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by Jon Rappoport
December 18, 2012 from JonRappoport Website
Mind control. Mass hypnosis. Operant conditioning. Brain entrainment. That’s
what we’re talking about here.
We’re so conditioned to how television covers life that we rarely step back and take notice. In the case of massive disasters and crimes, network news rules the roost. First, the premiere anchors, who are managing editors of their own broadcasts, give themselves the go signal.
They will leave their comfortable
chairs and travel to the scene of crime.
The anchors lend gravitas.
Their mere presence lets the audience know this
story trumps all other news of the moment. That’s the first hypnotic cue and
suggestion.
Of course, the anchors were not in Newtown, Connecticut, as reporters. They weren’t there to dig up facts. Their physical presence at the Sandy Hook School and in the town was utterly irrelevant. They could have been doing their newscasts from their studios in New York. Or from a broom closet. But much better to be standing somewhere in Newtown. It imparts the sense of crisis to the viewing millions. At the same time, the anchors are also there to give assurance. The subliminal message they transmit is: whatever has happened here is controllable. The audience knows the anchors will provide the meaning and the official voice of the tragedy. The anchors are, in a way, priests, intoning their benediction to the suffering and their elegies to the dead. This is what the audience expects, and this is what they get. This expectation, in fact, is so deep that anything else would be considered an insult, a moral crime. For example, suppose a network suddenly shifted gears and began interviewing police and residents and asking tough questions about contradictions in the official scenario. Suppose that became the primary focus. Suppose the tone became argumentative, in the interest of, God forbid, the truth. In other words, in a jarring shift of perspective, the anchors began asking questions to seek answers. What a concept. No, a priest doesn’t browbeat a parishioner. He takes confession and then offers a route to redemption. But if, by some miracle, these anchors launched a quest for truth, the whole scene would devolve into uncertainty and even chaos.
This is called reporting, a foreign enterprise to these blown-dried kings
and queens of media news.
Those of us reporting online declare there is something amiss when the
second-shooter story is dropped like a hot potato… and we are called
conspiracy theorists.
Get it?
Trying to ask relevant questions becomes conspiracy only because the
major media didn’t do their job in the first place.
It’s called an investigation.
Reporters do that.
Your typical American television viewer would cringe at such demanding
questions. You know why? Because he has been entrained and conditioned by
news anchors to refrain from digging below the surface.
In other words, that
viewer is hypnotized.
If these anchors kept on asking questions like this, do you know what would
happen?
The viewing audience would begin to stir, would begin to break
through their hypnotic programming and wake up.
Yes.
Instead of this kind of talk being consigned to “conspiracy nuts,” it
actually becomes part of the evening news experience. Because reporters
suddenly ask tough questions.
But no. We have to go with grief and shock. We have to lead with it and stay with it. But that is an artificial construct. Yes, of course people in Newtown feel great shock and pain and loss and grief and horror, but the news producers are consciously moving minutes and hours of it through the tube and filtering out everything else. They do this every time one of these events occurs, and so the audience expects it and soaks it in and, in that state of entrainment and hypnosis, the audience doesn’t want anything else…because anything else would BREAK THE FLOW and the spell, and the grief would no longer have the same impact. Newtown is presented as a television event. From the outset, the mood is funereal. It has that tinge and coloration. The audience absorbs it and wants no intrusion on it. This is Matrix programming. The anchor is not only the priest, but also the teacher. He/she shows the audience how to experience the event and what to feel and what to think and how to act. One of the great skills of an anchor is the ability to present the news seamlessly. This is what those big paychecks are for: the blends and segue-ways and the underlying tone of sincerity that bleeds into every detail of what is being reported. That is also hypnotic. It sets up a frequency that moves into the brains of the audience. In those brains, it’s an Acceptance-frequency. It’s the mark of a great news anchor, to be able to transmit that and achieve it.
That’s why he’s been called the Walter Cronkite of the
21st century.
No, no, no, no, no. That would crack the Acceptance-frequency like an egg
and send the evening news to hell in a hand-basket.
The egg not only cracks in that case, the news anchor is suspended the next
day, and the network releases a statement that his “breakdown” on camera was
brought on by stress.
Pharmaceutical companies put him on their “to-do” list. Yet, the questions about the drugs are exactly what a real reporter would ask. Not a “conspiracy theorist.” A reporter, on the scene in Newtown. Anyone who thinks that is absurd and out of bounds is hypnotized, programmed. That’s all there is to it. 'Traditional' media are dying in this country. Their money is drying up. They could revitalize themselves in a New York minute if they really started COVERING stories and waking up their audience, but that’s not on their agenda. They would rather die... They are the hired hands of the elites that own this country. They are the whores sent out every day by their pimps, and they know what their job is and what it isn’t. The direction of elite television news is squeezed down the path of consciously constructing artificial events, for mass consumption experienced in a state of emotional, mental, physical, and spiritual mind-control.
Those
reporters who venture outside that framework are labeled fringe figures on
the margins.
Oh, people say, that is not a reasonable question.
That’s a nutcase
question. That question shouldn’t be asked. Why not? You want the real
answer? Because it destroys the hypnotic frequency that is being delivered
by the television networks. That’s the real answer.
The viewer:
And of course, under those conditions, the very last person who should
interrupt the hypnotic flow is the anchor himself. He’s the one who’s
inducing the hypnosis in the first place.
That tells you the the anchor is quite definitely NOT there to dig up new facts or perspectives himself. Entrainment means: the brain is being bathed in rhythms and frequencies that literally train it to accept the information that is being transmitted at the same time. In the same way, a song can succeed because the melody (carrier frequency) makes the trite lyrics seem important. Entrainment also makes the recipient feel he is part of something larger. This is a key component. The recipient senses he is a member of a collective that is sharing a moment, an experience.
This is what substitutes, in our society, for individual experience and
self-sufficiency.
But this collective is not real community. It only appears and feels that way. It is mass hypnosis. You can find that in Gregorian chants and in sermons. You can find it in political speeches. The brain is bathed in certain harmonies and responds by Accepting. The Globalists’ language is replete with entrainment.
It sounds right, it seems right, but it is delivered to create a collective
instead of a real community.
Take a few minutes and
read Monsanto’s
literature. Read it out loud. Listen to yourself. Try to impart convincing
rhythms to the phrases. All of a sudden, you’re in the flow.
You’re
practicing
entrainment.
This is what network television news does. And we aren’t even talking about the hypnotic effects of the physical signals that deliver the picture to the audience. In a previous article, I pointed out that, if we are to believe the network coverage of the Newtown massacre, there wasn’t one angry outraged man or woman in the town. Because we didn’t see them onscreen. The networks made sure of that. This was a conscious choice on their part.
Sorry, that isn’t part of the coverage.
It would interrupt the entrainment.
Instead, that angry man will be funneled to a grief counselor, who will try
to soothe his outrage.
Events like Newtown are extraordinary teaching moments for television.
Network newscasts display a constellation of emotions that are deemed
“acceptable and appropriate” for the audience to experience. And the
audience is thereby trained to mirror those emotions, to feel them, to
express them, to soak in them.
It’s a closed system. This is how, incidentally, gun control works so well. It’s part of the overall message. The audience, existing inside that closed system, in that state of mass hypnosis, can be pointed to exactly the wrong remedy for the tragedy. All the network anchor has to do is frown and shake his head a little, when the subject of guns arises.
That’s all it takes, and the brains of the
audience suck it in:
The capstone that makes this puerile grand solution seem reasonable is:
That message is also imparted by the big-time network new anchors.
These
kings and queens don’t ask police the tough questions. They refrain from
doing that.
In fact, the anchors ARE surrogate police chiefs. They express what the
police chiefs would, if they had the anchors’ skills.
The anchors do stand-ups in Newtown and give us the absolute best of what the police would if they could.
And in the process, they transmit:
It’s perfect, if you want to be an android...
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