by Hugh Manatee Wins » Thu Jul 27, 2006 6:17 pm
<!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>But "Project Paperclip" is not exactly a hot current issue.<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br>Two more years of W in office and tying the name Bush to Hitler is indeed a hot current issue. As in, keep it out of the minds of the masses or at very least the harcore indoctrinated Fox viewers. The White House is losing ground and wants to slow its descent.<br><br>Even the Anti-defamation League is denying that Prescott Bush financed the Nazis right on its own website!<br><br>Not only that, Uncle Sam's white hat is mostly based on WWII. That is the most important narrative to preserve for future wars.<br><br>Why? Because Hitler is the 20th century military-industrial-media incarnation of THE DEVIL and his name is used as a superlative for exactly that reason.<br><br>All war is sold as religious war, that is, a moral response to Evil and thus the right thing to do.<br><br>And that requires having a DEVIL as a foil to make American bombs units of Virtue. I think it was a Soviet dissident who said something like this about his countrymen-<br>"To do evil, one must first be made to believe that one is doing good."<br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>On the other side of the ledger, "The Paperclip Project" is also not exactly a hot item. I'd say the chance that some innocent eight year old is going to permanently be imbued with positive thoughs involving paperclips and holocaust victims, to the point of growing up to be an adult who looks benignly on stories about Nazi scientists being smuggled into the US and is therefore unable to acknowledge fascist elements in US history, has got to be approximately zero.<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br><br>The Children's Holocaust Memorial with its feature documentary, book sold on Amazon, and a classroom teaching package releasing in August 2006 for 6-12 graders is becoming a "hot item." Or atleast there is an effort to make it so.<br><br>Why? Once kids (and many adults) get a name in their heads a first time that definition supercedes variations that might follow. Child psychologists call this 'mutual exclusivity,' a way to name the world for clarity without getting too many variations.<br><br>THAT"S the psycho-linguistic reason for name hijacking and decoys. Like 'Patriot Act.'<br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr><br>But it's also a pretty sure bet that any time you push your claims of their use beyond the point where, say, the half-bright average high school student would endorse your conclusions, you're almost certainly off track.<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br>Exactly wrong. See above for 'mutual exclusivity.' Plus a total immersion in subtle cues that add up without our realizing it to create a seemingly organic normative experience is EXACTLY the most effective tool of manipulation. Changing a person without them realizing it or resisting is a very effective tactic.<br><br>Advertising lingo calls this 'nesting' an idea in a 'shell.' The shell is the obvious vehicle and included are the little mind viruses that you don't notice and resist thereby allowing them into the subconscious with no resistance.<br><br>Example: Seeing a KKK rally makes you think "ugly hateful racists" but seeing black cannibals as the bad guys and negative roles for women in Disney's 'Pirates of the Caribbean' gets past most people without any protest.<br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>Besides, it's not like there haven't been enough goddamn militaristic, macho, jingoistic, US supremacist, essentially fascist movies around during the last 20 years or so. <hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br>A wall-to-wall catalog of mind viruses generated deliberately since the 1951 Psychological Strategy Board was mandated to affect the American mind is what you just described. There were crappy films like 'Birth of a Nation' before but the value of putting out crappy films was realized during WWII (Why We Fight and more folksy fare for civilians) and institutionalized.<br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr><br>Why look for subtle manipulations in the frigging titles when the thing itself is right there on the screen?<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br>Why look at titles? Because MOST people do and don't actually see the film! The title is a 'unit of meaning' much like a billboard or bumbersticker. The big exposure numbers are at that marketing level and this is not a throw away resource. Plus the consumption of the movie or book must be reinforced for the more intense propaganda effect for the few who actually get the full dose.<br><br>Here. Let me trigger some images, values, and implied behavior in your mind without even showing you a movie:<br><br>"Star Wars." Ok, now what catch phrase comes to mind?<br>And what sanctioned behavior is implied?<br><br>And since so many Americans grow up on TV and movies, they are a whole experiencial database to re-trigger later in adulthood as I just did by writing 'Star Wars.'<br><br>Now I'll do it again. 'Star Trek.'<br>What phrase (or two) comes to mind and what are the sanctioned behaviors?<br><br>See? <p></p><i>Edited by: <A HREF=http://p216.ezboard.com/brigorousintuition.showUserPublicProfile?gid=hughmanateewins>Hugh Manatee Wins</A> at: 7/27/06 4:26 pm<br></i>