However, idiots are marked with a big red subtextual sign that reads: "I am an IDIOT. Read this and be aware that I have *NO* idea what I'm talking about and am just wasting everyone's time. "
(hm misstyped as suctextual...sucktextual? Seems appropriate... half awake subconscious works well I see)
Feedback based industries aren't the best, but honestly, I do great in customer relations since I can filter out those who (a) are just having a bad day (b) aren't fully awake/aware (c) are just lonely and (d) are in a crappy life situation. I have actually been asked in previous jobs to stop letting customers recommend me, as it was making everyone else look bad (no joke!).
Most of customers being idiots involves the above. Most of *people* being idiots involves the above. It takes patience and good observational skills (auditory or visual) to figure it out, but you can figure it out if you take the time to learn, and it is worth it.
Fun fact: the latest psychological journals have found that video games tend to be excellent treatment of individuals with PTSD, in fact more so then medication and talk therapy (a big deal since PTSD is so very hard to treat). I wouldn't be surprised if video games as a whole are a great therapeutic tool.
And yes, more money to the gaming industry is good. Even if I dislike some games that are being produced, it means more people get exposed, more games get made, and it get explored fully as a medium allowing for new discoveries about the human psyche and our development. Even awful games give a positive impact to the industry by purely opening it up to a larger market who previously may not have even attempted such a thing. Poor games, bad games tend to die off rather quickly (see 4e-no not getting into it-wrong thread for that, but it makes a damned good example). I hate 4e, but..... it has added more people who are exposed to gaming. Which mean more people understand it and end up being less hostile towards it. Yup. I'm good with that. Just because it's not my taste (in so many ways) doesn't make it wrong.
Another example: I get massive migraines from certain strains of marijuana. That doesn't mean I'm against it used responsibly. It causes me grave discomfort but I am very pro legalization. Of all narcotics, not just marijuana. I don't relish throwing up and being confined to my bedroom with all the lights off, pressing a pillow into my right eye socket, but, it has many positive benefits that, while they don't help *me* any, they do help others a great deal.
I don't have to like it for it to have many good effects on society.
Yes, that even includes the most offensive of games, which you'll notice tend to die fast. They might trend or peak, but they slide off the charts or become an overblown joke (like GTA...I don't think anyone really thinks stealing cars and running people over is a great idea-once again-removing the mentally unstable from that)
Yes, the Third Reich can sound positive, and it did start out with good ideas (government mandated care for the mentally ill and the elderly, for example). A lot of people know this already, but despite it's "good ideas" those people *still* denounce it.
Subtext can only do so much, in the end, people will (generally) be able to make their own decisions.
Yes, media seeps in, but you'll notice what seeps in are generally constructive ideas, things that help a society stay healthy and vibrant. Things like racism and rape culture may be prevalent, but they are refuted by so many more. Eventually they too will dwindle and die.
When it gets down to it, subtextual "brain washing" only works on two things (a) things that help society and (b) things that don't matter-and even that doesn't last that long (advertising on products for example).
It's a survival instinct bred into us a social creatures. If we were easily swayed by the first idiot with and idea regardless of how bad the idea was, we'd have gone extinct long ago. Don't sell short people's ability to distinguish between utter stupidity and new, possibly constructive, ideas.
The only way subtext gets to be an issue is in academic journals and studies, but usually (with the exception of few really bad decisions on the part of the scientific community)they're contained within said community who knows how to analyze and digest the information given. They know that small sample sizes invalidate a study, that personal viewpoints and opinions cause bias, and that any study must be reviewed, replicated and justified before given credit. Letting those studies out among the uneducated populace before these things are accounted for is what causes problems, because they enter into an arena where the people exposed aren't equipped with the skills necessary to accept or decline. Even then, the majority still manages to see through poorly researched studies.
Yes, some people still believe vaccines cause autism. Those people are also now denounced as idiots, and the study has been widely debunked. At least two third who read the study without any prior scientific background discounted it immediately, even if they didn't know why. Even if all they could say was "well that doesn't sound right."
People are not so easily swayed as the "DICTATORSHEEP" sorts might think. They *are* swayed, that I do not disagree on, but in general it's not something that works like a magic wand. It has to be plausible and constructive before it really gets any momentum. We're not robots, and most people are actually quite intelligent, even if it's not immediately recognizable (personal belief brought in here that everyone is as intelligent as anyone else, just in different, possibly ignored areas, which is why we call some people "dumb", they're just not in their intellectual element-but that's another thread as well).
Regardless, I think it's just the two of us here now, back and forth and we've found out the "why" to your question a page or so ago. Why is the media inundating with multicultural/intersexed/varied sexual lifestyles/etc etc... because they're trying to reach those who didn't have the advantage of being exposed to it while maturing. To moderate and hopefully decimate what racism and bigotry still exists. It applies to enough that it still needs to be out there.
This is not to say I mind batting around ideas about society and consumer culture, but it's not really about that first post any more.
Then again- I'm weird, I *like* philosophical/sociaological chats/debates. I find them highly engaging and enjoyable.