In the fleeting, flattened world of social media, where only simple, singular ideas survive, politicians and media enjoy endless field days constructing and reconstructing reality, bending it to suit their purpose. The custom of reducing complex public problems to one‑line explanations routinely manufactures confusion, chaos and policy failure in the long run; it does not create clarity.
Modern politics is addicted to oversimplification. Complex crises with deep historical, economic, religious and institutional ro
In the fleeting, flattened world of social media, where only simple, singular ideas survive, politicians and media enjoy endless field days constructing and reconstructing reality, bending it to suit their purpose. The custom of reducing complex public problems to one‑line explanations routinely manufactures confusion, chaos and policy failure in the long run; it does not create clarity.
Modern politics is addicted to oversimplification. Complex crises with deep historical, economic, religious and institutional ro