My parents live near a university. We call the area the bubble because the students and people living in the actual town rarely hear about things happening to the other.
Of course the same could be said about here in Orlando. The waitress that served me today was shocked to hear that Universal Parks was across the street. It seemed so ordinary on the outside. I even though the same when walking through the space coast and realizing no one cared that Disney, Universal, and many lesser parks were just a 50 minute drive away. They had the ocean and tourists for that, who cares?
In Seattle, I knew people who didn't know the city outside of Amazon controlled areas. They genuinely thought anything outside of it held evil ner do wells. Redmond with Microsoft was even more intense. You got on a Microsoft run bus, through streets run by Microsoft, with stores and shops semi owned by the company. This is if you even left the campus at all.
The campus bubble seems to be something used by companies, universities and governments entirely to control what their followers see and hear.
Yup. I lived in a residential cult, in Sweden, for three months last year (unintentionally, but no one intends to move into a cult), and I can confirm, 100%, that this is a tactic that they use...
Unfortunately for them, but fortunately for me, I kept leaving. I left every weekend, and every chance I got, to go out and explore the wider world, meet people, have conversations, etc. So I very quickly realized that these people were insane. And so I left.
The others there, who didn't have that same experience of "going outside", regularly, stayed, shunned me, got really, really nasty when I told them I was leaving, and then got duped into giving the cult more money...
A cult which already starves and overworks "participants", and which pulls money from donors and the government, in addition to what we ourselves paid.
It was a very eye-opening experience, I will admit.
And that particular one has been going for 16 years, plus it's not even the only one in that same town, so...
That's a more extreme example of the phenom, obviously, but yeah, this is definitely a thing, in my experience...
My parents live near a university. We call the area the bubble because the students and people living in the actual town rarely hear about things happening to the other.
Of course the same could be said about here in Orlando. The waitress that served me today was shocked to hear that Universal Parks was across the street. It seemed so ordinary on the outside. I even though the same when walking through the space coast and realizing no one cared that Disney, Universal, and many lesser parks were just a 50 minute drive away. They had the ocean and tourists for that, who cares?
In Seattle, I knew people who didn't know the city outside of Amazon controlled areas. They genuinely thought anything outside of it held evil ner do wells. Redmond with Microsoft was even more intense. You got on a Microsoft run bus, through streets run by Microsoft, with stores and shops semi owned by the company. This is if you even left the campus at all.
The campus bubble seems to be something used by companies, universities and governments entirely to control what their followers see and hear.
Yup. I lived in a residential cult, in Sweden, for three months last year (unintentionally, but no one intends to move into a cult), and I can confirm, 100%, that this is a tactic that they use...
Unfortunately for them, but fortunately for me, I kept leaving. I left every weekend, and every chance I got, to go out and explore the wider world, meet people, have conversations, etc. So I very quickly realized that these people were insane. And so I left.
The others there, who didn't have that same experience of "going outside", regularly, stayed, shunned me, got really, really nasty when I told them I was leaving, and then got duped into giving the cult more money...
A cult which already starves and overworks "participants", and which pulls money from donors and the government, in addition to what we ourselves paid.
It was a very eye-opening experience, I will admit.
And that particular one has been going for 16 years, plus it's not even the only one in that same town, so...
That's a more extreme example of the phenom, obviously, but yeah, this is definitely a thing, in my experience...
Recognizing how the extreme works helps when you see the tactics in more subtle ways.