

In contrast, when you choose the red pill, you choose not to indulge your own reactivity or confusion. The red pill would cause Neo to confront a brutish reality. The patterns of self and self-cherishing have taken over the experience of mind nature and are only reinforced by it. Afterwards, stick around for SCOTUS punditry and what could be described as a worrying amount of Hegel-talk (for awareness: a worrying amount of Hegel-talk is any Hegel-talk). The blue pill offered the chance to remain in his comfortable fantasy world, believing whatever he wants to believe. This highly memorable scene from the original Matrix can easily be applied to sourcing. You take the red pill you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit-hole goes. Jonah asks Will what it’s like to be a genuinely liberal guy in an industry space that has moved largely past actual liberalism, and then Will turns the tables on Jonah and asks him what it’s like to be genuinely conservative in an era of dwindling conservatism. You take the blue pill the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. Luckily, the conversation more than makes up for these struggles. If he takes the blue pill, he’ll continue to live in blissful ignorance. The blue pill represents comfort and security. Neo’s world will be changed uncomfortably if he takes the red pill, but he’ll be made aware of the truth of the world. The pill can reveal any message, so it is. When they open the bottle, the chosen color pill will predict the spectators card perfectly. The spectator can freely name any playing card, and choose either the red pill or the blue one. The blue pill to keep him in his current. The red pill represents an awakening, but one that could be difficult and painful. The magician displays a bottle of pills, and has a spectator hold on to it. Not since Episode 11 has an installment of The Remnant so risked the sanity – nay, the very essence – of all participants involved. In an iconic scene in The Matrix, Morpheus gives Neo the choice of taking either the blue pill or the red pill. Today, we bring you Will Saletan of Slate – after having struggled mightily against the malevolent whims of technology in order to get it ready.
