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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
52 w

On Depression And Anxiety: Specifying The Nature Of The Problem
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On Depression And Anxiety: Specifying The Nature Of The Problem

The following is a transcript excerpt from Dr. Jordan Peterson’s “Depression & Anxiety.” In this segment, he defines depression, addresses the difference between being depressed and having a terrible life, acknowledges the proper treatment for depression, and outlines how meaningful life pursuits can stave off negative emotion and create a good life. Dr. Peterson’s extensive catalog is available on DailyWire+. * * * Generally, when people come to see a psychotherapist, they do it for one of three reasons. They’re either depressed or they’re anxious or some combination of the two, or they don’t do a particularly good job of standing up for themselves, in which case they need what’s often called assertiveness training. We’ll walk through all of those, but we’ll start with depression. So what is depression exactly? Well, it’s a preponderance of negative emotion, which seems self-evident. Depressed people are sad and frustrated and disappointed and grief-stricken. They have low self-esteem. They tend to feel all negative emotions simultaneously in a manner that’s paralyzing. If you have the proclivity to feel one negative emotion more intensely, you have the proclivity to feel them all because they covary, which means they tend to occur together. That’s because all negative emotions are the manifestation of the abstraction of a behavioral system that stops you from moving forward or moves you backwards or, in another variant, prepares you to fight. (Anger is a mix of positive and negative emotion, so it’s a bit more complicated.) If you feel a preponderance of negative emotions, you tend to be paralyzed and to withdraw, to be frozen in place and to withdraw. WATCH: Dr. Jordan B. Peterson on Depression and Anxiety on DailyWire+ Now, if you’re depressed, you also experience an absence of positive emotion. Positive emotion is linked to movement forward, and it manifests itself in curiosity and the desire to play, and more particularly, in hope. It makes itself known as a marker that you’re moving toward valuable goals. Depression takes you out in a sense such that you don’t feel any positive emotion in relationship to goals; nothing seems worthwhile, which is the absence of goals, and it also floods you with negative emotion. Treatment for depression — pharmacologically or behaviorally, psychologically — can address either the deficit of positive emotion, the excessive negative emotion, or both. Antidepressants, known as serotonin reuptake inhibitors, tend to modulate the degree to which negative emotion propagates neurologically. Antidepressants, like Bupropion or Wellbutrin, tend to increase the probability that positive emotion will make itself manifest. Sometimes people who are treated biochemically for depression are treated with SSRIs, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, and with drugs like Wellbutrin. (There are mixed antidepressants.) Because antidepressants work upon occasion, people also tend to think or make the claim that depression is fundamentally a biochemical disorder. That begs the question, what do you mean by fundamentally and what do you mean by biochemical? The situation is much more complex than the mere reduction of the condition to a biochemical abnormality might indicate. When I was doing differential diagnosis for depression — differential diagnosis means specifying the nature of the problem, distinguishing it from other similar problems, and then formulating something approximating a treatment plan — one of the things I tried to determine as a good behaviorist was whether the person who was suffering a dearth of positive emotion and an excess of negative emotion was suffering because they were ill in this strictly physiological sense, which might also mean that something had gone wrong biochemically with, for example, the serotonin production system, or whether they were suffering from the cumulative micro and macro catastrophes of life. One question might be, are you depressed or do you just have a terrible life? Although this hasn’t been well delineated in the research literature because the diagnoses aren’t done carefully enough, my belief and strong intuition, which makes sense theoretically and biochemically as well, is that antidepressants often work quite well for people who don’t have terrible lives but are depressed. Whereas for people who have terrible lives, anti-depressants might help them stave off the worst manifestation of suicidal self-destruction but can’t put in place the behavioral and psychological structures that are necessarily put in place in order for them to thrive, in order for them to be buttressed against negative emotion, which is generally manifest in response to genuine crisis and to help them gather this sense of positive movement toward a goal that might be necessary to live in the absence of depression. So you could say to have a good life and therefore not to be depressed, you need a goal, and maybe you need an overarching goal, and maybe you need an overarching goal that unites all the impulsive goals that might otherwise preoccupy you. You need to have enough stability in your immediate environment and your near conception so that you’re not flooded with anxiety and negative emotion. How might you understand that in a more differentiated manner if you were trying to address your own proclivity for depression? You need to be engaged in some meaningful life pursuits. You need to know what to do with your life. You need to have some day-to-day routines. You need to be engaged in something that is productive and can sustain you and that simultaneously makes you grow. Then you might ask more concretely, what might you engage in if you wanted to set your life up so that you were not depressed and nihilistic? One answer to that is, you could look for meaning and significance where other people have found it. * * * WATCH: Dr. Jordan B. Peterson on Depression and Anxiety on DailyWire+ Dr. Jordan B. Peterson is a clinical psychologist and professor emeritus at the University of Toronto. From 1993 to 1998 he served as assistant and then associate professor of psychology at Harvard. He is the international bestselling author of “Maps of Meaning,” “12 Rules For Life,” and “Beyond Order.” You can now listen to or watch his popular lectures on DailyWire+. Be sure to PRE-ORDER Dr. Peterson’s newest book: “We Who Wrestle with God” (Portfolio/Penguin. November 19, 2024.) The views expressed in the series “Depression and Anxiety” are presented for educational and informational purposes and are not intended a medical or psychological advice.
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
52 w

Study Finds BBC 'Flunks Journalism 101,' Blatantly Favoring Hamas Over Israel
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Study Finds BBC 'Flunks Journalism 101,' Blatantly Favoring Hamas Over Israel

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is considered the crown jewel of "public" broadcasting. All global journalism in English seeks to mimic it. That's not a good thing, since it is rife with leftist bias, and on the Israel-Hamas war, it can be difficult to distinguish from Al-Jazeera. At FoxNews.com, lawyer Trevor Asserson explained his research into anti-Israel bias, and how the BBC "flunks Journalism 101." Like PBS and NPR in America, the BBC is legally obliged to produce impartial news. For this, it is rewarded with $5 billion a year by British taxpayers. (PBS and NPR surely envy that.)  Asserson and a team of about 20 lawyers and 20 data scientists used artificial intelligence to analyze nine million words from the BBC on TV, radio, podcasts, and social media, starting on October 7, 2023 -- when Hamas slaughtered innocent Israeli citizens and others (including Americans). At the MRC, we wouldn't trust software to substitute for human reading, but knowing the BBC's patterns, we doubt a different result.  In BBC's English language TV output, they found while some programs were neutral, the remainder were between 90% and 100% pro-Palestinian/anti-Israeli. The BBC broke almost every rule in its own rule-book -- the ‘Editorial Guidelines.’ They use BBC as a platform for Hamas sympathizers, and Hamas members; they report death figures they know to be wrong without adequately conveying their unreliability to audiences; they air reports from Gaza without mentioning that Hamas controls journalistic output; their own journalists express personal opinions. Each of these is a separate breach of the BBC’s own guidelines on impartiality. While we found that BBC English was disappointingly bad, we found that BBC Arabic was significantly worse. In a ‘sympathy analysis’ conducted by the RIMe data scientists across global media, BBC Arabic was snuggled up with such outlets as Al Jazeera; Palestine Chronicle and Iraqi News. It must surely degrade trust in the BBC to discover that it is being used to peddle extremist views. The BBC News machine displays a strong anti-Israel view from almost every angle we analyzed. Bowen is a "truthful not neutral" chap. In response to Asserson's report he claimed “Searching for some kind of spurious balance is entirely wrong, the truth is the objective.” Bowen also said Hamas is a “good” source of information on Gaza casualty figures during a closed-doors “masterclass” on reporting war impartially -- their numbers are "pretty accurate" -- and objected to the word "terrorist" to describe Hamas. Way back during the first Gulf War, Bowen did reporting from inside Saddam Hussein's Iraq for NBC News, and in our newsletter MediaWatch we concluded it was dreadfully anti-American and sympathetic to the Iraqi dictator. At this point, the BBC's anti-Israel bias matches the ideology of the new Labour Party government. Asserson concluded his study "blows the myth of impartiality out of the water. The BBC doesn’t achieve impartiality and is not remotely close to achieving it. BBC management must either take back control of the ship, or the British people should demand a refund." PS: In Israel, comedians mocked the BBC's anti-Israel bias with reporter "Harry Whiteguilt."
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
52 w

Excellent roguelike RoGlass finally hits Steam 1.0, you need to try it
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Excellent roguelike RoGlass finally hits Steam 1.0, you need to try it

RoGlass deserves a lot more attention. It's laser-focused on a unique idea, and rivals Tetris as one of the easiest games to pick up and play - but not enough people have tried it. A roguelite puzzle game where you place stained glass tiles to increase your score, it's incredibly simple and effortlessly genius all at once. Relaxing, engaging, and distinctive, RoGlass is finally available in Steam 1.0, and you need to give it a shot. Continue reading Excellent roguelike RoGlass finally hits Steam 1.0, you need to try it MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Best puzzle games, Best roguelike games, Best indie games
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
52 w

Project Diablo 2 Season 10 adds a new uber boss to Blizzard’s best RPG
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Project Diablo 2 Season 10 adds a new uber boss to Blizzard’s best RPG

With Diablo 4 Vessel of Hatred right around the corner, it’s time to cast your mind back to arguably Blizzard’s best RPG - and certainly its most important - with the announcement of Project Diablo 2 Season 10. The fan project has been maintaining the beloved ARPG for several years now, preserving and upgrading D2 and its Lord of Destruction expansion as though development was still continuing to this day. Its new season is on the way, and the mod creators have just unveiled its key updates, which include a new uber boss fight, more runewords, and a very welcome quality-of-life tool. Continue reading Project Diablo 2 Season 10 adds a new uber boss to Blizzard’s best RPG MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Best games like Diablo, Best RPG games on PC
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National Review
National Review
52 w

A Tempting Tart
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A Tempting Tart

Combine some pastry dough with leftover fruit and you have a tasty treat that comes together quickly.
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National Review
National Review
52 w

Suicide Is a Problem. Left-Wing Policies Disguised as ‘Public Health’ Aren’t the Solution
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Suicide Is a Problem. Left-Wing Policies Disguised as ‘Public Health’ Aren’t the Solution

A leading medical journal promotes an ‘all of government’ suicide-prevention policy — but ignores the role of assisted suicide.
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National Review
National Review
52 w

Nate Silver’s Latest Doesn’t Glitter
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Nate Silver’s Latest Doesn’t Glitter

The impressive statistician presents some useful insights in his latest book, but it suffers from trying to do too much and lacking a unifying theme.
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National Review
National Review
52 w

Kamala Harris Is Not the Catholic Candidate
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Kamala Harris Is Not the Catholic Candidate

‘Catholics for Harris’ make a faulty case.
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National Review
National Review
52 w

The Nemesis of American Parents Is Kamala’s ‘Incredible Friend’ 
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The Nemesis of American Parents Is Kamala’s ‘Incredible Friend’ 

If elected president, Harris would side with Randi Weingarten and her union monopoly power against parents. 
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National Review
National Review
52 w

The Media Response to the Trump Assassination Attempts Is Not Normal
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The Media Response to the Trump Assassination Attempts Is Not Normal

The press chooses victim-blaming and apathy.
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