DeanAustin wrote: » Went out with a girl, who is probably above average intelligence and who has done very well in life, who thought Africa was a country and that Nigeria was a city in it. I was stunned. She wasn't stupid by any stretch of the imagination, just ignorant. There are lots like her.
Justin Credible Darts wrote: » and I bet a lot happier than those crying about global warning, evil trump, the price of petrol, gay rights etc
Jim Root wrote: » The framing of the op has a smug self righteous whiff to it. Leave the woman be, there could be all of sorts of things going on in her life to explain a perceived lack of interest in current affairs or Netflix.
igCorcaigh wrote: My political instinct is left wing, and i support a move to a different political and economic system. I just don't have a clear idea of what that could be.
bitofabind wrote: » I think one of the best things you can do for your mental health and happiness is to stop consuming news media, delete all the breaking news apps etc. I say that as a former journalist who globe trotted following the depressing story du jour, from camping outside Westminster waiting for the latest Brexit update to interviewing eye witnesses after the terror attack in the Bataclan in Paris. News is inherently depressing, catastrophic and cyclical. Consuming too much of it gives you a distorted sense of the world, a sense of doom and perpetual "what's next."I got all that in my career and eventually de-sensitisation and numbing set in. I couldn't connect or empathise with any of it. Would roll my eyes at the latest global disaster. My sister is willingly ignorant to news and current affairs. Wasn't aware Leo is no longer the Taoiseach until last week. Used to think "Al Jazeera" is a country. She's also a medical professional in a very specialised area, so pretty smart and competent generally. Just doesn't give a flying shyte about what Boris is up to or what the current infection rate is.
pgj2015 wrote: » what gets me is people who couldnt point out any country on a map or that dont know common knowledge things we all learned in school. like did they never listen or what?
paleoperson wrote: » Why are you trying to belittle the beliefs of Brexiteers and Trump supporters and acting like we all agree with you as fact that someone who was informed wouldn't vote for them? Plenty of highly informed, educated and intelligent people voted for them, a lot of the demographic were working class people because it helped them - or was projected to help them - a lot more economically.
paleoperson wrote: » Who shows a small bit of interest in what's happening in the world - so are you saying all those MAGA hat wearers don't care what's happening in the world? I mean you have to make sense, you can't just make things up as you fancy.
igCorcaigh wrote: » The price of petrol and gay rights, eh? You do indeed live in a bubble. Global warming i assume you mean.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » There's a special place in hell for those who get worked up about politics but don't actually vote.
pgj2015 wrote: » I met a woman one night who was with her other half, straight away she starts ranting about the Irish politicians and other issues with gay marriage (she was in favor). oh her opinion was 100% right and no one else got a look in. I was only in her company for about 10 minutes, it was awful, I felt sorry for her other half who didn't seem to be as political at all. why get worked up over things you cant change?
ILoveYourVibes wrote: » it took me three seconds to find out the cases were around 1000k today. I am a quick thinker though ..i tend to be able to make sense of information quicker than others. Maybe some people DO have to sit and read things over for hours. I don't.
gigantic09 wrote: » I have a couple of teenage nieces and nephews who don't seem to have a clue about what's going on in the world outside their own teenage bubble. They seem to have very little general knowledge, political, historical etc. They wouldn't be aware of the likes of the beatles, Hitler or jfk. We were playing charades last Xmas and I did 'the Angelus' for my turn. They looked at me like I had two heads, never heard of it. Their gran offered them a slice of rhubarb pie and again not a clue what rhubarb was. Nephew got a dog for birthday, and I joked when I was his age I had to walk the plank everyday as we couldn't afford a dog. Joke fell totally flat. Sometimes I question the government's insistence on keeping schools open at all costs if this is what the result is ��.
whisky_galore wrote: » Tbf I'd be pretty ropey on many of the -stans, the small countries east of say Poland, much of Africa esp the smaller ones, and South America. A fair whack of countries that were around in school are called something else now!
yosser hughes wrote: » This actually says a lot about the quality of education in this country. She probably did well in exams.
ShatterAlan wrote: » The "-stans"? Is that your collective for countries that end in "....stan"? What about your thoughts on people or languages ...are they the "...eses"? You know...Chinese, Japanese, Nepalese? Maybe Congolese or Portuguese brings it a little closer to home.
Deleted User wrote: » I think people who are obsessed with US Politics but show zero interest in domestic politics are worse.
ShatterAlan wrote: » My sister hasn't a clue about what's going on in the world. Not a scooby. She's not thick just has zero interest in politics or current affairs. She wouldn't know who the Taoiseach is (she lives in the UK...so the majority of brits wouldn't know either...but still). She probably knows that Trump is US president but wouldn't know who VP is or who the opposition is (Biden / Harris). I wish I was like her, I'd probably be a lot happier and more successful instead of wasting my life wringing my hands about the state of the world and stressing over things that I can't change or have zero influence over other than to bitch about them.
paddythere wrote: » Because things can be changed
Graces7 wrote: » By who? Not you and I