Sunday, June 4, 2017

Terror Attacks - and understanding memory is biased towards positive memories.

Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it

Those were the days

  • Fading affect bias: a bias in which the emotion associated with unpleasant memories fades more quickly than the emotion associated with positive events.

The negative events are remembered by the subconscious so in our daily lives we don't need to consciously reflex on them. We get a sense of fear warning us of danger ... in this way fear is a good and useful emotion, not something to be ignored.

Some negative events are because of other people who do not exist in our lives anymore. Other negative events still apply.

The terror event in London will fade. This is OK for them to fade, as long as we respect our subconscious to remind us of the existence of real danger. At which point we can question our memories about why something may be associated with a negative event.

It is perfectly safe to walk across a bridge in a place where there is not a near 51% Muslim population. When the Muslim population of a location exceeds a critical number there are members of the Muslim population who will be triggered to push the population of Muslims to 100%, and this is accomplished by Terrorism.

The trigger event in London was when Sadiq Khan, took up office of major on 9 May 2016. It is perfectly healthy to feel a sense of fear when Muslims exceed 51% ... as it is a trigger point for terrorism.

You are built to survive and have joy. You need not carry the pain, the subconscious can remember for you.

No comments:

Post a Comment