Fear is one of the biggest guns they have in the armory to keep the majority from ripping them apart. It can be used, if you know how. I have a personal relationship with such fear. I got "lucky" (it didn't feel like that then, but hindsight does have benefits, though I'd prefer not to have the knowledge) in how I got to experience it however. I was born in Northern Ireland and spent the first couple of decades growing up during what is now known as "The Troubles". It also had a deep Marxist twist to it as the IRA was founded on Communist social justice ideals. I know it's a cliché after Batman, but I grew up with fear outside of fear of bigger things. When waking up for school and getting dressed, the morning TV news is on telling us everyday that some poor sod had been bombed/shot/beaten because of terrorists at work is normal, fear becomes quite abstract if you take advantage of the view. I mean, people being murdered everyday in a country you could fit into any of the Great Lakes many, many times over isn't something you can ignore. At the same time, you can't mourn for everyone individually, you'd go crazy if you tried. I saw how they used fear to destroy my wee country. I saw the media lie constantly. I saw American MSM romanticizing "the cause" and the donations sent from the good old US of A to fund the Marxist PIRA and INLA. I had a deep mistrust of the US for many years because of that. Looking back (again, ain't hindsight great), 9/11 changed everything. I remember where I was and what I was doing leading up to seeing one of the planes hit on CNN. I remember that feeling in my gut that there was something going on that was bigger than anything I'd witnessed previously. The official story didn't make sense then and makes even less sense now. Instead of focusing on the body count, as from my youth, my mind went to the what's and why's. I watched people around me crumble, as they'd never experienced this before and were in shock and confused, so I knew there was something there I was missing. Fuck... 2000 words. I really need to learn to format in .win. Anyway, back to the point, [THEY] used fear in my case so [they] were the enemy, and vise versa, to distract from the big picture and [THEM]. Fear is a tool to be used when necessary, that's how Law & Order works in part. I find it's a good tool for introspection, to try and understand the fear of the unawake and what is keeping them in slumber. Sorry for the wall of text, I was on a roll. I'll leave it to you guys to decide whether it was a good read. Me? No apologies, it was actually good therapy to get that out.
My personal experiences aren't as wartorn, but I've ended up with a similar outlook. Great insight into the psychology of the subject, especially how it relates to the fear of those unawake.
Unfortunately, it's a lesson it appears one has to learn for oneself. Hence the precipice.
I've taken care of those closest to me in relation to what I know, whether they believe me or not is UTTERLY irrelevant. What those people have though is a basic understanding of what's happening overall, with many potentials. This will go a huge way to helping them to understand as specifics are revealed. Some won't be ready at all mentally when this ends, I've been prepping, wearing my supposed tinfoil hat with pride.
Great read! Fear has power beyond what most can comprehend. 911 was my turning point followed by my kid being injured by a vax that same year. The reasons/stories never added up.
I will prepare as I always have But I refuse to be afraid. Fear strengthens the enemy. Look.what fear did for them in 2020.
Fear is one of the biggest guns they have in the armory to keep the majority from ripping them apart. It can be used, if you know how. I have a personal relationship with such fear. I got "lucky" (it didn't feel like that then, but hindsight does have benefits, though I'd prefer not to have the knowledge) in how I got to experience it however. I was born in Northern Ireland and spent the first couple of decades growing up during what is now known as "The Troubles". It also had a deep Marxist twist to it as the IRA was founded on Communist social justice ideals. I know it's a cliché after Batman, but I grew up with fear outside of fear of bigger things. When waking up for school and getting dressed, the morning TV news is on telling us everyday that some poor sod had been bombed/shot/beaten because of terrorists at work is normal, fear becomes quite abstract if you take advantage of the view. I mean, people being murdered everyday in a country you could fit into any of the Great Lakes many, many times over isn't something you can ignore. At the same time, you can't mourn for everyone individually, you'd go crazy if you tried. I saw how they used fear to destroy my wee country. I saw the media lie constantly. I saw American MSM romanticizing "the cause" and the donations sent from the good old US of A to fund the Marxist PIRA and INLA. I had a deep mistrust of the US for many years because of that. Looking back (again, ain't hindsight great), 9/11 changed everything. I remember where I was and what I was doing leading up to seeing one of the planes hit on CNN. I remember that feeling in my gut that there was something going on that was bigger than anything I'd witnessed previously. The official story didn't make sense then and makes even less sense now. Instead of focusing on the body count, as from my youth, my mind went to the what's and why's. I watched people around me crumble, as they'd never experienced this before and were in shock and confused, so I knew there was something there I was missing. Fuck... 2000 words. I really need to learn to format in .win. Anyway, back to the point, [THEY] used fear in my case so [they] were the enemy, and vise versa, to distract from the big picture and [THEM]. Fear is a tool to be used when necessary, that's how Law & Order works in part. I find it's a good tool for introspection, to try and understand the fear of the unawake and what is keeping them in slumber. Sorry for the wall of text, I was on a roll. I'll leave it to you guys to decide whether it was a good read. Me? No apologies, it was actually good therapy to get that out.
Thanks Pede...welcome to the new idiocracy, I mean “normal”!
It was good therapy to read it as well.
My personal experiences aren't as wartorn, but I've ended up with a similar outlook. Great insight into the psychology of the subject, especially how it relates to the fear of those unawake.
Unfortunately, it's a lesson it appears one has to learn for oneself. Hence the precipice.
Buckle up.
I've taken care of those closest to me in relation to what I know, whether they believe me or not is UTTERLY irrelevant. What those people have though is a basic understanding of what's happening overall, with many potentials. This will go a huge way to helping them to understand as specifics are revealed. Some won't be ready at all mentally when this ends, I've been prepping, wearing my supposed tinfoil hat with pride.
Great read! Fear has power beyond what most can comprehend. 911 was my turning point followed by my kid being injured by a vax that same year. The reasons/stories never added up.