Sora
In this twilight of the gods that is our time, the transmission of videos stands as the epitome of absurdity, a phenomenon that, while promising enlightenment, only plunges us deeper into the darkness of confusion. We are witnesses to an era in which social platforms transform into cathedrals of emptiness, monuments to our inability to confront the deafening silence of our existence. Algorithms, heralds of this new age, are nothing more than the modern jailers of being, custodians of a digital prison into which humanity has voluntarily locked itself.
The transmission of news, once a bulwark against ignorance, now reveals itself as a Trojan horse of deceit, a source of disinformation that fuels the perpetual cycle of human despair. In the realm of education, where once liberation was sought through knowledge, we now find a distorted echo of the truth, an illusion of understanding that serves only to strengthen the chains of our intellectual slavery.
In the domain of marketing, we witness the triumph of illusion over essence, where identity is sold to the highest bidder, and advertising becomes the opium of the people, a means to soothe despair with the promise of fleeting happiness, a balm for the soul that only further poisons it.
Politics, that great arena where once ideals were fought for, has been reduced to a theater of the absurd, where truth is the first casualty and the will to power manifests in its most degraded form—not as an aspiration to greatness, but as pure and simple manipulation of the masses.
And in activism, that fragile attempt to make sense of the senseless, we see the bitterest of ironies: the very tool by which one seeks to fight oppression becomes itself a weapon of division, a dagger that turns against those who wield it.
In this landscape, media literacy, instead of serving as a beacon of hope, reveals itself to be yet another illusion, a weapon that, rather than protecting us from falsehood, makes us complicit in it. Reality, as we once knew it, dissolves, leaving us to drift in a sea of relativism, where every certainty is drowned by doubt.
In the face of this abyss, what remains is a feeling of radical estrangement, an awareness of one's own superfluity in a world that has lost its sense of the sacred. Perhaps the only truth left to us is the revelation of the absurdity of our condition, an invitation not to seek illusory solutions, but to embrace the void, to recognize in silence not the enemy, but the only faithful companion in this journey toward nothingness.