The 7 deadly S(p)ins
When I write or post about the blatant propaganda swirling around the situation in Ukraine, some people get angry. They don’t want to accept the truth. Some will even attack. With such programming in mind….
Actors \/ \/ \/
After being invaded by Iraq on Aug. 2, 1990, the government of Kuwait funded as many as 20 public relations, law, and lobby firms to marshal world opinion in its favor. One such firm was NYC-based Hill & Knowlton (H&K), which was paid at least $12 million to conspire with the Kuwaiti government.
As part of this effort, H&K conducted a study to discern the most effective method for garnering widespread U.S. support in the defense of Kuwait. Put more bluntly: They were hired to find the quickest-acting propaganda. In no time, the answer was clear: emphasize the atrocities (real or imagined) committed by Iraqi soldiers. Enter “Nurse Nayirah” from Kuwait (see above photo).
On Oct. 10, 1990 — without her background ever being vetted — Nayirah gave testimony to the Congressional Human Rights Caucus of the U.S. Congress. She tearfully described witnessing Iraqi troops stealing incubators from a hospital, leaving 312 babies “on the cold floor to die.” (watch below video)
In reality, “Nurse Nayirah” was the 15-year-old daughter of Saud Al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States. She was an aspiring actress and the story was an elaborate hoax. Nayirah’s false testimony was part of H&K’s well-funded conspiracy of deception.
All this came out too late to prevent mass slaughter — with no complaint from U.S. government officials, of course. For example, Brent Scowcroft, President Bush’s national security adviser at the time, claimed ignorance about the plot but admitted: “It was useful in mobilizing public opinion.”
President George H.W. Bush repeated Nayirah’s fabrication multiple times as he rounded up Congressional support for his war plans in the months following her testimony. By way of justifying their “aye” votes, 7 U.S. senators also quoted Nayirah in their own speeches. The resolution passed on Jan. 14, 1991. Two days later (after months of deadly sanctions), the coalition bombing commenced.
To accurately document the human cost in Iraq since Nayirah’s performance would require another full article. For now, I’ll leave you with findings from the London School of Economics in 2006: Between 1991 and 1998, there were an estimated 380,000 and 480,000 excess child deaths in Iraq due to the U.S.-led military actions and economic sanctions.
The cruel irony is that deceitful testimony about murdered Kuwaiti children — as part of a well-orchestrated conspiracy — directly led to innumerable Iraqi children losing their lives over the next three decades.
When attempting to unravel the behaviors of today’s ruling class, it helps to understand their actions in the past. Rather than getting angry at those who dash your red, white, and blue delusions about the US of A, do a little homework, educate yourself, and accept reality. It’s the only way anything will ever change.
AI already owns the net.
This got me again thinking about the concept of bot farms. There are innumerable artificial intelligence systems designed to deceive you into believing whatever they want you to believe. Check out these images:
Hello, fellow web surfers! What if I were to tell you that 64 percent of Internet traffic is automated (read: non-human)? In fact, a new report entitled “Bot Attacks: Top Threats and Trends,” explains that roughly 40 percent of all traffic is from what we call “bad bots.”
Fake, bot-created memes like this stir up emotions, spread disinformation, and manufacture opinions. I have literally seen friends and loved ones sharing the exact images above.
"The Third World War must be fomented by taking advantage of the differences caused by "agentur" of the "Illuminati" between the political Zionists and the leaders of the Islamic World. The war must be conducted in such a way that Islam (the Moslem Arabic World) and political Zionism (the State of Israel) mutually destroy each other."
--Albert Pike
Dude wrote that 1000 years ago, or like 120.
Well, Albert Pike seems to have been hearvy in the occult, and he wrote a book called Morals and Dogma. But the main point here is that there is a letter which is believed he wrote to Mazzini dated August 15, 1871.
This Substack is on the side of all innocent people that are being exploited. Humanity is continually being set up as cannon fodder and genetically modified lab animals in an effort to depopulate the planet. The governments are all being handled and controlled by dark forces operating in the shadows, and all of the Mockingbird MSM narratives are designed to divide and conquer.
The situation in the Middle East is especially difficult because generations of families on both sides have lost loved ones, and are thus seemingly incapable of forgiveness and peace in their permanently supercharged states of anger, fear, and stress: these are socially engineered trans-generational traumas that make all sides far easier to control.
It is certainly no coincidence that so much global death, destruction and destabilization is transpiring on the “Biden” administration’s watch, nor is it any surprise that some of the billions of dollars of weapons deliberately left behind during the Afghanistan withdrawal have ended up with Hamas…while the stock “market” is pleasantly up this morning, and crude oil is miraculously in the red on the eve of PSYOP-WW3…because maybe it really is true that all wars (and “pandemics”) are bankster wars (and bankster “pandemics”):
Wilmot Reed Hastings Jr. is the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Netflix. He has a net worth of roughly $6 billion.
Spoiler alert: His great-uncle is Edward Bernays, the nephew of Sigmund Freud.
Edward Bernays was a public relations pioneer, one of America’s most innovative social engineers, and the author of a 1928 book brazenly entitled Propaganda. In 1929, Bernays was hired by the American Tobacco Company to persuade women to take up cigarette smoking. His slogan, “Reach for a Lucky Instead of a Sweet,” exploited women's fear of gaining weight (a concern purposefully manufactured through previous advertising and/or public relations work by Bernays and others).
While Lucky Strike sales increased by 300 percent in the first year of Bernays’ campaign, there was still one more barrier he needed to break down: smoking remained mostly taboo for “respectable” women. This is where some watered-down Freud came in handy. As Bernays biographer Larry Tye said, he basically wanted to take his uncle’s works and “popularize them into little ditties that housewives and others could relate to.” With input from psychoanalyst A.A. Brill, Bernays conjured up the now legendary scheme to re-frame cigarettes as a symbol of freedom.
"During the 1929 Easter Parade," explains New York Times reporter Ron Chernow, "he had a troupe of fashionable ladies flounce down Fifth Avenue, conspicuously puffing their 'Torches of Freedom,' as he had called cigarettes.” As Chernow reports, Bernays augmented this successful stunt by lining up "neutral experts" to "applaud the benefits of smoking, all the while concealing the tobacco company's sponsorship of his activity.” (I strongly suggest you re-read that last sentence a few more times to comprehend its relevance within today’s Big Pharma context.)
It’s no wonder so many of today’s Americans — all across the ideological spectrum — are so easily and willingly duped by fake news and clickbait. In the era of social media and a 24-hour news cycle, we are now exposed to more propaganda than ever before. Bernays’ PR progeny continues refining and honing their skills. They keep us passive, distracted, and divided — but still inherently trusting those in power. Most Americans are thusly trapped inside algorithms that serve as echo chambers to create and reinforce flawed opinions.
All this talk of Bernays’ progeny and manipulative algorithms brings us back to Netflix CEO Reed Hastings. Under his watch, Netflix has dramatically changed how we view movies and TV shows. Their algorithm virtually controls us. In addition, they use what music mogul, David Beer calls “classificatory imagination.” The term is meant to describe “how viewing the world through genres, labels and categories helps shape our own identities and sense of place in the world.”
“On Netflix,” he writes, “the thousands of categories range from familiar film genres like horror, documentary, and romance, to the hyper-specific ‘campy foreign movies from the 1970s’.” Such metadata controls our consumption without us realizing it. “Our social connections are also profoundly shaped by the culture we consume, so these labels can ultimately affect who we interact with,” Beer concludes.
Meanwhile, Hastings and Netflix are pumping stuff like this into our heavily programmed minds:
We are the intended result of a century-long social experiment — only now they have artificial intelligence to more efficiently condition us. We’ve willingly surrendered our ability to discern fact from fiction. Even worse, we’ve surrendered our desire to discern fact from fiction.
Pro tip: Nothing will change until we truly open our minds, recognize that we are being lied to, and consciously reject the programming.