MY point is the ad makes perfect sense for the time. I think ad copywriters have since the first ad used catch phrases they pick up here and there without any particular understanding of the meaning. Whatever they did mean, to say the ad makes no sense ignores the fact that it makes absolute sense to women who are cooking on a woodstove, and there were many. Not just on farms, either. The great aunt I mentioned lived in the middle of a city.
I can see where this ONE INSTANCE could be seen as a catch phrase, but 1941/42 every newspaper spouting the same phrase. I just put this one up to show the forum.
The term "NWO" was first used by the League of Nations after WW1.
Look at the date again. 1941. Smack dab in the middle of yet another world War. Also when America decided to jump in and join the Allies.
No real mystery of why so many papers using the phrase if you understand how and why the phrase originated. Also handy to know what was going on in the world at that time. 🙂
I don't think anyone here is saying that advertising a gas range didn't make sense. What doesn't make sense are the references to a "New World Order," which come across as odd and forced in this context.
Ad copywriters don't usually throw in random catch phrases. They're more likely to agonize over the best choice of words and images, doing multiple revisions and passing their drafts through multiple hands, as they have very little space to create an impression and sell their product. They also often have talking points their boss or clients want included and have to work those in.
We know the Luciferian cabal plans long-term, as in hundreds of years. We know their goal is a new world order. We know they control much of the media and messaging around us and have for many years. We know they believe in planting seeds in our heads, usually in ways we won't overtly recognize. They believe this alters our minds subconsciously, makes us less resistant to their goals, helps their plans come to fruition, and absolves them of guilt for their crimes, as they've "told us" what's coming and we haven't stopped them.
The cabal might very well have used ads and headlines like this to get us used to the idea of a new world order as something positive. After all, there was a world war in progress, which some believe was planned, created and executed to be one of three world wars that would move to a new world order under the command of the Luciferians. (See Albert Pike's 1871 letter.)
Did your grandma start calling her home the new world order? That's the point. That doesn't make sense.
MY point is the ad makes perfect sense for the time. I think ad copywriters have since the first ad used catch phrases they pick up here and there without any particular understanding of the meaning. Whatever they did mean, to say the ad makes no sense ignores the fact that it makes absolute sense to women who are cooking on a woodstove, and there were many. Not just on farms, either. The great aunt I mentioned lived in the middle of a city.
I can see where this ONE INSTANCE could be seen as a catch phrase, but 1941/42 every newspaper spouting the same phrase. I just put this one up to show the forum.
The post and meaning are crystal clear. Some things cannot be explained to tards or trolls,
The term "NWO" was first used by the League of Nations after WW1.
Look at the date again. 1941. Smack dab in the middle of yet another world War. Also when America decided to jump in and join the Allies.
No real mystery of why so many papers using the phrase if you understand how and why the phrase originated. Also handy to know what was going on in the world at that time. 🙂
Your objectivity is great but ... it still sounds weird to say my kitchen inms a new world order.
I don't think anyone here is saying that advertising a gas range didn't make sense. What doesn't make sense are the references to a "New World Order," which come across as odd and forced in this context.
Ad copywriters don't usually throw in random catch phrases. They're more likely to agonize over the best choice of words and images, doing multiple revisions and passing their drafts through multiple hands, as they have very little space to create an impression and sell their product. They also often have talking points their boss or clients want included and have to work those in.
We know the Luciferian cabal plans long-term, as in hundreds of years. We know their goal is a new world order. We know they control much of the media and messaging around us and have for many years. We know they believe in planting seeds in our heads, usually in ways we won't overtly recognize. They believe this alters our minds subconsciously, makes us less resistant to their goals, helps their plans come to fruition, and absolves them of guilt for their crimes, as they've "told us" what's coming and we haven't stopped them.
The cabal might very well have used ads and headlines like this to get us used to the idea of a new world order as something positive. After all, there was a world war in progress, which some believe was planned, created and executed to be one of three world wars that would move to a new world order under the command of the Luciferians. (See Albert Pike's 1871 letter.)