KJ Dailor
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kdailor.bsky.social
KJ Dailor
@kdailor.bsky.social
Just a gay man 🏳️‍🌈 trying to live in a straight world. Husband, dad (human and dog), social worker. ASD. Science and facts. If you know, you know!
Unfortunately, too many of them are.
January 10, 2026 at 11:59 PM
Reposted by KJ Dailor
Once again: The news on US sharing intelligence with Russia has been reported today by 3 independent sources. It has nothing to do with any article.

I wish this not to be true, but I report this since 3 independent sources confirm the same information. These are Ukraine based.
March 7, 2025 at 11:34 PM
5/ Build community: Share the cognitive load. Different people track different issues. Network intelligence beats individual overload.
Remember: They want you scattered. Your focus is resistance.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
4/ Practice going slow: Wait 48hrs before reacting to new policies. The urgent clouds the important. Initial reporting often misses context.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
3/ Remember: Feeling overwhelmed is the point. When you recognize this, you regain some power. Take breaks. Process. This is a marathon.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
2/ Use aggregators & experts: Find trusted analysts who do the heavy lifting of synthesis. Look for those explaining patterns, not just events.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
What now?

1/ Set boundaries: Pick 2-3 key issues you deeply care about and focus your attention there. You can't track everything - that's by design. Impact comes from sustained focus, not scattered awareness.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
3/ Agenda-setting theory explains the strategy: When multiple major policies compete for attention simultaneously, it fragments public discourse. Traditional media can't keep up with the pace, leading to superficial coverage.
The result? Weakened democratic oversight and reduced public engagement.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
2/ Media theorist McLuhan predicted this: When humans face information overload, they become passive and disengaged. The rapid-fire executive orders create a cognitive bottleneck, making it nearly impossible for citizens and media to thoroughly analyze any single policy.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
1/The flood of 200+ executive orders in Trump's first days exemplifies Naomi Klein's "shock doctrine" - using chaos and crisis to push through radical changes while people are too disoriented to effectively resist. This isn't just politics as usual. It's a strategic exploitation of cognitive limits.
January 28, 2025 at 12:36 AM
It is scary how stupid half of America is
January 7, 2025 at 12:59 AM
❤️
December 30, 2024 at 8:37 PM