Saturday, March 28, 2020

Resonance with Nuggets of Truth used to Sell Lies

Its often noted that one can more effectively sell a lie if it has elements of truth to parts of the story. People naturally resonate with that element of truth and that adds more credibility to the whole tale.

"Who could imagine terrorist would fly planes into buildings?" US leaders told a stunned and traumatized public.

A typical person hears that and it resonates because they themselves never thought about that. The individual imagines neither would anyone they know. It resonates off the truth of their own personal experience and gives credibility to that statement. Never mind that the US government itself was running drills about terrorist crashing planes into buildings the very day of 9/11, 2001. You can even listen to the audio recordings of the military air traffic control during the drill and their confusion about whether an actual attack was happening at that moment.

I was listening recently to a truther Brian Staveley describe how compartmentalization is used to sell the latest 9/11 style operation commonly known as Coronavirus when a connection to an event in history where the power structures use of compartmentalization was the nuggets of truth used to sell a separate lie.

The Manhattan Project we are told was the super secret project the US conducted during World War II to build the atomic bomb. It is described as a massive project that spanned over multiples cities. It claims it was able to remain a secret project primarily through the strategy of compartmentalization, where each group has their specific task but gets no information about the overall project or how their specific task fits in. The Atomic Heritage Foundation summed it up like this:

As the only person knowledgeable about the entire project, Groves stood at the pinnacle of power. He controlled the project's pace, priorities, and direction through his decisions. No one could travel from one site to another without the general's permission. Knowledge was compartmentalized. Workers were told only what they needed to know and were forbidden to discuss their jobs with anyone other than designated supervisors.

I do not believe atomic bombs or nuclear bombs exist as they are described. So from my perspective, the story of the Manhattan Project is fundamentally a lie. Maybe a project occurred and people were put into small groups and worked on different things but I dont believe it ended in an atomic weapon being produced. Maybe nothing ever happened, which probably best explains how it managed to stay so "secret".

So back to the original point of how to sell lies with nuggets of truth. In the case of the Manhattan Project, the lie was the story about a super secret program that developed a new super weapon, the atomic bomb, that could destroy the world. The nugget of truth used to sell that lie was the revelation of their actual real strategy of compartmentalization that they have used over and over to sell us lies from the moon landing to coronavirus.

That's some dark ass brilliance. Its all the more twisted if you believe as seems plausible, that evil has to basically reveal to people what its doing and its methods from time to time, even if normally in occult or obscure ways. They showed you a page from their playbook, and the simple brilliance of the strategy sold you a series of huge lies, which as usual, were used to sell more fear.