Why does the msm have so much influence about what lives rent free in our heads? Brainwashing via subliminal messages (among many others). When we think of subliminal messages we think of the methods they used back in the 1950's and 60's. Example: inserting a single frame of a picture of a box of popcorn into a presentation at a movie theatre to influence food sales. The methods used today are completely different and obvious once you're aware of it.
NLP. Neuro Linguistic Programming. It is a method of using language, both verbal and body language, to strongly influence the thoughts and actions of others. The expert practitioners can use it in what appears to be normal conversation, comments and questions with little notice all while getting the agreement/response they are seeking. Think stage/street hypnotist. The msm are MASTERS of this art. Less than 10 years ago one could find scores of YouTube video's disecting news segments and exploring how it affects the thinking of the masses. There were videos disecting Bill O'Reilly conducting an interview of a guest that exposed exactly what he was saying, how he was saying it, and how it would railroad his guest down the path he wanted. Total control of the conversation. There were many videos like this using other news anchors. And WE could learn it and defend against it. Not any more. Today all you can find about NLP are videos about it being a "self-help program". Recommend dig NLP.
Comments (13)
sorted by:
cause they have for over fifty years. My question to you is: Why have you not turned them all off including NPR stations......they are bad for emotional and mental health....
They don't live in my head, but people continuously post the same articles from them over and over on these forums.
Not to sound backwards or anything, but I am evermore glad I did not have access to cable or satellite TV most of my adult life. It was both unnecessary expenditure and I felt the programming was not worth renting free space in my head. I did pick up many current events vicariously so I wasn't completely out of touch. Now I understand why I didn't necessarily fit in with the "popular" crowd since I didn't participate in their small talk and chats about politics, religion, celebrities, or sports. You know what? The way this ol' world is heading, I appreciate my differentness.
That's a blanket statement full of stupidity. Age doesn't affect our understanding. Almost everything in computing was invented by my age group.
I've been studying computers for 50 years. I built my last computer from scratch. I'll build the next one from scratch as well. I need more power and ability than a cheap Chromebook or smartphone can ever provide. I know enough to have a billfold with built-in RFID protection so no one can steal my card info with a portable scanner. Do you?
I was creating MP3 files before you could talk. I was creating music files before you were born. I cruise the internet, write books using the most powerful word processing program on the market, and work on my collection of music. I have more music files on my system than some of the online music providers.
I rewrote software to make it Y2K compliant in 1999 and kept my company from failing, as the original software was legally necessary but would fail in 2000, and the original writers couldn't get us new software in time.
So I understand the computer perfectly well, probably much better than you do.
BTW, you left off the period. I guess you don't understand the computer and how a simple grammar checker could have prevented that error.
I'm older, I'm not hooked on television, and I do know how to surf the internet (by 1996). Most of the people in my age group that I know can surf the internet fine, and they know the MSM is lying. I don't even have a TV. The older people who don't know the internet and only listen to MSM came before the baby boom. I have refuted every one of your made-up points.
So you obviously have your generations confused and don't care about truth.
This is my last attempt to educate you. Bye.
NONE
prove it. show us a single frame of a box of popcorn in an ad and the correlation to increased sales.