What’s going on? You should know by now that this is all part of their game.
They’re always moving the boundary stones and flipping you from one side to another, merely to create as much noise as possible.
The more cognitive dissonance they can create, the more information they can bombard you with, the faster they will wear you out.
It doesn’t matter whether it’s truth or lies they’re blasting at you anymore; the key to their strategy is merely to make sure that their blasters are on full force and coming at you constantly from every angle.
Because they know that if you’re disoriented, you won’t have the mental energy to sift through all of it and form a firm opinion or take firm action. Analysis paralysis, in other words.
Their goal is just to keep you adrift in an ever- churning sea of plausible information and tentative opinions
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Searching on the foundations of the NYSE, I tripped over the fact that it had been sold in 2012 to ICE. What is ICE? It is a company started by Jeffrey Sprecher.
ICE was backed by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley at its startup in 2000, and we are told by mainstream sources that Sprecher “gave” 80% control to them. I assume the correct verb is “took”. They took it.
We aren't told if they still had 80% control in 2012, when ICE took over the NYSE. But I take this to mean that Goldman Sachs (and perhaps Morgan Stanley) now own the NYSE. Morgan Stanley faded in 2007-8, as everyone knows, so maybe they aren't part of the mix like they were.
Surprisingly, the WSJ comes within inches of the full truth, providing plenty of evidence that BlackRock and other institutional investors are, in fact, ruining the housing market. wsj.com/articles/prope…
The article must have ticked off somebody at Langley – er, I mean, The Atlantic – which is why they stuck their senior stooge Derek Thompson on it. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
The piece is a rebuttal of the Wall Street Journal article about how giant investment banks are gobbling up single-family homes and turning them into high-yield rentals, effectively pricing families out of the housing market. wsj.com/articles/prope…
The film "Let Him Be" is a pretend hunt for a living John Lennon.
Released in 2009, with clips still up on youtube as of 2014. It is chock full of big red flags. The first red flag is the title, which is a prominent part of the psychological operation.
The message is there in the title: let him be! “He isn't still alive; but even if he is, let him be!” In the film, they tell you they have found a guy who looks exactly like Lennon would look at this age.
In interviews for the film, they tell you they have found a Lennon impersonator who looks exactly like Lennon would look at this age, to play the part in the film. The actor named Mark Staycer is playing a character named Noel Snow who other characters think may be John Lennon.