Collectivist mind control: "save the planet"
by Jon Rappoport
"The planet wouldn't need saving if willing prosecutors had
gone after high-level criminals (corporate, banking, war-mongering) with
hammer and tongs. Now, the very people who escaped such prosecution
have emerged as the leaders of the "save the planet" movement. That's
called a clue." (The Underground, Jon Rappoport)
The word "collectivism" sounds old-fashioned today. It's supposed to.
It's supposed to sound like a label from a bygone age when people were combing US government offices for hidden Soviet spies.
Collectivism is tied to other obsolete slogans like "Better
dead than Red" and "America, love it or leave it." In other words, we're
supposed to think collectivism was simply a trendy idea that ran out of
steam.
You know, a bunch of crazy paranoids were warning everybody
the sky was falling, but it wasn't. They yelled COLLECTIVISM IS COMING,
WATCH OUT, but nothing happened.
Well, the truth is, collectivism won its war.
So it changed its name. It became a thousand names behind a thousand masks.
If we win this fight to preserve freedom in America, will
people understand what The Individual means? Or will we they be so
brainwashed that they'll preach and teach freedom for The Group, the
Collective?
Consider the actions and words of the last few presidents. Have any of them made The Individual the basis of their rhetoric?
The answer, of course, is no. And Obama has been the worst of
them in that regard. Obama is, you might say, the natural evolution of
the eradication of The Individual. He's focused all his attention on
groups.
He bemoaned the unemployment rate in "the public sector,"
which is the drone-core of the collective. He emphatically demeaned the
individual entrepreneur ("you didn't build that").
Under Obama, the collective became a messianic force. As if, in its vague and undefined way, it would save us all.
Yet, for every significant enterprise in human history, the individual vision comes first.
It is the launching pad.
The energy and inspiration of one person is the thing without which nothing happens.
Where is this taught in our schools? Where do we hear this in
churches? What corporations explain this? How many parents make this
clear to their children?
The major media certainly don't bother with it. Psychologists
don't study it or comment on it. Who is funding studies on the power
and vision of the free individual?
The Individual is supposedly passe.
An overwhelming number of Americans can no longer conceive of themselves as free and powerful individuals.
I, for one, think about the free and independent individual
every day. The very idea is a North Star that allows a person to
navigate his life.
In uncountable ways, we are being drawn into the orbit of The
Group. One group or another. We are told, directly or subtly, that
everything we do is connected to other people, and that connection is
the defining impulse which shows us what we are. We are THAT and nothing
else.
Why did George Orwell write 1984 about Winston Smith, one
individual? Because he wanted to show the effect of the all-consuming
State on its primary target: one person. Is that the way the book is
read and taught now?
Operation Mind Control, or collectivism, has triumphed so
fully in our time that most people can't imagine themselves as distinct
and separate and free and powerful individuals. They feel guilt when
they try. They feel they are betraying the Mass. They feel they are
breaking the law. They feel they must retreat back to a position of
safety. They feel that, if they step out in front of The Group, they are
losing their innate "religion."
Through devious means, the media twists "individuals" into
"lone individuals," a phrase we're all too familiar with. These are the
mysterious psychopaths who commit vicious crimes.
According to collectivism, to be saved IS to recognize that
one is a cell inside an interdependent collection of cells. That is the
premise. That's the trendy thing to believe.
What do you think Globalism and the New World Order are all
about? They are the apotheosis of The Group, disguised as humanitarian
service to The Good.
This is a cold calculated propaganda operation. It sells
because people, when they become aware of suffering, want to reach out
and end it. That impulse is preyed upon by the Globalist vultures,
twisted, redirected, and harvested.
On a personal level, many individuals become aware they can
discover and invent visions of grand achievements and futures; then they
hesitate; they balk, they feel alone; they don't have the staying power
to rebel against the Mass. They find a group into which they can
retreat. They remain there. They hide from themselves there. They hope
their self-induced amnesia will last. They invent reasons and stories
and myths to explain their retreat. They seek confirmation they've made
the right choice. They find other individuals like themselves, who've
surrendered. They form bonds. They collectivize.
Now we are told the individual's highest aspiration or vision
must be service to the group. Thus the whole matter of "the greatest
life" is presumed to be settled. It's no longer worth re-thinking.
This, of course, is propaganda. In many ways, from many
angles, it's taught and implied in our schools. Children learn to parrot
the appropriate phrases. They utter them proudly.
Look at how "one world striving together" has been used by
Globalists in the last 65 years. We have, for example, the GATT Treaty,
which gave birth to the World Trade Organization. And we have lesser
treaties, like NAFTA and CAFTA, which were designed along the same
lines.
These treaties have led to the enormous outsourcing of jobs
and the flight of industrial factories. As Sir James Goldsmith pointed
out, this is a completely criminal and insane policy. It means that the
industrial countries have had to compete on impossible terms with
countries where workers will produce goods for next to nothing.
It is economic suicide---planned economic suicide. Behind the
psyop, this is the real and brutal face of the slogan, "We're all in
this together on planet Earth."
From the World Trade Organization has come the pernicious
standard called Harmonization. It means that food policy and medical
policy and health policy and trade policy---and eventually military
policy and limited free-speech policy and judicial policy---are all
arranged on an international basis. No more sovereign choices and no
more sovereign nations. Again, this is the real and brutal face of the
collectivist slogan, "We're all in this together on planet Earth."
At the heart of the operation is the premise that the free
and powerful individual, seeking his highest vision, seeking his
greatest achievements, is defunct.
Some people, reading this, will think I'm against any group
action, that I don't believe group action has ever been effective. They
miss my point entirely. I'm not talking about REAL group action. I'm
talking about ENGINEERED group action devised to destroy life, under the
guise of saving it.
And most of all, I'm talking about the individual human being
SURRENDERING to the idea that he is unimportant, that he only counts in
reference to other people, that he has no real power, no real
imagination, no great vision, no great status.
Status ultimately is reserved for the collective.
In my life, I've known people, and I've seen people, who've
launched and built and created enterprises of one kind or another...and
then turned around and preached the primacy of the group.
Instead of standing as an example of what one person can do, a
TRUTHFUL example, they betrayed all that and became advocates for the
collective.
Some of these people have been co-opted, but many just failed
to understand their own psychology. And then there were people who
refused to think of others as individuals:
"Well, yes, I built that, but I know you can't. So I'm here to help you, to put you into the mass, the group, the collective."
Could they be more patronizing?
"Yes, I'm a big person, but you're a little person. Don't worry. I'll show you the way. WE'RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER."
And standing nearby, the real movers and shakers in the Globalist Club are cheering.
They live for the erasure of the individual. And they have lots of friends.
But here's an irreversible clue. They don't have THE INDIVIDUAL.
They never will.
This is why the father of modern propaganda, Edward Bernays,
wrote: "It is sometimes possible to change the attitudes of millions but
impossible to change the attitude of one man."
Consider this idea: a college is formed on the basis of one
question, aimed at each entering student: WHAT DO YOU REALLY WANT TO
CREATE IN YOUR LIFE?
For four years, every student wrestles with that question,
writes about it, talks about it---and every course comes back to that
point of view. History, literature, biology, logic, mathematics---it's
all framed around the student learning and using that learning to answer
the one burning question that will guide his future.
As an individual.
As an individual, shaking off the dead coils of The Collective.
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