| ▲ | komali2 7 hours ago | |
What's frustrating is our society hasn't grappled with how to deal with that kind of psychological attack. People or corporations will find an "edge" that gives them an unbelievable amount of control over someone, to the point that it almost seems magic, like a spell has been cast. See any suicidal cult, or one that causes people to drain their bank account, or one that leads to the largest breach of American intelligence security in history, or one that convinces people to break into the capitol to try to lynch the VP. Yet even if we persecute the cult leader, we still keep people entirely responsible for their own actions, and as a society accept none of the responsibility for failing to protect people from these sorts of psychological attacks. I don't have a solution, I just wish this was studied more from a perspective of justice and sociology. How can we protect people from this? Is it possible to do so in a way that maintains some of the values of free speech and personal freedom that Americans value? After all, all Cambridge Analytica did was "say" very specifically convincing things on a massive, yet targeted, scale. | ||