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The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5

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<strong>The</strong> Third Interview of Dr. Jamisson <strong>Neruda</strong><br />

WingmakersTM<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “<strong>The</strong> danger of ignorance is only in believing you’re not ignorant. If you<br />

know that you lack insight into the inner dimensions of how things work, you know<br />

that you have blind spots. You can keep a wary eye open for any advantage that enables<br />

a deeper insight or more profound sense of meaning. You have to learn to live with<br />

incompleteness and use it as a motivating force rather than a point of desperation or<br />

indifference.<br />

“As far as where do we turn That’s a hard question to answer. It’s the reason that all<br />

the dramas have become packaged and sold via the media. <strong>The</strong> media is where most<br />

people turn. <strong>The</strong>y flick on their televisions, radios, computers, newspapers, magazines,<br />

and even books, and these deliver the packets of information bundled together by the<br />

media. <strong>The</strong> media know very well that people are ignorant—enough so that they lack<br />

the ability to discern the incompleteness of the information packets they serve to their<br />

customers. Information is incomplete, and this drowns our population in ignorance,<br />

which enables manipulation.”<br />

Sarah: “By whom”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “Sarah, no one entity is the master manipulator, if that’s what you’re<br />

asking. It’s more like everyone in the media manipulates information and disclosure.<br />

It’s all part of the drama that causes people to turn to the media for their answers, and<br />

citizens are responsible for this state of affairs because they don’t demand that their<br />

educational centers secure clear, full disclosures of information and distribute it to the<br />

public domain.”<br />

Sarah: “Are you saying that our schools and universities should be the stewards of this<br />

information, and not the media”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “In the ideal world, yes. This is how the Corteum designed their<br />

information structures. <strong>The</strong> educational centers dominate the distribution of<br />

information through a collective and well-reasoned system of journalism. <strong>The</strong><br />

journalists are specialists across the disciplines of theology, the arts and sciences,<br />

government, business, and technology. <strong>The</strong>se journalists document the best practices<br />

of each and every discipline and share this information through full disclosure. Nothing<br />

is left out. <strong>The</strong> research is meticulous and completely untouched by the political<br />

spectrum of special interests.”<br />

Sarah: “Okay, being a journalist myself, we’ve finally hit on a topic I know something<br />

about. When I was a beat reporter, I never felt the hand of politics influencing how or<br />

what I reported. I know at the national level—particularly reporting in D.C.—that<br />

might not be entirely the case, but the stories we’ve been talking about the past few<br />

nights weren’t even on my radar screen. That’s the real problem. <strong>The</strong>se stories are<br />

completely secreted away. And given that our politicians don’t even know about the<br />

existence of the ACIO and all of the other things affiliated with it, how can you blame<br />

the politicians, or the media for that matter”<br />

Page | 116

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