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WikiLeaks: Government Conspires to Keep the People “Unaware”

wikileaksbiThe latest release of WikiLeaks emails shows global policy strategist, Bill Ivey, admitting to Clinton’s campaign manager, John Podesta, that “we are all content to demean government, drop civics, and in general conspire to produce an unaware and compliant citizenry”. If this policy makes you angry, it should.

We oftentimes are too ready to accept what government, industry, and mainstream media tells us is true. These sectors of our society count on the fact that this will never change.  That we will be good little citizenry—blindly accepting their policies for the benefit of the greater good. The greater good usually being the one percent elite in power. While they gain, we the people (or sheeple as they think of us) suffer the pain through failed policies, bank bailouts, and lives lost in senseless wars.

Well, those days are over. The people are awakening, and it probably scares the hell out of government pundits who think they still hold sway over us. For decades they have shaped our beliefs through paid off news sources and organizations who are told what to write and print—all with the goal of keeping us indefinitely unaware and compliant.

But, if we have been unaware for so long, we have only ourselves to blame. As they say in the movie The Matrix, it’s a choice between embracing the sometimes painful truth of reality (taking the red pill) or opting for the blissful ignorance of illusion (the blue pill). Get out your red pills, for the times they are a changing.

One has to ask oneself why do some people so readily believe the likes of CNN polls, rosy economic figures disseminated by evolutionofsheeplegovernment  agencies, and the increasing propaganda policies justifying pre-emptive war strategies? There is an answer.

As countless social experiments have shown, it is because we want to go along with the crowd. We don’t want to stand out or make waves. There is comfort and safety in uniformity. And this is what the global policy strategists of the world count on to lead us and mass deceive us.

The National Geographic Channel’s Brain Games show conducted several social experiments that actually prove people are like sheep and will follow the leader even if they don’t know why. Take a look at what happens when one woman did something that made no sense, only to have others copy her. It’s not only astounding, but disheartening:

This same Brain Games show then demonstrated how peer pressure can make someone, who knows the right answer, go along with the crowd and choose the obvious wrong answer to avoid being different. They claim people’s brains are hard-wired to want to fit in.  SEE HERE

Scientists at the University of Leeds conducted research that proves the tendency for many people to act like sheep. The study shows that it takes a minority of just five percent to influence a crowd’s direction – and that the other 95 percent follow without even realizing what is going on. This doesn’t say much for mankind, but explains why so many people are easily swayed by what they read in the mainstream news as being bonafide truth.

No one wants to think they may be part of the sheeplehood—which has nothing at all to do with intellect or how highly educated you are. The world has a place for followers and there is nothing wrong with this. But, how does one awaken and foster free thinking whether they are a follower or a leader at heart.

First, accept the fact that you don’t have to please everyone. It’s not necessary in life, and virtually impossible to have everyone agree with you or even like you. So stop trying to fit in. Be yourself, even if it’s really different. Live your dreams and your beliefs. Love yourself and your differences and make yourself happy instead of everyone else.

As you follow these goals, you will find your awareness and consciousness growing. You will feel more confident. You will let go of fear. And, most of all, you will start seeing through the lies. You will be able to detect political spin and what is clearly the illusion of these days and times.

You might even find yourself chuckling at how the political polls are wildly different for each news station depending on the candidate they have sold their soul to, and know you are no longer one of the “unaware” and “compliant” ones. Always follow your inner truth, no one else’s and you will have freed your self from societal enslavement. Then they will have failed, and YOU will have won.

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Dr. Kathy Forti is a clinical psychologist, inventor of the Trinfinity8 technology, and author of the book, Fractals of God: A Psychologist’s Near-Death Experience and Journeys Into the Mystical

Being Labeled a Conspiracy Theorist

conspiracy-theorist1No one likes being accused of being a “conspiracy theorist.”  It’s an offending and dismissing label which basically sends the message: “I think you’re an idiot or a crack pot.”  It’s the quickest way to lose a friend, or have them stop talking to you about the things they find important.  In essence, they will shut you out after you have tried shutting them up.  It’s a no-win situation for both parties.

Wikipedia defines “conspiracy theory” as “an explanatory proposition that accuses two or more persons or group, or an organization, of having caused or covered up, through secret planning and deliberate action, an illegal or harmful event or situation.”  According to author and political scientist, Lance deHaven-Smith, this term was invented and came into wide circulation by the CIA to smear and defame people questioning the JFK assassination.  It’s been used ever since, much like President George W. Bush used the term “unpatriotic” for those who questioned the necessity of the Iraq War.

Let’s face it, many once called “conspiracy theories” have turned out to be correct, especially where the government was involved.  Let me list a few of the more famous cover-ups:  Prism, the NSA’s domestic surveillance program (includes spying on everyone, even our allies); Project Paper Clip (allowing illegal entry of famous Nazi scientists and collaborators into the U.S for profit);  the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment on Afro-Americans; Project MKUltra Mind Control Program; COINTELPRO by the FBI—and the list goes on and on.

Our government and others simply do not tell us everything—especially if it is illegal, unethical or immoral.  Obama promised us complete transparency in his presidential campaign, yet the secrets seem to have gotten worse.  Is it any wonder why more people are becoming “conspiracy theorists.” All we want is the TRUTH.  Cover-ups are a conspiracy against the American people.  Which reminds me…if something is already proven, why do we still call it a conspiracy “theory”?

Several polls, including a Gallup Poll, found that more than 50% of the population believes we have never been told the whole truth about 911, JFK, UFOs, or those infamous weapons of mass destruction that made us invade Iraq.  The banks perpetrate mortgage scams, the Bernie Madoff’s of the world pull off unregulated Ponzi schemes, the insurance companies have conspired to deny legitimate health care claims, the pharmaceutical companies have been known to falsify drug testing data, and we the American people are left to try to figure out what is Truth and what Kathy Bates would so adequately say is “cock-a-doody.”

It’s been my experience that conspiracy theorists generally ask questions when not all the facts add up.  They don’t take everything they read in the news or watch on TV as the gospel truth.  They know they have been deceived before and prefer to dig deeper.  They tend to think of themselves as more critical thinkers.  They know that pertinent information is oftentimes conveniently left out.

In fact, a 2013 study by psychologists Michael J. Wood and Karen Douglas of the University of Kent in the UK, suggests that those labeled “conspiracy theorists,” actually appear to be saner than those who accept the official version of contested events.   They were surprised to discover that it is now more conventional to believe so-called conspiracy comments than conventional ones.  They also found that “anti-conspiracy” believers (especially with regard to 911)  often displayed anger and hostility when trying to persuade the conspiracy theorists that they were wrong.  Wood and Douglas found that the negative stereotype of the conspiracy theorist—as a hostile fanatic wedded to the truth of their own fringe theory—instead more accurately describes the people who defend the official account of 911, not those who dispute it.   I don’t know about you, but this definitely gives one food for thought.

But, here’s the real dilemma.  The sad thing about being labeled a conspiracy theorist is that you often have to put friends into “safe” conversation groups.  I heard two friends recently complain how they can’t discuss spirituality with a certain friend or family member, oftentimes avoid politics with another friend, and are very selective about mentioning ET and/or UFO stories altogether.  The categorization process becomes complicated.  You have to remember which topics you can or cannot talk about with which people.  I myself know I can’t talk about a lot of my interests with my sister, while my brother is totally cool with some pretty off-the-wall stuff.  My bicycling buddy, a Republican in a sea of Democratic friends, also added her own frustration with being labeled a “Republican” in the great “blue” State of California.  “I believe in gay rights, abortion, and a lot of stuff other Republicans don’t!” she complained.   Obviously, she also hates negative labeling.  Yet, the truth is we tend to label when other people’s beliefs make us uncomfortable, or worse yet—threaten deeply held values.

Over the years I have learned it’s always better to say “that’s interesting,” when I don’t agree with someone else’s point-of-view.  That’s especially true if I want to avoid a heated debate.  Sometimes I just listen and say nothing, even though I might have to lacerate my tongue to do so.   On the other hand, I’m sure my beliefs don’t always make others feel comfortable either.  But I must confess–I like people who question the “official story” even if they are  conspiracy theorists.   It tells me their brain cells are robust and no where near atrophy.

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Dr. Kathy Forti is a clinical psychologist, inventor of the Trinfinity8 technology, and author of the book, Fractals of God.   amazon.com/author/k