shii410
I'm not black I'm O. J.
★★★★★
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2020
- Posts
- 17,636
I'm not referring to soy reddit talk, I mean the type of doublethink speech that every faceless corporation or bureaucratic organization uses. ex:
"Our school leadership program prepares our students for a culture of excellence and self sufficiency..."
"Our HR Department takes a hands-on approach to resolution of workplace incidents..."
"The McDonald's corporation has been dedicated to serving our communities and providing the highest standard of quality for over 60 years..."
to an average person these just sound like nice formal words without any real deeper meaning. but when you're constantly abused by your "superiors" in these environments, you realize that all of these flowery words are a facade, put up to appease society's moral standards without conforming to them, via signaling virtue on a purely superficial level. in reality all of these organizations are run by faceless, sociopathic, materialistic bugmen who are obsessed with having power and authority over you. spouting idealism isn't actually a part of their profession, but convincing the unwashed masses of their moral correctness is
I wouldn't care as much if you weren't required to be fluent in this kind of doublethink to excel academically or financially. ex: college applications care about shit like your "personal narrative" almost as much as they do about your academic work. a high school Chad who spent his teen years partying, playing sports, doing extracurriculars and forming a wide network of social contacts has a massive advantage over a shut-in socially awkward currycel who spent his teens studying and getting all A's. the Chad just has so much more to show for himself.
so when you're applying to a job or university, you can't just show them the work you've done and your experience, you need to be like "I demonstrated moral excellence by..." "I demonstrated my leadership capability when I went to Europe with daddy's money and..." etc. it's really just a sophisticated form of narcissistically exaggerating your own achievements. it has unfortunately become the academic lingua franca because sociopathic authority figures and hysterical females love that kind of doublethink. saying something that you don't actually mean, in order to give off an appearance of conformity (to moral standards that you don't actually hold yourself to) is practically their natural manner of speaking
"Our school leadership program prepares our students for a culture of excellence and self sufficiency..."
"Our HR Department takes a hands-on approach to resolution of workplace incidents..."
"The McDonald's corporation has been dedicated to serving our communities and providing the highest standard of quality for over 60 years..."
to an average person these just sound like nice formal words without any real deeper meaning. but when you're constantly abused by your "superiors" in these environments, you realize that all of these flowery words are a facade, put up to appease society's moral standards without conforming to them, via signaling virtue on a purely superficial level. in reality all of these organizations are run by faceless, sociopathic, materialistic bugmen who are obsessed with having power and authority over you. spouting idealism isn't actually a part of their profession, but convincing the unwashed masses of their moral correctness is
I wouldn't care as much if you weren't required to be fluent in this kind of doublethink to excel academically or financially. ex: college applications care about shit like your "personal narrative" almost as much as they do about your academic work. a high school Chad who spent his teen years partying, playing sports, doing extracurriculars and forming a wide network of social contacts has a massive advantage over a shut-in socially awkward currycel who spent his teens studying and getting all A's. the Chad just has so much more to show for himself.
so when you're applying to a job or university, you can't just show them the work you've done and your experience, you need to be like "I demonstrated moral excellence by..." "I demonstrated my leadership capability when I went to Europe with daddy's money and..." etc. it's really just a sophisticated form of narcissistically exaggerating your own achievements. it has unfortunately become the academic lingua franca because sociopathic authority figures and hysterical females love that kind of doublethink. saying something that you don't actually mean, in order to give off an appearance of conformity (to moral standards that you don't actually hold yourself to) is practically their natural manner of speaking
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