Lakewood Public Library 
Wild Ideas Lecture Series -- The Battle  for Your Mind 
Propaganda, PR and PsyOps 
Quotron 
presented by Kenneth  Warren and John Guscott 
October 15, 2000  
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Propositions  in Play
 "No enlightened person wishes to be duped by his desires, his fantasies, his  glands." Gordon W. Allport
 "All coercive techniques involve, on one level or another, frightening, or  threatening, or intimidating a person, so that they move into survival mode."  Douglas Rushkoff
 "If we understand the mechanisms and motives of the group mind, it is now  possible to control and regiment the masses according to our will without their  knowing it." Edward L. Bernays
 "Everytime you watch someone else doing something(or even starting to do  something), the corresponding mirror neuron might fire in your brain..." Arleen  Raymond
 "I think the subject which will be of most importance politically is mass  psychology....Although this science will be diligently studied, it will be  rigidly confined to the governing class. The populace will not be allowed to  know how its convictions were generated." Bertrand Russell 
 "What we observe in the population today are the three destructive symptoms  of persons whose minds are controlled by alien forces: 1. Amnesia, i.e. loss of  memory. 2. Abulia, i.e. loss of will. 3. Apathy, i.e. loss of interest in events  vital to one's own health and survival." Michael A. Hoffman II
 "It would not be impossible to prove with sufficient repetition and  psychological understanding of the people concerned that a square is in fact a  circle. They are mere words and words can be molded until they clothe ideas in  disguise." - Joseph Goebbels
 "We shall assume that what each man does is based not on direct and certain  knowledge, but on pictures made by himself or given to him...But what is  propaganda, if not the effort to alter the picture to which men respond, to  substitute one social pattern for another?" - Walter Lippmann
 "The notion of rational man, capable of thinking and living according to  reason, of controlling his passions and living according to scientific patterns,  of choosing freely between good and evil--all this seems opposed to the secret  influences, the mobilizations of myths, the swift appeals to the irrational, so  characteristic of propaganda." - Jacques Ellul
 "There are no facts." - Michel Foucault
 "You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you mad." - Aldous  Huxley
 Propaganda
 Context and Definitions
 "If you think about how you think, you will find your mind is made of  memories, facts, and that sort of thing; you picked these up through continual  reinforcement... Using a computer metaphor, your mind is hardware (the grey  matter, providing you with senses, nerve endings, neurons) and software  (combined from that odd core of your being that is doing the reflecting, and the  material it is reflecting upon, kind of like a computer program and its data).  That isn't the whole story, of course; there is an unidentified extra component,  the 'wetware,' that gives you free will, volition, self-awareness. We know next  to nothing about how this piece works; it appears to be an odd combination of  chaotic and stochastic processes, transcending both. About the only thing we  know for certain about the human mind is that we haven't even begun to utilize  it to its full potential." Michael Wilson, from: "Memetic Engineering PsyOps and  Viruses for the Wetware"
 Propaganda - "systematic manipulation of public opinion, generally by the use  of symbols such as flags, monuments, oratory, and publications. Modern  propaganda is distinguished from other forms of communication in that it is  consciously and deliberately used to influence group attitudes; all other  functions are secondary. Thus, almost any attempt to sway public opinion,  including lobbying, commercial advertising, and missionary work, can be broadly  construed as propaganda." Columbia Encyclopedia
 Propaganda - "The deliberate attempt to influence mass attitudes on  controversial subjects by the use of symbols rather than force. 2. A systematic  effort to persuade a body of people to support or adopt a particular product,  opinion, attitude, or course of action. Propaganda and Persuasion Techniques A  Guide to Identifying Manipulative Information by Virginia Stewart, M.Ed.
 "Words are the new weapons, satellites the new artillery. . . . Caesar had  his officers; Napoleon had his armies. I have my divisions: TV, news,  magazines." -- Archvillain Elliot Carver to James Bond in Tomorrow Never Dies  
 "As generally understood, propaganda is opinion expressed for the purpose of  influencing actions of individuals or groups... Propaganda thus differs  fundamentally from scientific analysis. The propagandist tries to "put something  across," good or bad. The scientist does not try to put anything across; he  devotes his life to the discovery of new facts and principles. The propagandist  seldom wants careful scrutiny and criticism; his object is to bring about a  specific action. The scientist, on the other hand, is always prepared for and  wants the most careful scrutiny and criticism of his facts and ideas. Science  flourishes on criticism. Dangerous propaganda crumbles before it." Alfred McLung  Lee & Elizabeth Bryant Lee, from: The Fine Art of Propaganda
 "Propaganda seeks to induce action, adherence, and as little thought as  possible. According to propaganda, it is useless, even harmful for man to think  .... Action must come directly from the depths of the unconscious ..... This is  the basic condition of the political organization of the modern world, and  propaganda is the instrument to attain this effect. An example that shows the  radical devaluation of thought is the transformation of words in propaganda;  there, language, the instrument of the mind, becomes "pure sound," a symbol  directly evoking feelings and reflexes. This is one of the most serious  disociations that propaganda causes. Propaganda sometimes deliberately separates  from man's real world the verbal world that it creates; it tends to destroy  man's conscience" Jacques Ellul, from Propaganda: The Formation of Men's  Attitudes
 "It is the emergence of mass media which makes possible the use of propaganda  techniques on a societal scale. The orchestration of press, radio and television  to create a continuous, lasting and total environment renders the influence of  propaganda virtually unnoticed precisely because it creates a constant  environment. Mass media provides the essential link between the individual and  the demands of the technological society." Jacques Ellul, from Propaganda: The  Formation of Men's Attitudes
 "... every day we are bombarded with one persuasive communication after  another. These appeals persuade not through the give-and-take of argument and  debate, but through the manipulation of symbols and of our most basic human  emotions. For better or worse, ours is an age of propaganda." Anthony Pratkanis  and Elliot Aronson, Age of Propaganda: The Everyday Use and Abuse of Persuasion  
 "Our contemporaries only see the presentations which are given them by the  press, the radio, propaganda, and publicity. . . . In his eyes, a fact becomes  true when he has read an account of it in the paper, and he measures its  importance by the size of the headlines!" Jacques Ellul, from: The Presence of  the Kingdom
 "Propagandists love short-cuts -- particularly those which short-circuit  rational thought. They encourage this by agitating emotions, by exploiting  insecurities, by capitalizing on the ambiguity of language, and by bending the  rules of logic." Aaron Delwiche, from: "Why Think About Propaganda?
 Categories of propaganda techniques are: "1. Characteristics of the content  self-evident -No additional information is required to recognize the  characteristics of this type of propaganda. "Name calling" and the use of  slogans are techniques of this nature. 2. Additional information required to be  recognized - Additional information is required by the target or analyst for the  use of this technique to be recognized. "Lying" is an example of this technique.  The audience or analyst must have additional information in order to know  whether a lie is being told. 3. Evident only after extended output - "Change of  pace" is an example of this technique. Neither the audience nor the analyst can  know that a change of pace has taken place until various amounts of propaganda  have been brought into focus. 4. Nature of the arguments used - An argument is a  reason, or a series of reasons, offered as to why the audience should behave,  believe, or think in a certain manner. An argument is expressed or implied. 5.  Inferred intent of the originator - This technique refers to the effect the  propagandist wishes to achieve on the target audience. "Divisive" and "unifying"  propaganda fall within this technique. It might also be classified on the basis  of the effect it has on an audience." Dorje Carl, from "Propaganda Techniques"  
 "The five propaganda techniques generally used in advertisements: a.  Bandwagon: persuading people to do something by letting them know others are  doing it; b. Testimonial: using the words of a famous person to persuade you; c.  Transfer: using the names or pictures of famous people, but not direct  quotations; d. Repetition: the product name is repeated at least four times; e.  Emotional words: words that will make you feel strongly about someone or  something." Lorraine Tanaka
 "Command propaganda" seeks an immediate, specific response: NOW. Most  commercial advertising does this. In much political advertising,* persuaders  also use this same 5-part pattern of "the pitch": Attention-getting starts with  simple "name recognition"; Desire-Stimulating refers to the issues discussed (if  any), the social (not individual) benefits promised; Urgency and Response focus  on a simple act, "Vote for Me. Now." Thus, election campaign rhetoric is a form  of command propaganda. "Command Propaganda and Conditioning"
 "Conditioning propaganda" seeks a future response: LATER. Conditioning  propaganda is designed to mold public opinions, basic assumptions, attitudes,  beliefs, myths, and world views, on a long-term basis, as the necessary prelude,  climate, or atmosphere for eventually getting a response, later. Observers  disagree on terms here: Jacques Ellul, the French scholar, in the classic study,  Propaganda, called this "sub-propaganda"; the Nazi leader, Goebbels, called it  "basic propaganda"; the Soviet leader, Lenin, called it "political education."  Recently, the terms "consciousness raising" and "awareness building" have been  used by various cause groups (anti-abortionists, feminists, environmentalists,  civil rights) in the United States. And, everyone argues over the distinctions  and borderlines between "conditioning propaganda" and "indoctrination" and  "education." However, some political and social command propaganda uses a  related 4-part pattern (the "pep talk") which not only calls for immediate  action, but also calls for "committed, collective action": to join a group, to  fight for a cause." "Command Propaganda and Conditioning"
 Agencies and Applications
 Since WWII the U.S. government's national security campaigns have overlapped  with the commercial ambitions of major advertisers and media companies and with  the aspirations of an enterprising stratum of university administrators and  professors. Military intelligence and propaganda agencies such a the Department  of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency helped bankroll substantially all  of the post – WWII generation's research into techniques of persuasion, opinion  measurement interrogation, political and military mobilization, propagation of  ideology and related questions. The persuasion studies, in particular, provided  much of he scientific underpinning for modern advertising and motivational  techniques." Christopher Simpson, from: The Science of Coercion
 "What is the propaganda model and how does it work? The crucial structural  factors derive from the fact that the dominant media are firmly imbedded in the  market system. They are profit-seeking businesses, owned by very wealthy people  (or other companies); they are funded largely by advertisers who are also  profit-seeking entities, and who want their ads to appear in a supportive  selling environment. The media are also dependent on government and major  business firms as information sources, and both efficiency and political  considerations, and frequently overlapping interests, cause a certain degree of  solidarity to prevail among the government, major media, and other corporate  businesses. Government and large non-media business firms are also best  positioned (and sufficiently wealthy) to be able to pressure the media with  threats of withdrawal of advertising or TV licenses, libel suits, and other  direct and indirect modes of attack." Edward S. Herman, from: "The propaganda  model revisited" Monthly Review, July, 1996 
 "Nazism, the myth of Germanic racial superiority, is an interesting look at a  common historical occurrence. Hitler provided the skeleton, but Goebbels and the  Propaganda Ministry put flesh on the bones. Use of constant reinforcement,  triggering an amazing number of cultural responses such as 'noble sacrifice' and  'total commitment,' use of the 'elite chosen by God' metaphor, indoctrination of  the young, all were a masterful implementation by a natural talent. The meme,  however, had the roots of its destruction built in, with non-tolerance, the  inability to conceive of losing, and the perpetration of unspeakable acts as  side effects that combined to kill off those infected. Nazism also gives an  example in recent history of a successful meme actually managing to become an  operational paradigm for continuing generations." Michael Wilson, from: "Memetic  Engineering PsyOps and Viruses for the Wetware"
 "Jacques Ellul, author of "Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes"  (1965) defines psychological warfare like this -- "the propagandist is dealing  with an adversary whose morale he seeks to destroy by psychological means so  that the opponent begins to doubt the validity of his beliefs and actions." "The  incestuous relationship of the Monopoly Media Cartel and psychological warfare  has a long history. Veterans of World War II, for example, the US Army's  Psychological Warfare Division, became the Cold War's media giants. OSS agent  William S. Paley became a CBS executive. C.D. Jackson worked at Time/Life. W.  Phillips Davison became a Rand Corporation think-tanker. William Casey was an  executive at Capital Cities, which merged with ABC and subsequently devoured by  Disney. Casey himself, of course, became Director of the CIA. In other words,  when former intelligence operatives get a new job in the media, does their  psychological warfare ever stop? Mind control by mass media manipulation is just  another variation of the Hegelian Dialectic, the concept that "conflict creates  history." The theory is simple -- if you control the conflict, you control the  outcome. In other words, an existing force (the thesis) generates an opposing  force (the antithesis) and the conflict between the two creates the final effect  (the synthesis). " Uri Dowbenko, from "The General's Daughter: Psyops & the  Military Career Criminal" 
 "The alchemical processing of humans is performed with the props of time and  space: what happens ritually in a series of significant places can "bend"  reality. That's what "wicker" means in its most subterranean signification.  Wicca (witchcraft) is just a description of the end-result of the function of  bending reality. How is reality bent? By the placing of ritual props in  ceremonial places. These places exist both in the mind and in physical space."  Michael A. Hoffman II, from: "Profiling the FBI's Unabom Charade"
 Messages and Targets
 "The average American is exposed to at least three thousand ads every day and  will spend three years of his or her life watching television commercials." Jean  Kilbourne, from: Deadly Persuasion
 Dell Computer and Web PC - (ca. January, 2000) Different people speak in  turn. One says, "I was born to be bombarded by information." Another says, "I  was born to turn my mind over to the web." --Nobody was born to be bombarded by  information, or to turn their mind over to anything or anyone. A truly  disgusting and Big Brotherish ad." Mark Seely, from "Propaganda Watch It's in  the commercials Second Edition" 
 "Few Americans, however, know of a hidden government effort to shoehorn  anti-drug messages into the most pervasive and powerful billboard of all --  network television programming." Daniel Forbes, from "Prime-time propaganda How  the White House secretly hooked network TV on its anti-drug message"
 "OnStar - (ca. January and February, 2000) A married couple talks about an  incident where they were driving through the desert, got a flat tire, and the  ground was crawling with rattlesnakes. They pushed the "OnStar" button on the  car's console, and "within seconds the OnStar advisor pinpointed our location  and sent a tow truck... called the paramedics..." The announcer says, "The one  touch connection to people who can help." A caption on the screen reads,  "Wherever you go, here we are." --You bet they are. What they didn't tell you  was that they knew your location even before you pressed that button.This ad is  rumored to be the first step in the establishment's plan to put a tracking  device in every car." Mark Seely, from "Propaganda Watch It's in the commercials  Second Edition" 
 "In the summer of 1959, just before McCloy took his family for an extended  trip to Europe, C.D. Jackson wrote to remind McCloy that later that summer a  World Youth Festival was scheduled to take place in Vienna. Jackson asked McCloy  to contribute an article, perhaps on the "benign and constructive aspects" of  the U.S. occupation of Germany. The piece would appear in a daily newspaper to  be published in Vienna in conjunction with the festival. McCloy agreed, and the  article was published (in five languages) in a newspaper distributed by a  twenty-five-year-old Smith graduate named Gloria Steinen... McCloy's connection  to Steinem went beyond contributing an article to the propaganda operation of  which she was an editor in Vienna. Late in 1958, he and Jackson had discussed  how the United States should respond to the expected Soviet propaganda blitz in  Vienna. Previous gatherings of this kind had always been held in Moscow, East  Berlin, or other cities in Eastern Europe. These events were major propaganda  circuses, and the CIA was determined, in the words of Cord Meyer, a career CIA  officer, 'to compete more effectively with this obviously successful Communist  apparatus." Kai Bird, from The Chairman: John J. McCloy and the Making of the  American Establishment (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992), pp. 483-84, 727  as quoted by Daniel Brandt in "Gloria Steinem and the CIA"
 "Lynne Cheney describes an incident at Vassar College where several male  students were charged and then found innocent of date rape. Afterward, assistant  dean Catherine Comins declared of the men: "They have a lot of pain, but it is  not a pain I would necessarily have spared them. I think it ideally initiates a  process of self-exploration. ‘How do I see women?’ ‘If I didn’t violate her,  could I have?’ ‘Do I have the potential to do to her what they say I did?’" Two  University of Pennsylvania instructors explicitly justify such strategies in the  Journal of Social History. "We are all engaged in writing a kind of propaganda,"  they insist. "Rather than believe in the absolute truth of what we are writing,  we must believe in the moral or political position we are taking with it." Karl  Zinsmeister, from "Propaganda in America?"
 "Disinformation rules in The Siege. Here are the most obvious propaganda  factoids. 1. Demonizing the Militia. Continuing the mainstream-media propaganda,  Denzel Washington asks his fellow feds in the FBI office, "You think it's  militia?" "Not their style," they answer, as if most militas were capable of  "terrorism" without the active participation by undercover CIA, FBI, or BATF  agent provocateurs. 2. Demonizing the Internet. "Everybody on the Internet knows  explosives," says Washington, spreading the lie about how the Internet is a tool  of subversion and therefore must be controlled. Department of Justice has  lobbied long and hard for anti-internet, anti-cryptography legislation. 3.  Demonizing Cash. "Where does a guy like you come up with ten thousand dollars?"  the FBI man berates the Arab suspect, implying that cash anywhere is immediately  suspect. According to US State Propaganda, only "terrorists" or "money  launderers" use cash. This reinforces the suspicion in moviegoers' minds that  only "criminals" would have any concerns about privacy." Uri Dowbenko, from:  "The Siege: PsyOps Movie Prepares U.S. for Martial Law"
 PR
 Industry History and Profile
 "The PR industry employs 200,000 people in the US. The PR industry in the UK  employs more than 48,000 people, most of them in London. While in Australia  there are 2,400 full-time members of the Public Relations Institute." "The Rise  of Corporate Propaganda", new internationalist issue 314 - July 1999"
 "...what makes advertising and PR work is that people see their own personal  needs or interests being stoked, and ... unless you acknowledge the appeal of  this stuff — its eroticism — and the self-interest of the receiver of the  message, it's like presenting a machine without anything driving it; there's no  sense of what propels the apparatus." Stuart Ewen
 "An estimated $1.4 trillion is spent every year marketing goods and services  worldwide." Kim Cassino, American Demographics, November 1997. 
 "The first wave of PR strategy... is... rational reportage...laying out facts  to persuade people the corporate position was in their best interest. It wasn’t  particularly successful. Meanwhile, another intellectual tradition began to  raise its head in the late nineteenth century. It has as its founder a French  sociologist named Gustav Le Bon who wrote in 1895 a book called The Crowd: A  Study of the Popular Mind. Le Bon was an anguished French middle-class academic  who saw the growth of democratic politics and the old systems of hierarchy and  deference breaking down. Particularly after the Paris Commune of 1871 he felt  that the mob at any moment could seize society and destroy all he held sacred.  Le Bon starts to examine the social psychology of the crowd. For him the crowd  is not driven by rational argument, but by its spinal cord. It responds solely  to emotional appeals and is incapable of thought or reason. Somebody interested  in leading the crowd needs to appeal not to logic but to unconscious motivation.  For Le Bon, the most effective way to do this is through the use of images. In a  period of great social turmoil Le Bon’s ideas began to have a tremendous impact.  The Crowd was available in 19 languages a year after publication. In the US it  influenced everyone from Teddy Roosevelt to the founders of the modern PR  movement. By the First World War rational journalistic PR gave way to a  propaganda designed to pluck people’s heartstrings." Stuart Ewen
 "By World War I, middle-class fears of the rising tide of immigrants and the  social turbulence borne on their wake were overtaking the progressive agenda;  the Enlightenment faith in a reasoning "public," susceptible to arguments  founded on fact, was giving way to a vision of the masses as an irrational,  unmanageable "crowd." Informed by social science, public relations emerged as a  tool for controlling cultural chaos and maintaining the status quo." Mark Dery,  from "Hidden Persuaders"
 "PR was originally a tool for damage control or crisis management. If a  company committed a wrongdoing or had some other disaster on its hands, it would  employ PR defensively to save face. Managing image perception (or "manufacturing  consent," to use the words of PR pioneer/pollster Walter Lippmann) soon became a  much more active process. Now crisis management is but a small subset of the  ever-expanding field of public relations." Carrie McLaren
 "Press releases were invented by public-relations expert Ivy Lee in the early  years of the twentieth century in an effort to control media coverage of railway  accidents for his client, Pennsylvania Railway. He decided that if the press was  going to report the accidents it would be better to make sure they reported them  from the company point of view. The strategy was so successful that by the late  1940s almost half the news was based on press releases from public-relations  departments and firms." Sharon Beder, from "The Best Coverage Money Can Buy"
 "The daily tonnage output of propaganda and publicity... has become an  important force in American life. Nearly half of the contents of the best  newspapers is derived from publicity releases; nearly all the contents of lesser  papers... is directly or indirectly the product of PR departments." Fortune  magazine 1949 as cited by Sharon Beder in Global Spin
 "Edward L. Bernays...became one of the most influential pioneers of American  public relations...In the twenties, Bernays fathered the link between corporate  sales campaigns and popular social causes, when-while working for the American  Tobacco Company-he persuaded women's rights marchers in New York City to hold up  Lucky Strike cigarettes as symbolic "Torches of Freedom." In October of 1929,  Bernays also originated the now familiar "global media event," when he dreamed  up "Light's Golden Jubilee," a worldwide celebratory spectacle commemorating the  fiftieth anniversary of the electric light bulb, sponsored-behind-the-scenes-by  the General Electric Corporation." Stuart Ewen, "Visiting Edward Bernays" from  PR!: A Social History of Spin
 "The Torches of Freedom campaign was a classic instance of using sexual  liberation as a form of control. It proposed addiction as a form of freedom. In  this, it was an early version of the Virginia Slims, “You’ve Come a Long Way,  Baby” campaign, which made repeated reference to the suffragette movement as a  way of associating cigarettes with freedom...All the gullible consumer saw was  women wanting to be free, whereas in reality the women who marched in the parade  smoking their Luckies were being manipulated by the Tobacco Industry into a sort  of bondage that was both literal, in terms of physical addiction, and moral in  the sense that it was motivated by a subliminal understanding of sexual  liberation." E. Michael Jones, Ph.D., from: "The Torches of Freedom Campaign:  Behaviorism, Advertising, and the Rise of the American Empire"
 "Bernays regarded Uncle Sigmund as a mentor, and used Freud's insights into  the human psyche and motivation to design his PR campaigns, while also trading  on his famous uncle's name to inflate his own stature. There is, however, a  striking paradox in the relationship between the two. Uncle Sigmund's "talking  cure" was designed to unearth his patients' unconscious drives and hidden  motives, in the belief that bringing them into conscious discourse would help  people lead healthier lives. Bernays, by contrast, used psychological techniques  to mask the motives of his clients, as part of a deliberate strategy aimed at  keeping the public unconscious of the forces that were working to mold their  minds." John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton on The Father of Spin: Edward L.  Bernays & The Birth of PR
 "The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and  opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society...Those who  manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government  which is the true ruling power of our country. . . . In almost every act of our  daily lives, whether in the sphere of politics or business, in our social  conduct or our ethical thinking, we are dominated by the relatively small number  of persons . . . who understand the mental processes and social patterns of the  masses. It is they who pull the wires which control the public mind." Edward  Bernays, from: Propaganda
 Applications and Effects
 "By initiating the story, PR people are better able to shape the angle it  gets told from and determine which people get interviewed. The ultimate  pre-packaged news is the video news release. This is sent to TV stations and  often aired with little change or indication to the audience that what they are  watching is not independent reporting. Most broadcasters, whether in Europe or  the US, make use of these releases in putting together the news. Sharon Beder,  from "The Best Coverage Money Can Buy"
 "...public relations, broadly defined, includes advertising. The difference  being that, while advertising appears as an explicit commercial message, good PR  is invisible. If PR is done right, you can't tell it's PR, it just looks like  good business." Carrie McLaren
 "The vast increase in corporate and government PR worldwide means that those  with power are falling over themselves to let us in on the good things they are  doing for us... It’s an enterprise whose collective purpose is to ‘administer’  democracy, eliminating risks for clients. The key ‘project’ is not to reform  reality, but to manage our perceptions of it." Richard Swift, from "Mindgames  It’s just a short step from political propaganda to corporate public relations"  
 "The powerful techniques of coercion -- from Carnegie's classic How to Win  Friends and Influence People to Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) to the  diabolical CIA Interrogation Manual -- have poisoned our lives. All personal  interactions, from our daily workday encounters to our most intimate  relationships, have been tagged, even perverted, by the meta-language of  "sales." Uri Dowbenko, from "Media, Manipulation and the Cult of Consumerism An  Interview with Douglas Rushkoff" 
 ."The logic is clear -- propaganda is to a democracy what the bludgeon is to  a totalitarian state and that's wise and good because again the common interests  elude the bewildered herd, they cant figure them out. The public relations  industry not only took this ideology on very explicitly but also acted on it,  that's a huge industry, spending hundreds of..by now probably on the order of a  billion dollars a year on it or something and its commitment all along was to  controlling the public mind. "Chomsky on Propaganda"
 "Using the latest communications technologies and polling techniques, as well  as an array of high-level political connections, PR flacks routinely "manage"  issues for government and corporate clients and "package" them for public  consumption. The result is a "democracy" in which citizens are turned into  passive receptacles of "disinfotainment" and "advertorials" and in which critics  of the status quo are defined as ignorant meddlers and/or dangerous outsiders."  Carmelo Ruiz, from Burson-Marsteller: PR For the New World Order"
 "Founded in 1923, Hill & Knowlton (H&K) are an international public  relations company...H&K... fabricated the story that `Iraqi soldiers had  removed 312 babies from their incubators and left them to die on the cold  hospital floor of Kuwait City'... The story was first reported to the London  Daily Telegraph (September 5th, 1990) by exiled Kuwaiti housing minister and  member of CFK Yahya al-Sumait. Because of the high emotional content of the  story, it was repeated globally by much of the media, none of whom adequately  checked the source... `the senior account people on the Kuwaiti account included  Craig Fuller, Bush's former chief of staff when Bush was Vice President'. Using  this connection, H&K set up a hearing with the Congressional Human Rights  caucus on October 10th 1990 where they produced `Nayirah', a 15-year Kuwaiti who  gave the following statement: 'I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital  with guns, and go into the room where 15 babies were in incubators. They took  the babies out of the incubators, took the incubators, and left the babies on  the cold floor to die.'..According to MacArthur (1993), H&K 'made a  brilliant little video news release out of it, which they beamed all over the  world. It was on NBC Nightly News and millions and millions of people saw this'.  This story was then presented to the United Nations Security Council during an  audio-visual presentation on the 27th November 1990. In addition to `Nayirah',  seven other witnesses were produced, five of whom 'coached by Hill &  Knowlton - had used false names without saying they were doing so' ...Nayirah  was, in fact, 'the daughter of the Kuwaiti Ambassador to the United States' (1),  and had been coached by Lauri Fitz-Pegado to deliver the testimony which  (according to Strauber & Rampton) 'even the Kuwaitis' own investigators  later confirmed was false'. Not only had she never seen the atrocity she had  alleged to, but had never been to the hospital, much less worked there." Darl  Turner, from "Hill & Knowlton: Exporting Propaganda Engineering Warfare  through Public Relations" 
 "Advertising at its best is making people feel that without their product,  you're a loser," explained Nancy Shalek, president of the Shalek Agency." Gary  Ruskin, from: "Why They Whine: How Corporations Prey on Our Children" 
 More than anything, they want your children's minds. "Kids marketing in  general is becoming more sophisticated," says Julie Halpin, CEO of Gepetto  Group, which specializes in marketing to kids. It is a competition for what she  calls "share of mind." Gary Ruskin, from: "Why They Whine: How Corporations Prey  on Our Children" 
 ‘‘Persuasion, by its definition, is subtle. The best PR ends up looking like  news. You never know when a PR agency is being effective; you’ll just find your  views slowly shifting." A PR executive
 "You have pollsters and demographers going around asking people questions,  usually more about what they feel than what they think. From that fairly  fragmentary data they put together an agglomeration called ‘public opinion’."  Stuart Ewen
 "It was in the post-War period that the PR industry, the advertising  industry, the press agent industry, what the psychologist Robert Shalldini calls  ‘the compliance industries’, really took off. These things grew exponentially in  the 1920s in the US and provide the world with a model – and the world of course  includes Germany. Goebbels himself was a reader of the work of Edward Bernays.  Bernays was Freud’s nephew on both sides of his family. Here is a guy for whom  the idea of the unconscious was his mother’s milk. What makes Bernays important  is that he is the first PR guy to apply social psychology strategically and use  theories of the unconscious in propaganda technique. Bernays is no mere  theorist. He put his ideas to work for a number of corporations as well as for  government." Stuart Ewen
 ":... to make the transition from effective policy interlocutor to effective  public communicator, it is essential to shift from issues-based communications  to stories-based communications. There are no issues-oriented media with any  broad appeal, and the selling of complex issues coverage is a difficult task in  any event because it contains little or no news value. Good stories, on the  other hand, go around the world in minutes. That's the way adversaries play.  That's the way industry must play." Leaked Document on Europabio PR Strategy"  
 "The 1930s and then the 1960s were periods in which the challenge to the  business system became widespread. If you want to see the flowering of corporate  public relations strategies look at the decade following those periods. After  World War Two a kind of gung-ho corporate public-relations strategy tries to  present the private business system as the quintessence of the American Way – a  kind of commercialistic rendition of democracy. This became almost a national  ideology used to roll back policies and ideas that came out of the 1930s New  Deal – for example, the very idea that government might compete with business by  providing public housing. In the 1960s people began to wonder if democracy was  being violated by a destabilized business system. In the 1970s and 1980s, with  the triumph of Reagan and Thatcherism, there comes to fruition a set of national  public relations strategies catalyzed by the political issues of the Sixties."  Stuart Ewen
 Perhaps the biggest – and certainly the most expensive – PR effort on a  Southern issue was the campaign undertaken by the Wexler Group for the  ratificaction of the Northern American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Mexico  in 1993. Wexler worked for a coalition of Fortune 500 companies to reassure a  worried US public about job losses and environmental deterioration. NAFTA’s  broken promises were so under-reported that Project Censored named them ‘one of  the top-ten censored stories of the year’, just one year after Wexler’s  successful sales job.Richard Swift, from "Mindgames It’s just a short step from  political propaganda to corporate public relations" 
 Subliminals and Technology
 "High-tech mass persuasion has achieved levels of sophistication far beyond  what most individuals imagine. Most still desperately cling to the delusion that  they think for themselves, determine their own destinies, exercise both  individual and collective free will (the great myth that underlies democratic  ideology); that advertising works in the interest of the consumer; and perhaps  the greatest self-deception of all -- that they can easily discriminate between  fantasy and reality." Wilson Bryan Key
 "With the onset of the machine technology known by the interesting sobriquet,  "Virtual Reality," the immersion of mankind into the counterfeit,  computer-generated cryptosphere, intensifies, and the march of induced  hallucination, digital money, junk from Wal-Mart and miracles by priests in lab  coats, accelerates, commensurate with the spiritual and mental deaths of  animated corpses of the walking dead in America." Michael A. Hoffman II, from:  Secret Societies and Psychological Warfare
 "Subliminal visuals surround us as well. They're airbrushed into print ads  and billboards, they flicker past during commercials at a hardly noticeable,  barely legal rate. To heighten the hypnotic effects of moving video, producers  need only place one blank, black frame for every 32 frames of film. Every hour  that you spend watching tv, your right-brained, endorphin-numbed, glassy-ass  trance state is deepened. So don't be too hard on yourself for accidentally  "staying tuned" all the way through 7th Heaven—you were literally held against  your will." Sven Golly, from "Learn the Deadly Secrets of Mind Control"
 "Wayne Chilicki, a General Mills executive, agrees: "When it comes to  targeting kid consumers, we at General Mills follow the Proctor & Gamble  model of ‘cradle to grave,'" he says. "We believe in getting them early and  having them for life."" Gary Ruskin, from: "Why They Whine: How Corporations  Prey on Our Children" 
 "Advertising targeted at elementary school children," Professor McNeal says,  "on programs just for them works very effectively in the sense of implanting  brand names in their minds and creating desires for the products." Gary Ruskin,  from: "Why They Whine: How Corporations Prey on Our Children" 
 ""I was working with one firm that was doing focus groups with cult members  about how they got pulled into their cult and what the cult did... They  interviewed some people from Scientology. Some of them were still in. And [they  interviewed] those who were in cult-like organizations like Amway or Hells  Angels...They were looking for ways to apply the techniques of cult  indoctrination to 'cult brands.' They're called 'cult brands.' In other words --  how to take a brand and have an off-the-shelf set of rules that they can apply.  If a client comes in and says 'We want our brand to be a cult brand,' they say,  'Well, this is how to do it.'" Douglas Rushkoff
 "Advertising is everywhere, and people everywhere are united by it. Perhaps  for the first time, young people of all ethnic and geographic origins share  images and experiences, thanks in large measure to mass media and mass  advertising. Advertising offers youth entertainment, diversion, a way to manage  their mood states, and information on how to satisfy personal needs. Its  first-class graphics, music, and humour give advertising the potential to teach  children language, cognitive, social, and artistic skills... What youngsters get  are ideas for satisfying their needs for identity, belonging, and independence.  They use information in commercials, and the commercials themselves, to help  them achieve their personal goals. " Jeffrey Goldstein, Ph.D., Department of  Mass Communications, University of Utrecht, from: "Children and advertising -  the research"
 "Recent tests by researcher Herbert Krugman showed that, while viewers were  watching TV, right-brain activity outnumbered left-brain activity by a ratio of  two to one. Put more simply, the viewers were in an altered state, in trance,  more often than not. They were getting their Beta-endorphin "Fix." To measure  attention spans, psycho - physiologist Thomas Mulholland of the Veterans  Hospital in Bedford, Massachusetts, attached young viewers to an EEG machine  that was wired to shut the TV set off whenever the children's brains produced a  majority of alpha waves. Although the children were told to concentrate, only a  few could keep the set on for more than 30 seconds! Most viewers are already  hypnotized. To deepen the trance is easy. One simple way is to place a blank,  black frame every 32 frames in the film that is being projected. This creates a  45 beat ñ per - minute pulsation perceived only by the subconscious mind, the  ideal pace to generate deep hypnosis. The commercials or suggestions presented  following this alpha-inducing broadcast are much more likely to be accepted by  the viewer. The high percentage of the viewing audience that has  somnambulistic-depth ability could very well accept the suggestions as commands,  as long as those commands did not ask the viewer to do something contrary to his  morals, religion, or self-preservation." "Battle for Your Mind: Subliminal  Programming"
 "McDonald’s spends $1.8 billion a year on various PR." Joel Kovel, Z  magazine, September 1997.
 "The biotech industry has chosen a slam dunk strategy to gain public  acceptance for its products: Slip unlabeled genetically engineered food into the  food supply and hope too many people don't notice or object. Deal with those who  do notice and object with an army of "experts" that stand ready to refute any  criticisms or critics of the technology....If plans run awry for some reason,  mount a full public relations offensive..." Karen Charman, from: "Force Feeding  Genetically Engineered Foods"
 Europe's most powerful biotechnology industry has contracted the government  and public affairs PR agency, Burson Marsteller, to manage the crisis that the  biotech market is facing as a result of the widespread resistance to genetic  engineering and its products in this part of the world. "Leaked Document on  Europabio PR Strategy" 
 "Subliminal perception occurs whenever stimuli presented below the threshold  or limen for awareness are found to influence thoughts, feelings, or actions.  The term subliminal perception was originally used to describe situations in  which weak stimuli were perceived without awareness. In recent years, the term  has been applied more generally to describe any situation in which unnoticed  stimuli are perceived." Philip M. Merikle, from "Subliminal Perception"
 "Mental illness, the Twentieth Century Plague, may be related to subliminal  stimuli. What is vaguely called schizophrenia, for example, could be involved  with an individual's perception of subliminal stimuli." Wilson Bryan Key, from:  Subliminal Seduction
 "According to research by the Roper Organization in 1992, fifty-seven percent  of American consumers still believe that subliminal advertising is practiced on  a regular basis, and only one in twelve think it "almost never" happens. To  protect themselves from the techniques they believe are being used against them,  the advertising audience has adopted a stance of cynical suspician." Douglas  Rushkoff, from Coercion: Why We Listen to What "They" Say
 "Kilbourne, Painton and Ridley created a test of subliminals using an  original Chivas Regal ad with a subliminal nude and an additional picture  retouched to take out the nude. They reported their results in Psychology Today.  The picture with the subliminal nude was preferred over the picture without the  subliminal nude (Natale, 1988; Kilbourne et. al., 1984). They point out that  part of the problem with Key's reports is his ambiguous use of the word  subliminal. Key makes no distinction between innuendo, metaphor, embeds and  subliminals. The phenomenon that Key is most concerned with are actually visual  embeds, also known as hidden pictures." B. Diane Miller Blackwood, from: Sex and  the Single Sociologist: An Essay on Subliminal Advertising" 
 "In March of 1994, someone discovered that Jessica Rabbit had no underwear  for a very short time during the animated movie Who Framed Roger Rabbit? (Globe  & Mail, March 17, 1994). In this example, there were at least three  offending frames-unnoticeable unless the tape is advanced frame by frame. Were  they deliberately planted there for some nefarious reason, or were the artists  just saving some ink or playing a practical joke? It's hard to know, but the  physical presence of an uncovered Jessica tells us nothing about the perceptual  or psychological consequences of her undressed state. It is probable that under  normal viewing conditions the contents of the frames are completely and  thoroughly masked by the subsequent material. In the absence of the appropriate  tests, however, one cannot simply assert that stimuli are (or are not)  subliminal. In none of these examples is it possible to know definitively if the  signal or image was subliminal, nor if it was deliberately planted." Timothy E.  Moore, from: "Scientific Consensus and Expert Testimony: Lessons from the Judas  Priest Trial"
 "Certain studies seem to show that subliminal visual or aural conditioning in  movie theaters can increase sales of refreshments. However, the results are not  significant enough to be regarded as evidence of a real effect. Additionally,  experiments have shown that any changes in behavior occur only immediately after  the subliminal message is given and they disappear just as quickly. It is only a  temporary modification of the subject's reactions, and not a durable  conditioning." Jean-Marie Abgrall, from Soul Snatchers: The Mechanics of  Cults
 "In fact, the man who claims to have developed subliminal persuasion, James  Vicary, admitted to Advertising Age in 1984 that he had fabricated his evidence  that the technique worked in order to drum up business for his failing research  company." Douglas Rushkoff, from Coercion: Why We Listen to What "They" Say
 "Gore staffers alerted at least one news organization and were contacting  others about an RNC ad in which the word "RATS" appears briefly on screen in an  ad that criticizes Gore's prescription drug plan. A Bush spokesman brushed aside  suggestions of subliminal advertising as "bizarre, ridiculous and absurd." The  RNC had no immediate comment." Candy Crowley, from "Gore campaign smells 'rats'  in RNC ad" 
 "...on a slow news day in a laggardly news week, the Gore campaign called  Berke with its "scoop." It said a clever viewer in Seattle had noticed the "r"  word in a Republican ad, insinuating that the rodentine reference constituted  dirty, lowdown, filthy politics at its worst. Berke snapped at the bait. He  wrote a piece, which the Times splashed across its front page. It alleged deep  and troubling ugliness in the heart of the Republican camp -- all because of  four letters only a highly vigilant viewer would notice. The story fingered Alex  Castellanos, a GOP ad man, and fulsomely quoted some of Castellanos' most ardent  enemies. It gave him a sentence or two for rebuttal. The original item carried  no mention of Fox News, meaning Berke had no idea he had been fooled into  touting a stale story about an ad scheduled to go off the air the day his piece  appeared. Gore operatives thus transformed the Times into a purveyor of all the  news that's fit to reprint." Tony Snow, from "Rodentine Reference"
 "Kathleen Hall Jamieson, dean of the Annenberg School of Communication at the  University of Pennsylvania and author of several books on political ads, told  MSNBC.com that the technique used in the GOP spot is known in psychological  literature as “priming” — a word or image is flashed at the viewer to predispose  him to view a subject negatively." Tom Curry, ‘Rats’ joins famous ad  gallery"
 "As the presidential campaign gives every sign that it can't wait to be  upstaged by the Olympics, we are suddenly thrust back into the 1950s with the  hyped-up fear that subliminal advertising is tampering with our brains. A  Republican commercial deriding Al Gore's prescription-drug plan flashes the word  "RATS" on the screen for one-thirtieth of a second, right after the phrase  "Bureaucrats Decide." Detected by Fox News two weeks ago, then given front-page  treatment by The New York Times Tuesday, this ad flap suggests a 3-D movie about  a mad social scientist. The whole thing makes about as much sense as the  widespread 1950s belief that crouching under a schoolroom desk would protect  children against a Russian atomic attack. The only coherent explanation was  belatedly provided by Alex Castellanos, who made the 30-second spot for the  Republican National Committee (RNC). He claimed that the rodent language was  coincidental and that the oversize letters were designed to create visual  interest. "People get bored watching TV," Castellanos told the Associated Press.  "You're trying to get them interested and involved." Walter Shapiro, from "Fear  of subliminal advertising is irrational"
 "A research project by Jacob Jacoby, a Purdue University psychologist, found  that of 2,700 people tested, 90 percent misunderstood even such simple viewing  fare as commercials and "Barnaby Jones." Only minutes after watching, the  typical viewer missed 23 to 36 percent of the questions about what he or she had  seen. Of course they did, they were going in and out of trance! If you go into a  deep trance, you must be instructed to remember, otherwise you automatically  forget." "Battle for Your Mind: Subliminal Programming"
 PsyOps
 Definitions
 "PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS: (DOD) Planned operations to convey selected  information and indicators to foreign audiences to influence their emotions,  motives, objective reasoning, and ultimately the behavior of foreign government,  organizations, groups, and individuals. The purpose of psychological operations  is to induce or reinforce foreign attitudes and behavior favorable to the  originator's objectives. Also called PSYOP. See also perception management.
 PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS: (NATO) Planned psychological activities in peace  and war directed to enemy, friendly, and neutral audiences in order to influence  attitudes and behavior affecting the achievement of political and military  objectives. They include strategic psychological activities, consolidation  psychological operations and battlefield psychological activities.
 PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS: (IADB) These operations include psychological  warfare and, in addition, encompass those political, military, economic, and  ideological actions planned and conducted to create in neutral or friendly  foreign groups the emotions, attitudes, or behavior to support the achievement  of national objectives." Propaganda And Psychological Warfare Studies: Glossary  Department of Defense Military and Associated Terms" 
 The PSYOPS "process"... is divided into six parts: intelligence gathering,  target audience analysis, product development, media selection, media  production, and dissemination." Benjamin Richardson, from: "The Use of the  Psyops Against High School Terrorism" 
 Brains and Targets
 "Once you have a brain harnessed to imitation, you can transmit behavior  non-genetically, thus giving rise to "culture" or "memes." Richard van Ort, on  "Mirror Neurons"
 "Santa Claus is a meme that parents deliberately infect their children with;  the purpose for it is quite unfathomable, and seems to run along two paths--it  didn't seem to hurt the parent when they had it, and it helps to explain the odd  behavior that people go through once a year. The Claus meme in a child helps the  way cowpox helped with smallpox; part of growing up is the 'trauma' of learning,  once old enough, that Santa is a myth, and that people, including one's own  parents, have systematically lied to you. This may seem a callous way to view  it, but from the viewpoint of building cognitive mechanisms, this is one of the  earliest we gain that fosters the ability of disbelief." Michael Wilson, from:  "Memetic Engineering PsyOps and Viruses for the Wetware"
 "...the astonishing truth is that any given mirror neuron will also fire when  the monkey in question observes another monkey (or experimenter performing the  same action), e.g., tasting a peanut!" Arleen Raymond, on "Mirror Neurons 2"
 "In the study of mind control and psychological warfare, it is not enough to  simply review the latest technology of coercion, the most recent gadgetry and  techno-junk littering the hardware and supply depots of governments and cults.  Far more dangerous PSYOPS "use specially constructed communications to  manipulate the actions of target groups without the use of physical force.  PSYOPS, in one form or another has been used against the enemies of the United  States for hundreds of years. Most people think of PSYOPS as something directed  at the nation's foreign enemies. Today, however, there are new, domestic threats  to United States' security that may also pose legitimate targets for such  operations. The sudden surge in high school terrorism in the last five years has  created a conundrum for the nation. The youths that commit such violence are  American citizens. They are teens that, on the surface, differ very little from  the millions of other high school students in the United States. The federal  government cannot simply order anti-terrorist units like Delta Force to hunt  them down. The public would find such tactics too drastic. These are, after all  , just kids. Thus, the need for less severe countermeasures makes PSYOPS very  attractive. These techniques are well grounded in research and have been copied  by others like advertisers and marketers. If properly implemented, the  legitimate use of PSYOPS to reduce future high school terrorism would be both  appropriate and effective." Benjamin Richardson, from: "The Use of the Psyops  Against High School Terrorism" 
 "Naval Reserve United States Atlantic Command Psychological Operations Unit  is a special purpose radio/television production unit whose dedicated mission is  to train audiovisual personnel for mobilization and to produce audiovisual  products in response to CINCUSACOM Special Operation Requirements." Mission  Statement
 "In 1950 the CIA's budget for "psychological warfare was $34 million; over  the next two years that figure quadrupled." Laura Brahm, from "The Culture  Vultures," In These Times, May 15, 2000
 Applications, High Technology, Memes and the Religious Impulse
 "Religious strivings...often originate in the desires of the body, in the  pursuit of meanings beyond the range of our intellectual capacity, and in the  longing that values be conserved. Do we not then merely "rationalize" our  yearnings with manufactured beliefs that are egomorphic, fashoioned to satisfy  private desire or inner compulsion? Does not the very prominance of the fear  motive indicate that we have invented a God to protect us against anxiety? And  if life or society demands many renunciations from us, are we not prone to  invent an after-life that will compensate us for present deprivation? Gordon W.  Allport, from The Individual and His Religion
 "Back in the 1950s, during the rebellion in the Philippines, U.S. Air Force  General Edward Lansdale, then head of CIA PsyOps in the islands, used the legend  of Philippine vampires to chase the Huk rebels from their various areas of  operation. The asuag, or Philippine vampire, struck terror in the hearts of the  superstitious population, a fact exploited by the CIA. When a Huk patrol would  pass by, the last member of the patrol was silently captured, and then killed.  Two holes were punctured in the Huk's neck, and he was hung upside down to drain  the blood from his body. The corpse would then be left where it would be found  by his comrades - a victim of the vampire." W. Adam Mandelbaum, from: The  Psychic Battlefield
 "In occult crimes the objective is not linear, that is to say, is not solely  bound to the achievement of the immediate effects of the attack on the victim,  but may in fact be a part of a larger, symbolic ritual magnified by the power of  the electronic media, for the purpose of the alchemical processing of the  subconscious Group Mind of the masses. If we are observing a ritual working, we  should be looking for relevant synchronicities (coincidences that have meaning)  in the days following 'Unabom's' explosive attacks, which would form a pattern,  on the hypothesis that his bombing is the Introit to a kind of public,  subliminal Black Mass that plays for days. Consciously we don't apprehend the  connection, but our subconscious may and it is the subconscious that is being  addressed in occult ritual, in a process CIA behavioral scientist Dr. Ewan  Cameron termed, "psychic driving." Like other Group Mind imprinting, such as the  Son of Sam series, the 'Unabomber' has a high media profile as a communicator,  as someone having a message for the masses." Michael A. Hoffman II, from:  "Profiling the FBI's Unabom Charade"
 "PSYOP has a vital role to play in the effective use of military force. This  is especially so as the world becomes increasingly urban and interconnected  through the internet and satellite television, media which decrease the  likelihood that US forces can use force against an adversary indiscriminately.  PSYOP's role is also magnified as the US military finds itself more involved in  protracted struggles at the lower end of the spectrum of conflict. As a US Army  study once noted, "Low-intensity conflict is basically a struggle for people's  minds . . . . And in such a battle, psychological operations are more important  than fire power." Steven Collins, from: "Army PSYOP in Bosnia: Capabilities and  Constraints" 
 "Historically in Haiti, any change of power was a very bloody deal. This was  accomplished with minimal bloodshed," Crawmer said. "...I personally feel that  because of [the psyop soldiers'] ability to influence the media environment in  Haiti, the effect was to soothe the Haitians and get their cooperation."  Katherine McIntire Peters, from Haitian Mission Is Smoothed By Psyops Getting  Out The Word"
 "Military personnel from the Fourth Psychological Operations Group based at  Fort Bragg, in North Carolina, have until recently been working in CNN's hq in  Atlanta. CNN is up in arms about our report in the last issue of CounterPunch  concerning the findings of the Dutch journalist, Abe de Vries about the presence  of US Army personnel at CNN, owned by Time-Warner. We cited an article by de  Vries which appeared on February 21 in the reputable Dutch daily newspaper  Trouw, originally translated into English and placed on the web by Emperor's  Clothes. De Vries reported that a handful of military personnel from the Third  Psychological Operations Battalion, part of the airmobile Fourth Psychological  Operations Group based at Fort Bragg, in North Carolina, had worked in CNN's hq  in Atlanta." Alexander Cockburn, from "CNN AND PSYOPS"
 "Think of this new domain as 'applied sociology' or 'cultural engineering.'  Neither name is sufficient description to a field that encompasses information  theory, general semantics, semiotics, cybernetics, neurolinguistics, statistical  theory, advertising/propaganda, conditioning, epistemology, epidemiology, game  theory, cognitive psychology, sociology, and evolutionary biology. If your eyes  have glazed over, or you have already decided that you shouldn't be reading such  'trash' as this, then resign yourself to being one of the sheep. Careful study  of Nazism (and Goebbels), Marxism, or Scientology (and Hubbard) give clear  indications that the concepts work; from there, it is simply a matter of  analysis of the phenomenon to build a new form of engineering, which in  deference to its roots, can be referred to as memetic engineering." Michael  Wilson, from: "Memetic Engineering PsyOps and Viruses for the Wetware"
 "A meeting sponsored by Defense & Foreign Affairs and the International  Strategic Studies Association was held in Washington DC in 1983. High-level  officials from many countries met for this conference. They discussed  psychological strategies related to government and policymaking. A summary of  the agenda reads: "The group will be discussing the essence of future  policymaking, for it must be increasingly clear to all that the most effec- tive  tool of government and strategy is the mind... If it's any consolation to the  weapons-oriented among defense policymakers, the new technologies of  communications -- satellites, television, radio, and mind-control beams -- are  'systems' which are more tangible than the more philosophically based  psychological strategies and operations." Judy Wall, from "Aerial Mind-Control:  The Threat to Civil Liberties"
 "Those are things ranging from using low-frequency [electromagnetic] waves in  battlefield situations to intimidate your enemy to using smells. There's a lot  of scents now that chemo-reception scientists have figured out make people upset  and make people intimidated...And those are real, and more than enough to talk  about. I've seen them being [used in field test situations] or read research  reports about them being used. I've interviewed people in the military who have  used them. I've read the public relations materials -- bill collection agencies  that use pheromones in the ink in collection letters." Douglas Rushkoff
 "The March 23, 1991 newsbrief, "High-Tech Psychological Warfare Arrives in  the Middle East", describes a US Psychological Operations (PsyOps) tactic  directed against Iraqi troops in Kuwait during Operation Desert Storm. The  manoeuvre consisted of a system in which subliminal mind-altering technology was  carried on standard radiofrequency broadcasts. The March 26, 1991 newsbrief  states that among the standard military planning groups in the centre of US war  planning operations at Riyadh was "an unbelievable and highly classified PsyOps  program utilising 'silent sound' techniques" Judy Wall, "PSY-OPS WEAPONRY USED  IN THE PERSIAN GULF WAR"
 "The Pentagon had listed the holographic projections openly as part of its  "non-lethal" weapons program. But since 1994, the program has disappeared from  view, evidently now a "black" effort, says DEFENSE WEEK. In conclusion, the  DEFENSE WEEK article states that the Army's JFK Special Warfare Center and  School in late 1991 disclosed that it was looking to develop a PSYOPS Hologram  System with a capability "to project persuasive messages and three-dimensional  pictures of cloud, smoke, rain droplets, buildings......(even religious "images"  or "figures")........The use of holograms as a persuasive message will have  worldwide application". (end quoting). (This looks like it will be a  concentrated unit of soldiers armed with the very latest high-tech weapons  systems)" Norio Hayakawa, from "Pentagon, Psyops and Holographic Technology"  
 "The objective and scope of the 1993 Los Alamos conference included exploring  a nonlethal approach to apply force against not only wartime enemies (the Soviet  Union had already fallen) but against "terrorists" and "international drug  traffickers" as well. The introduction noted that the purpose of the conference  was to bring together "industry, government, and academia to explore the  potential of nonlethal defense and identify requirements so that the defense  community can work together in leveraging the nonlethal concept. "Industry [law  enforcement], particularly, will benefit from a more precise understanding of  requirements and operational constraints regarding nonlethal defense  technologies," noted the conference's sponsors, The American Defense  Preparedness Association. Additionally, nonlethal defense was described as "an  emerging technological option being developed conceptually with a sea of  technical opportunity. Based upon the technical presentations listed in the  brochure, it didn't appear to me that such technology as acoustical, highpower  microwave, laser, ELF/RF weapons and "psychotronic" systems were particulary NEW  in the field of military or intelligence applications. Obviously, what was  occurring at this conference was the presentation of these formidable weapons to  law enforcement for domestic (U.S.) applications." Carol Marshall, from "The  Last Circle"
 "The NSA uses this technology to resocialize (brainwash) the US civilian  voting population into "Giving their lives to Christ" (giving up their personal  will and civil rights to the NSA). Each subject is required to maintain a  "Personal Relationship with Jesus Christ" (following the precepts of the Bible  and doing what is ordered by the NSA). The technology is also used to monitor  and optimize NSA employee performance and loyalty...Coincidence is used to  create the perception in the subject that supernatural events are beginning in  the subject's life. A combination of posthypnotic commands and pre-information  awarded to the subject prior to an upcoming experience that the NSA intelligence  system has discovered gives the subject a feeling that "God" or some other  supernatural being is taken interest in their life...The following is one  typical technique used by the NSA. NSA Intelligence gathers information  regarding the topic of the sermon in the subject's church. This information is  gathered through electronic surveillance equipment installed in the church. The  NSA then implants a posthypnotic command that triggers the subject’s mind into  concern and contemplation about the sermon’s topic prior to going to church.  When the subject hears the sermon, the sermon seems to be speaking directly to  the subject that adds to God's mysterious and unexplainable ability to address  the innermost concerns of the subject, especially when the subject has not  shared those concerns with any other human being. .. " NSA mind control and  psyops
 "The scary thing is, the technology exists to do it. You only have to look at  the U.S. Patents Office Website to see that it's true. "There are patents for  microwave devices that can beam sound directly into someone's head." Mind  Control, Conspiracies and Lobster 
 "Dr. Igor Smirnov, of the Institute of Psycho-correction in Moscow, says in  regard to this technology: "It is easily conceviable that some Russian 'Satan',  or let's say Iranian [or any other 'Satan'], as long as he owns the appropriate  means and finances, can inject himself [intrude] into every con- ceivable  computer network, into every conceivable radio or television broad- cast, with  relative technological ease, even without disconnecting cables. You can  intercept the [radio] waves in the aether and then [subliminally] modulate every  conceivable suggestion into it. If this transpires over a long enough time  period, it accumulates in the heads of people. And even- tually they can be  artificially manipulated with other additional measure- ments, to do that which  this perpetrator wants [them to do]. This is why [such technology] is rightfully  feared." From a German documentary, "Geheimes Russland: Moskau - Die Zombies dr  roten Zaren" ("Secret Russia: Moscow - The Zombies of the Red Czars") aired on  German TV network ZDF on December 22, 1998. Script translation by Jan Weisemann.  The full text is to be published in Resonance, No. 35. Judy Wall, from "Aerial  Mind-Control: The Threat to Civil Liberties"
 "Last night on the Art Bell show, Ed Dames announced that PsiTech had  remote-viewed the "third prophesy of Fatima." He identified it as equivalent to  the opening of the sixth seal, as described in the book of Revelations in the  Judeo-Christian Bible and said it would happen next month, in November. His  description made a vague reference to war and other calamities. Noting the  history of "Major Head Games" history as an intelligence agent, one wonders what  psyop strategy is being implemented here. Is the government planning a major war  next month (Wag The Dog?) and is this announcement being used to precondition  the gullible to accept a mystical explanation or is it some other psyop  strategy, such as raising the panic level among the gullible so they will be  more likely to accept martial law?" Wes Thomas 
 "An ex-CIA agent interviewed by researcher Jim Keith claims to have knowledge  of biological warfare testing and "special medical and Psy-ops (psychological  operations) facilities at Fort Riley," where Timothy McVeigh was stationed.  (Recall that McVeigh took a Psy-ops course at Ft. Riley) This agent stated that  experimentation is conducted "in collaboration with the whole range of  intelligence agencies, FBI, CIA, NSA, the works." The agent also told Keith that  he had witnessed special psychological operations performed on the crew of the  Pueblo naval vessel at Fort Riley, and at Fort Benning, Georgia (where did his  basic training), prior to the ship's capture under mysterious circumstances by  the North Koreans." David Hoffman, from: The Oklahoma City Bombing and the  Politics of Terror
 "Criteria for Determining Psychological Warfare in Documents 1. Is there low  risk of attracting foreign intelligence organizations to the targeted topic?  What is the extent of the risk involved with such a deception? Is it worth the  tradeoffs? 2. Has there been a long multi-year history of credible relationship  between the target of deception and the authors of the deception? 3. Is the  reaction of the target predicable; will they swallow the bait and move in the  desired direction for some length of time? 4. Is there a specific purpose, goal,  objective or intent of the deception; can it be clearly stated? 5. Does the  phrase, sentence or document establish believability in the eye of the target of  deception? 6. Is there any direct evidence that the documents were ever launched  at the target? 7. Are there a credible number of unique language words to draw  suspicion about authorship? 8. Do the historically competent experts, in  Psychological Warfare agree with the answers to these questions?" Ryan Wood,  from "Psychological Warfare & The Majestic Documents: No Signs of  Deception."
 "The whole arsenal of frequencies will be unloaded on the USA, Australia, New  Zealand, Canada, and Mexico as part of Stage 1 of the First Protocol, (to  include) Woodpecker, Buzzsaw, Videodrome, Subliminals*, Sonic Pulses. Holograms,  Visions, Voices and strange Psychokinetic phenomena. Beware of TV's, computers,  movies, radios and phones! Also books, magazines, newspapers, printed  advertisements and posters will also contain the encrypted hidden subliminal  holograms. * In addition to the obvious programming of commercial, consumerism  and marketing reason behind all the subliminals and electronically compressed  information in movies, commercial television, Hollywood videos, radio and  telephones - and now encrypted in printed matter, affect the brains neural  networks and functions through select frequencies and their harmonics to  diminish the Will, Individuality and Creativity of the Individual. Furthermore,  the protocols intended to give, in essence, the commands of "Obey the Law", "Do  Not Question Authority Government is Your God", "Do As You Are Told" and "God is  talking to you". -Also, erratic thoughts of Anger, Fear, Depression, and wanton  Sexuality are also included. This causes utter confusion in individuals who  don't know where these strange thoughts are coming from -Now you do." CIA &  Vatican, Holographic Projection Technology - The "Holy See"
 "It is child's play to transmit an ELF modulated signal to be broadcast by  the entire mobile phone network - if need be. By this means, all mobile phone  users can be behaviourally modified, at the cost of developing cancer from low  level microwave exposure from the phones they constantly use, stressing the  neural network by constant calcium ion efflux and interference with bioelectric  fields." Margaret Thatcher Masers, Microwaves, Mindcontrol & Abductions
 "Within the last two decades a potential has emerged which was improbable,  but which is now marginally feasible. This potential is the technical capability  to influence directly the major portion of the approximately six billion brains  of the human species, without mediation through classical sensory modalities, by  generating neural information within a physical medium within which all members  of the species are immersed. The historical emergence of such possibilities,  which have ranged from gunpowder to atomic fission, have resulted in major  changes in the social evolution that occurred inordinately quickly after the  implementation. Reduction of the risk of the inappropriate application of these  technologies requires the continued and open discussion of their realistic  feasibility and implications within the scientific and public domain." Dr.  Michael Persinger, Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at Laurentian  University, from "On the Possibility of Directly Accessing Every Human Brain by  Electromagnetic Induction of Fundamental Algorithms" 
 The best way to protect oneself... is the Delphic oracle's comment to 'know  thyself.' Understanding the rudiments of what is going on allows for  considerable self programming and self control; a sophisticated person in fact  will have a number of paradigms and shift them at will. It is interesting to  note that prophylactic measures against this sort of thing have considerable  history; for example, Speculative Freemasonry, in an attempt to counteract the  rise of superstition and the power of the Church, used various rituals and  initiations (kept secret to increase the 'shock value' to the participant) to  invoke and evoke a state of mind and being through 'gnosis,' direct experience.  The influence, historically, of such groups is still debated, yet the influence  of the practitioners still remains; we view them as the most significant free  thinkers, artists, and scientists of their age. Clearly, the ability to  continually integrate the signals one receives and choose one's own actions and  reactions is a beneficial capability." Michael Wilson, from: "Memetic  Engineering PsyOps and Viruses for the Wetware"
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