Internet as a "Playground for Losers"
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Realize that the internet and social media, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Reddit is mostly bullshit. These apps are used daily by losers. Even if a successful person posts on Twitter or Instagram, that’s only 5% of their life, the rest of their time spend with firends, on gym or reading productive book.
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If people are truly getting things done, they’re busy and don’t have time to waste online. The internet is actually place for losers. If you can't stop doom scrolling you are addicted to content produced by losers. These people are unemployed, fat, stinky, lazy and ugly.
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Successful people have the mindset of making money from the internet, not wasting time on it. When they post on Instagram or social media, it’s not because they’re being genuine or care about people it’s because they want to monetize it. Nothing is truly authentic everything is monetized, even if you don’t see it.
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Successful people recognize that the internet is boring and meaningless. There are better things to do in life than browse artificial websites. You don’t even know who wrote what you’re reading it could be some loser pretending to be knowledgeable.
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I don’t know any valuable person who spends a lot of time on social media. Even rich people hire social media assistants to post for them because social media is for losers.
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The internet used to be a place for losers. Making friends online was considered dangerous, and those who spent their time chatting or posting on social media were seen as creeps who don’have private life. Only lonely, ugly people with no real life friends use the internet. You don't want to be part of them.
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80% of internet content is an echo chamber. This content is designed to trigger emotions. Algorithms are built to make you feel something strongly. If you see someone online with extreme or controversial opinions like a misogynist content they likely don’t even express those thoughts in real life because it’s socially unacceptable so they leave this shit on social media.
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algorithms are design to promote content that makes emotion and the same applies to internet algorithms and news headlines. Everything is designed to manipulate your emotions and keep you engaged.
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This community is full of losers—lazy, obese, unhealthy, unemployed, less inteligent people who are too lazy to even take a shower. They stink, and you don’t want to be part of that.
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If you’re addicted to social media Instagram, Twitter, Reddit, etc. you’re basically a loser who’s easy to manipulate. You’re letting algorithms control you and play on your emotions. You spend your time with loser who don't have interesting private life.
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Reading a book makes you feel better because the person who wrote it is intelligent. Spending time on social media is essentially wasting time with ugly losers who pretend to be knowledgeable but have achieved nothing in life.
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Being productive means surrounding yourself with verified intelligent and successful people, taking advice from them, learning from them, and becoming part of a community of high-achievers. It also means doing things that will help you be part of smart peope circles.
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Productivity is about being among intelligent people, while doom-scrolling is just observing the behavior of a mix of NPCs some smart, but the vast majority dumb, lazy, fat, unemployed, ugly, irresponsible people who you wouldn't want to be friends with.
Notes:
Note: This is a long reddit post from someone who is clearly overly-engaged online.
Folksonomies: discipline productivity
Taxonomies:
/technology and computing/internet technology/social network (0.996401)
/technology and computing/internet technology/internet cafes (0.890044)
/technology and computing/internet technology/web search/people search (0.809036)
Concepts:
Internet (0.985188): dbpedia_resource
Facebook (0.966381): dbpedia_resource
Productivity (0.953148): dbpedia_resource
Twitter (0.919181): dbpedia_resource
Instagram (0.877189): dbpedia_resource
Social media (0.872500): dbpedia_resource
Emotion (0.727937): dbpedia_resource
Knowledge (0.660193): dbpedia_resource
