Screen Addiction: Manipulating America

January 25th, 2007

Did you know that the Nazis provided slave laborers with prostitutes?! According to this Independent article, “The idea was conceived by Heinrich Himmler, the Nazi SS chief, as an incentive for slave labourers.”

For years, I’ve had suspicion that the ubiquitous availability of free pornography on the Internet had a PSYOP component. I didn’t bother trying to articulate the hunch, or research it further. The topic seemed too weird and disturbing, even for me.

However, after reading that Independent article about the Nazi sex slaves (and the piece below about addictions to various electronic screens), I have to wonder: Is the Internet being used as a force multiplier of the sex-for-the-slaves concept that was used by the Third Reich?

I’m sure someone with a formal psychology background could comment on the lizard brain components of our behavior, and how the visual cortex is an easy vector to access our lizard brains…

In the meantime, keep these weird concepts in mind as you read this excellent piece by Nancy Levant.

Via: News with Views:

How do free people say good-bye to freedom? This is the only real question people must ask themselves unless one happens to be a billionaire. As wealth is now the only badge of freedom, and as the American masses continue to lose jobs, private property, Constitutional rights, opportunity, and intellectual capacity, it is clear that our trajectory is spiraling downward into the new dictatorial definitions of our political handlers. Feudalism is alive and well on the homeland, and we are trapped like rats in constant states of mass manipulation and unadulterated ignorance.

It’s been obvious for centuries that clear warnings cannot be heard by historically challenged people. Americans are completely ignorant when it comes to the history of this nation and the world – remarkably ignorant. They have never studied the history of the Federal Reserve, their educational system, nor their Constitutional government. Instead, they have blindly accepted everything that televised elites have dictated on their behalf. American people STILL haven’t learned to READ pending legislation or to watch the money exchangers. They are playing the global monopoly game.

Today’s American has fallen victim to reality manipulation through all forms of screen entertainments – from tell-a-vision to computer game addictions. The “science” of visual manipulation is hard core science, and why American people are, in fact, addicted to “screens.” Between the flashing lights, colors, and sound combinations, American people are now literally addicted to computer and tell-a-vision devices. Silence in homes has become virtually impossible to bear, and both children and adults find themselves “virtual slaves” to the electronics in their possession. This addiction was not by accident. This was “science” created to pacify and capture the attention of entire nations so that a new breed of government and governors could take control unnoticed. It worked, and “it” is called mind control.

Research Credit: Life After the Oil Crash

8 Responses to “Screen Addiction: Manipulating America”

  1. […] The brain is going to build whatever structures you empower it to build (or allow others to build), good or bad. […]

  2. Eileen says:

    Kevin,
    Scuse me for disagreeing but this is not an excellent article because Nancy assumes SO MUCH DUM ASSERY re American’s that its quite insulting, thank you.
    Nancy has obviously never read an article from GATA: visited the Cryptogon, Life After the Oil Crash, Solari, No More Fake News, or Planet Waves web sites. Criminy. For Nancy to visit any and/or all of these websites she’d be appalled – non- billionaires expressing their thoughts. SPEECH FROM THE MASSES! And sure, I’ll bet every one of the website owners I’ve mentioned are addicted to the electronic screen. Billionaires might be the only people who DON”T connect electronically with the rest of the world. Poor a holes.
    On behalf of my fellow Americans (the small circle I know of) they spend most of their days WORKING on computers – creating information. And yes, they might have kids that can’t get enough of the funky electronic stuff. Pull the plug on the crap Nancy. Turn off the televison; don’t indulge children with electonic toys. My house has none of that shiite in it. Aw crap, the only reason I’m writing this is because I’m visually addicted to your website. HAHAHA.
    And speaking of political handlers, I’ll take Jim Webb (sans his hairdo) as my political handler, anyday (for now). I thought he sent a very clear messsage.
    E

  3. Kuromaku Kenkyu says:

    … but on the plus side, she didn’t use the word “community”, not even once. That have to count for something.

  4. andrew says:

    Kevin, you are right about the use of porn as mind control, but it’s really always been there as a basic tenet of advertising: sex sells. I just never realised how insidious this notion was until I realised that of course sexual degradation is a key tool for psychological reconditioning (what else did you think Abu Ghraib was all about?) and if you’ve ever watched children’s Saturday morning TV here in Australia, it really is a bunch of ads for toys packaged in the soft porn of Video Smash Hits. Soften the kids up by barraging them with strange and confusing sexually charged images and then – wham – sock them with the latest “My Pretty Pony” set…

  5. fallout11 says:

    Great article.
    Eileen, clearly her intended audience was the 95% that haven’t a clue (not that they would ever read it, mind you), not the self-selecting 5% that visit sites like Cryptogon, LATOC, et. al.

  6. Tito says:

    I’ve had vague suspicions about internet porn along the same lines. I’ve never seen them articulated, but think that the use of the net as a broad mind control medium should be critically looked at.

  7. tmb says:

    I am a former prosecutor from Florida in the mid-80s and I have also come independently to believe that all the porn allowed on the internet has a mind control component. In the mid-80s porno bookstores were busted for stuff that is much, much less indecent than what is everywhere on the internet today – – and more and more of it is violent . . . I believe that another reason for allowing this stuff is that it can “criminalize” just about anyone as a search of just about any computer could turn up porno that could suddenly be termed illegal under any of a number of laws that are not acively but can be selectively enforced at the appropriate time . . . I also believe that the internet porno creates more barriers between people as it has changed sexual mores and behavior and beliefs . . . lots of on line masturbators with web cams, incredibly prevalent now as I recently learned from a younger girlfriend who had a boyfriend into this – – this is incredibly prevalent and I had never heard about this subculture . . .

  8. Kevin says:

    tmb,

    Several interesting points!

    Thanks,
    Kevin

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