash-cow, once they were fully leased) twin towers? Do you actually think a
private developer (Silverstein) would lease them for 99 years if they were such
a burden financially?” Err, duh, he thought it was a great deal at first. He
probably still does. He made $500 million on it. He just can’t get the loot
together to do what he has to do to get it up, the Liberty Tower. Originally,
the PA was just happy to unload WTC on Silverstein. Get it. They gave him a
sweetheart deal: $120 million a month for 99 years. A more apt figure would
have been a billion a month. But then, my write-in, Mr. C D ended with some
poetry meant to be the ultimate diss . . .
”What Color Is the Sky in Your World?”
Oh wow, gee, well,
the color of the sky in my world is a vibrant blue, totally cloudless, like
that morning on 9/11 when the airliners hit the Twin Trade Towers and there
weren’t enough planes to respond because they were tied up in a half dozen
drills and the air traffic controllers didn’t know what was a drill and what
had gone real. In fact, FEMA had conveniently come to town the night before to
play in the “terror hijacking drills.” Mayor Rudy Guiliani stuck his foot in
his mouth and told us.
See, in this
vibrantly blue sky you can clearly see a homegrown apocalypse occurring, even
from the Upper West Side. Actually as my older son, from his rooftop in the
East Village, saw the South Tower go down in seconds, free-falling, exploding
top and bottom. The white smoke caused by explosives looked like a huge Rasta
hair-do. It wasn’t the black jet fuel smoke puffing from the initial plane hit.
Even my aged aunt,
who has trouble with her sight these days, could clearly see each tower go down
in a matter of seconds, as she stared from her sixth floor apartment window on
6th Avenue and Houston Street, looking downtown, straight at them. As they came
down, tears came to her eyes.
Yup, it was a sky
in which my wife who was in Brooklyn could see the second plane turning 180
degrees (nigh impossible for a pilot, but not for a radio-controlled plane) to
slam into the South Tower. She called me as it was happening and gasped on the
phone to put on the TV, that only minutes before some members of the film crew
she was working with had seen the first plane hit the North Tower. Now, their
video was replaying the second hit.
Also, George Bush
told reporters later that he had seen the first hit on TV and thought that was
some lousy pilot, ha ha. That was some gaff, ha ha, because it wasn’t shown on
TV that morning, ha ha. The crews weren’t there yet. He could have seen it in
his secure, closed circuit communications room at the elementary school he was
visiting and listening to pupils reading a book about a pet goat while New York
burned, ha ha. But it wasn’t till the next day that the TV stations got some
footage shot that morning by a French crew making a documentary about the WTC.
They caught the crash by accident. That footage was duplicated and used on the
news, such as it was.
Then, pal, there’s
my friend Jay, who saw it from the 107th floor of the North Tower, from the
restaurant Windows on the World,
where he was a manager. He called his wife to say he was going downstairs to
see if he could help with whatever trouble there was and then he would come
home. That was the last time she and their two kids heard from him. That’s my sky.
I can still clearly
see us sitting at his wake and an oil painting of him on an easel staring back
at us. He was posed in a dark blue suit, white shirt, and reddish tie, a
friendly smile on his mustached face that never moved. Jay was on the PTA with us,
and helped every charity he could, and never said no, even that morning. So
blue, so cloudless, so vibrant, it hurts.
In fact, my vibrant
blue sky that day shed pieces of correspondence, memos, trade notes, letters,
all from the exploding towers, into my cousin’s small garden in Carroll
Gardens, Brooklyn, maybe five miles away. That’s what a blast it was. He walked
home from work, uptown New York that day, over the Brooklyn bridge to his
brownstone to find that effluvia of life. He gathered each holy piece with his
son and put it all in a box and into a closet for safekeeping. It makes him
teary to talk about it.
That’s what color
my sky is, Mr. Cognitive Dissonance. But hey, dude, you got a president to back
you up. He still thinks Iraq is a success. More than 2,300 Americans dead, an
estimated 250,000 Iraqis (citizens and solders) dead. And over a trillion bucks
blown, according to Bob Herbert in the March 23 New York Times, “George Bush’s Trillion-Dollar War.” And then there’s the Kurds and the
Shias going at the Sunnis and visa versa, a civil war. No exit strategy. And
it’s a success. You think Bush has trouble adjusting what he believes to what
is really happening? I do.
Even Brzezinski Is
Bailing
Even Zbigniew
Brzezinski, who wrote of the need for a Pearl Harbor-like incident in his book,
The Grand Chess Board -- an incident that could be used to
militarize America -- is now bailing. That same language and notion appeared on
PNAC's Program for a New American Century) website, envisioning the neocon
march to empire via preemptive war. That same Brzezinski said Wednesday night
on Jim Lehrer’s News Hour it was time
to cut bait and split Iraq. This is also the man who helped organize the
Mujahideen with Osama bin Laden and the CIA to help Jimmy Carter fight Russia
in 1979 when it took our bait and invaded Afghanistan. Am I making sense? Am I
entertaining you? Am I keeping you up? I hope so, dude. I don’t want to loose
you.
Everybody knew we
needed Afghanistan to run those Unocal pipelines south, carrying the oil from up
north in the Caspian Sea region down to Pakistan and India and the Indian Ocean
to China.
Am I making sense?
I know you think I’m nuts. But you didn’t even understand what I wrote about
Larry and the boys and the asbestos-bomb of the WTC.
Money, oil and
power, dude, that’s what it was all about. And 9/11 was just the “Pearl Harbor”
to get the attack on Afghanistan going. Then a simple leap of a lie to get us
into Iraq, the lie that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction, which no one
has found yet, and millions of Americans believe are there, somewhere, under a
mushroom cap (not cloud). Cognitive dissonance on a mass scale.
That’s my sky, Mr.
CD, wherever you are, thinking that CNBC and Sean Hannity and Bill Riley and
all the right-wing fakes are telling you the truth. The truth is that for the
first time a big time publication, New
York Magazine, March 27, pg. 28, is running a multi-page story, “The Ground
Zero Grassy Knoll” by Mark Jacobson, seriously questioning 9/11. Someone may
actually have gone through their processing cycle and given up the dissonance
and perceived some truth. By the way, the Grassy Knoll was in Dealey Plaza
where Kennedy was ambushed and killed, by at least eight gunshots from three
different angles, as seen by a CIA man on the original Zapruder film footage.
September 11 was
also an inside job, Mr. C D, that Bush and Boyz, the Pentagon, DOD, Rumsfeld,
Cheney, Wolfowitz, George Tenet, the Intel agencies, the FBI helped to happen,
squelching warnings left and right. This according to FBI Agent Harry Samit,
supposedly a witness against Moussaoui, but who said he warned his supervisors
more than 70 times that they should look at Moussaoui’s laptop, but nobody did.
They didn’t bungle it by accident. It was The
Plan. They made it happen. They already knew what Moussaoui could tell.
He’s just another patsy.
See, my sky is
clear blue. I can see why they had a whole slew of terror hijacking drills
going on that September 11. So planes were siphoned off to every drill and the air
traffic controllers were confused as to what was what, who was who, when the
first tower was hit and the drill went real. So they have to call for planes
for New York from Otis Air Base in Cape Cod Massachusetts, 150 miles away, and
they arrive too late. Monmouth Air Base in Jersey, 10 miles away, no deal. Read
my article Moussaoui
takes the fall for 9/11 and find out what happened at the Pentagon in DC.
Or call 1-800-294-5250 to order the second edition of Loose
Change right now. How simple and entertaining can I make it for you?
And since we’re
challenging notions, let’s really jog that cognitive dissonance. Flight 93
never crashed in southern Pennsylvania. What they found was a 20-foot wide hole
with a bunch of scrap poured in. Flight 93, which had gone west actually landed
at 10:45 a.m. in Cleveland’s
Hopkins Airport. Its 200 passengers were evacuated within a half-hour to an
empty NASA facility nearby. What happened to them then? Your guess is as good
as mine. Maybe they are in paradise with the poor people from Flight 77 that
never hit the Pentagon. But there’s more.
How about Katrina,
the second 9/11, which was also “allowed” to happen. Bush sits on his duff for
days after he’s notified the storm is number five huge, the levees could go
down. Was it cognitive dissonance? He couldn’t see a category five hurricane
take down a nice ole town like New Orleans? Why can’t he and his associates put
pieces together? Why can’t they act? And if they can’t, why in the hell are
they sitting at the helm of the Ship of State. Why aren’t they thrown in the
brig in irons? Answer me, Mr. C D. I think you’re a little bonzo for believing
all this crap.
What Color Is Your Sky? Vanilla?
Is it a Vanilla Sky like that Tom Cruz movie, a
romantic action fantasy? Where the handsome guy gets all the babes in some
totally implausible plot as implausible as 9/11’s script would seem to the
ignorant, the uninterested, the disengaged, the inbred cognitive dissonants.
Nor is this adult cognitive
dissonance limited to your average
American-I-don’t-know-anything-about-politics. Catch this.
“Less than a week
after he denounced the ‘wayward path’ of deficit spending to a gathering of
2,000 Republican Party stalwarts, Bill Frist,” according to the March 21 New York Times editorial Deficit
Demagogues, “the Senate majority leader and would-be president, was busy
presiding over business as usual in the Senate . . ." where “51 Republican
Senators and one Democrat approved a $2.8 trillion budget for 2007. . . . after
Frist and 51 other Republicans voted to raise the nation’s debt limit for the
fourth time in five years -- this time by $781 billion, to nearly $9 trillion.
All of that increase will be needed to pay for earlier tax cuts and spending
increases, and, if the Republicans get their way on taxes, to pay for future
deficit-financed tax cuts.” The shadows of 1929 lengthen over our endless blue
sky.
Is this Congress’ cognitive
dissonance? Maybe. Maybe just your ordinary garden-variety dumb crooks, don’t
give a rat’s ass crooks, every single one of them. At least Mr. Vanilla Sky who
wrote to me revealed his total innocent ignorance. These guys know better, but
they don’t care. Until we hit the Wall, the Great D of 2008.
As to their
constituency, the Republican voters, the grand old party and its new found
Conservative Christians who want to teach Unintelligent Design and wait for the
Rapture to sweep them up from all this hellfire, here is cognitive dissonance
sine qua non, the real thing, full blown, terminal. They ain’t a letting go of
one piece of crap that’s been told or taught to them by Pat Robertson, George HW
Bush, Billy Graham, The Easter Bunny, The Spoon-Benders, The War Lords, The
KKK, The Reconstructionists, CFR and so on. No, sir/ma'am, hold on to that
crap, till you bust.
So, there it is,
lovers of truth. The Comedia as Dante
would call it, the grand comedy of 21st century living. You’re gonna die
laughing. Before that happens, try to get over your cognitive dissonance soon.
Work on it. See somebody, shrink, reverend, guru, gas station attendant,
bartender, masseuse, book club, whoever works for you. 'Cause, sorry to say,
the joke’s on you. Oops, I mean us! I have to stop thinking it’s only about
them.
Jerry Mazza is a
freelance writer living in New York. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net.