Number of articles: 2
The Internet and Social MediaKeywords: internet, online, social media, media, computers We in Britain don't realise it, but in terms of the way our internet and media work, we seem like a throwback to people in the New World Order. We have our own internet, of course, substantially but not entirely cut off from the global internet, and broadly free and uncensored. We of course also have digital and analogue broadcast media, i.e., radio and television. There is also a robust print media. The New World Order, however, has only one medium: the internet. There are no broadcast media of any significance outside the internet, and paper is very niche, or restricted to certain professional environments where it still makes sense. For a century, this media landscape has shaped NWO culture, as some of the most influential writings of the last hundred years took place wholly within the context of social media postings online. To understand NWO culture, it is essential, therefore, to grasp the nature of their internet and social media. |
Vehicles and TransportationKeywords: transportation The Common language was designed for a fictional culture that had been technologically advanced for such a long time that it had basic words for rather modern concepts, and one area in which Davidson was careful to showcase this idea was in the area of vehicles and transportation. Common also, however, has absorbed a lot of borrwed terminology that sits alongside the native terms. |