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How narratives shape perceptions, lay groundwork for different types of discrimination

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak 
Perceptions continue to play a significant role in shaping personal, political, economic, and cultural debates and discussions in the age of technological revolutions. Evidence-based arguments and evaluations often take a back seat in areas ranging from policy formulation and implementation to the assessment of personal conduct and individual behaviour. The environment based on perception is against the foundations of truth. Perceptions breed different forms of prejudice. Therefore, both ruling and non-ruling elites dedicate significant effort to shaping public perceptions of people, politics, products, services, and ideas. In this exercise of perception management, evidence rooted in human experiences and empirical facts frequently holds limited significance whereas bias takes priority.
Social, political, cultural, economic, and religious perceptions play a central role in creating ‘bias’ and sustaining the concept of "otherness" within society. Biased narratives shaped by these perceptions lay the groundwork for racism, sexism, class divisions, and other forms of discrimination. In various spheres of life, evidence-based analyses, objective evaluations, and rational arguments are often overshadowed by subjective motives, personal interpretations, and emotional appeals.
The ruling, non-ruling classes and corporates not only leverage perceptions but actively manufacture them by dedicating significant time and resources to shaping public opinion. Their strategy focuses on influencing how people perceive individuals, political ideologies, products, services, and broader societal, cultural, and economic narratives. In this process of constructing and manipulating perceptions, empirical evidence and experiential truths are often sidelined. Instead, the emphasis shifts to crafting emotionally resonant narratives or reinforcing preconceived biases, irrespective of factual accuracy. As a result, perception management transcends mere persuasion, becoming a mechanism for controlling discourse and redirecting or diverting public attention from the material realities of their daily lives.
Social and economic parasites, along with cultural and political reactionaries, thrive in environments dominated by perception-based narratives, which provide fertile ground for their parasitic survival. Such environments also serve the interests of feudal, patriarchal, and capitalist classes, enabling them to maintain systems that lack accountability. By cultivating the perception of a successful and efficient system, they employ strategies that perpetuate self-sustaining, unaccountable structures rooted in manipulation, ultimately aiming to delegitimise evidence and objective analysis.
Evidence rooted in everyday reality poses a significant threat to the survival of social, cultural, religious, and economic parasites. Similarly, environments devoid of evidence and accountability create fertile ground for reactionary individuals, families, and groups to sustain their parasitic existence, exploiting the inherent weaknesses of perception-driven systems. Such environments particularly benefit feudal, patriarchal, and capitalist classes, allowing them to perpetuate structures that resist scrutiny, reform, and progressive change. By disseminating the perception of fictitious, successful, and efficient systems, they effectively shield themselves from accountability. This carefully constructed illusion serves as a strategic tool, enabling these ruling and corporate classes to maintain self-sustaining, unaccountable systems that thrive on manipulation and misrepresentation.
The strategy of delegitimising evidence and reasoned critique serves as a powerful tool for these actors. By misrepresenting and undermining the credibility of facts and empirical evaluations, they entrench their manipulative survival while neutralising challenges to their existence. In this context, perception becomes not merely a means of control but a weapon against truth, systematically eroding the foundation for equitable society and transparent governance. This approach perpetuates environments that protect social parasites, obstructing the creation of a society free from such exploitative influences.
Perception often creates a fictitious image of oneself and others. While it may serve as a strategy for immediate success, in the long run, it promotes self-deception and leads to defeatist individuals and societies. In contrast, an evidence-based culture promotes the development of a scientifically minded society and individuals guided by reason and critical thinking, rooted in reflections on the realities of everyday life, with its joys and challenges.

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