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<div id="conspiracy">
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<p>THEY'RE FUCKING WITH YOUR MIND.</p>
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<p> Car salesman Jeff Johnson is enjoying a lazy night at
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home, drinking a few beers and half-watching music videos on
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television. The sounds are loud, the colors, intense. The
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four millionth viewing of Madonna's video numbs him into
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semi-consciousness. Not even the booming bass beat of the
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latest rap hit can lift him out of it. More music videos go
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buy. Pretty soon, out of left field, Jeff catches himself
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thinking that the President's a sharp guy, definitely shafted
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by the press. "Yep, he is definitely okay. Fuck the media."
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Jeff Johnson has just been brainwashed, and it has
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happened so undetectably that there is absolutely nothing he
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could have done to prevent it.
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Sure, that's fiction--but the facts are real. Using the
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powerful sensory inputs available to TV, radio, films and the
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rest of the mass media, mind manipulators in <span class="GPE" title="GPE">New York</span>'s
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advertising agencies, Hollywood's movie and TV industries and
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Washington's political power structure are at this very
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moment shaping what you think about the key issues of the
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day, from abortion to elections.
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"Today," say journalists Flo Conway and Jim Siegelman,
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authors of Snapping, "American business and advertising have
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at their disposal the latest and most comprehensive body of
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knowledge concerning the manner in which human behavior can
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be manipulated."
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"You cannot pick up a newspaper, magazine or pamphlet,
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hear radio or view televison anywhere in <span class="LOC" title="LOC">North America</span>
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without being assaulted." adds researcher Dr. Wilson Bryan
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Key.
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"I shudder to think about the propaganda and commercial
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manipulation that we are exposed to on a daily basis," says
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hypnotherapist Dick Sutphen.
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There are numerous documented cases of covert mind
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manipulation techniques used to control behavior:
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In 1956 a New Jersey market researcher imbedded movies
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with hidden visual commands to buy Coca Cola. Movie watchers
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were absolutely unaware that these consciously imperceptible
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orders were attacking them, but the proof was at the cash
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register: Coke sales jumped 58% at that theater.
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At a Kansas City medical center, hidden audio messages
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are constantly piped through the sound system. And there
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have been dramatic results--smoking in the staff lounge is
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down 50%; angry patient outbursts in the crowded patient
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waiting room are down 60%.
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Retailers around the country are experimenting with "no
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shoplifting" audio tapes that endlessly repeat--on a
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subconscious level, beneath the Muzak--directives not to
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steal. One New Orleans supermarket reported that "Inventory
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shrinkage" (Theft) fell two-thirds, from $50000 yearly to
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just $13000.
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As long ago as 1972, In-Flight Motion Pictures, Inc.
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started selling advertisers the right to imbed totally hidden
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advertising in movies screened on airplanes.
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Major advertisers are continually subjecting you to
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disguised commands to buy THEIR beer, THEIR shampoo. You are
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hit with an avalanche of hidden audio and video messages
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every time you turn on your TV.
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Waiting around the corner are truly mind-boggling
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technologies of light and sound. Among them is a bizarre
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subconscious attack on the kidneys, liver and bladder
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developed by Mid-West Research for use by law enforcement
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personnel. The technology is designed to incapacitate
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hostage-holding terrorists. Using pink noise masking-the
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sound of air conditioning-this system was tested on
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unsuspecting cadets in a police academy. According to on
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researcher, "the result of the test was that nearly the
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entire class of cadets had become dehydrated."
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Don't believe it? join the club. In one survey of
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influential business and civic leaders, 90% said they were
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sure there were laws against covert mind manipulation.
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What's more, 60% added that that stuff was a lot of hooey
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anyway.
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As for hidden mind manipulation being hooey, that is
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exactly what big advertisers, major media, politicians,
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religious leaders and the U.S. government want you to
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believe. The more you believe that, the longer and more
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successfully the can secretly influence your purchasing and
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political decisions. "We hear very little about the subject
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these days," leading brain researcher Dr. Barbara Brown
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admits. But that is not because there is nothing to talk
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about. On the contrary: There is too much. "One always
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suspects government intervention when techniques to abuse
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mankind are suddenly banished from discussion. In any event,
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for some 20 years now there has been a steadfast denial of
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this extraordinary phenomenon by the experts."
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You may think you know what you know--but thinking so
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may be dangerous to your mental health. As Dick Sutphen
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says, "In the entire history of man, no one has ever been
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brainwashed and realized or believed that he had been
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brainwashed." That's the terrifying part of brainwashing:
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Once it has happened to you, you will never know it.
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"It is very difficult to pass laws against this," says
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Dr. Patrick Flanagan, a Tucson, Arizona, inventor of
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sophisticated mind manipulation machinery. "There are so many
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ways around it." What's more, much mind-control technology
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is abstract, putting it absolutely out of reach of any
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legislation or regulation. Used this way, the technologies
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aim to numb the unsuspecting--perhaps including you--into
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accepting the otherwise unacceptable. fundamentalist
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preachers, for instance, commonly saturate their revival
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halls with a barely perceptible six-to-seven cycles per
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second sound, which can be hidden under the noise of air
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conditioning or even the hum from loudspeakers. That
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vibration--harmless as it seems--is incredibly effective in
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putting much of any audience into an immediate open-eye
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trance state. Because their eyes are open, the audience
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believes they are fully functioning, wide awake individuals.
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THEY AREN'T. THEY ARE EASY PREY FOR ANY MESSAGE THE PREACHER
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CHOOSES TO PUT FORTH.
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Effective as that technique is, there are scarier tools
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available to mind manipulators. Particularly chilling
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research is reported by Dr. Barbara Brown, who says that
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things as simple as the sounds of heartbeats can radically
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alter our reactions to pictures and ideas. In one experiment
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cited by Brown, scientists tricked subjects into believing
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they were hearing their own heartbeats while viewing
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photographs. They weren't. The heartbeats were prerecorded,
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yet as subjects heard faster heartbeats they automatically
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gave high ratings to the observed photos. Lower heart rates
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yielded poorer ratings. Theoretical as that research is, the
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impact is very powerful. Increase the rate of fake heartbeat
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sounds, and audience excitement will bolt upwards. Lower it,
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and audience enthusiasm drops. It is as elementary as that.
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The dimension this adds to political messages, advertising,
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and so on, is alarming. "This begins to have frightening
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implications," admits Brown. "It seems quite possible that
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certain types of propaganda or techniques of persuasion will
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take advantage of this."
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Commonly employed not only in revivalist/fundamentalist
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gatherings but in many public meetings and throughout the
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media, the six-to-seven cycle vibrations as well as the fake
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heartbeat can be used to hide specific information or
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commands. In fact, subliminal information--"subliminations"
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as it's called by professionals--is a primary weapon in the
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electronic battle for your brain and your free will. Every
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minute of every day, your mind is swamped with smells,
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tastes, sights and sounds. You consciously process the data
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you are aware of, but you are unaware of much more. These
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data sneak through a maze of trap doors into your
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subconscious. Very high-and low-pitched sounds register on
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your subconscious but make no conscious impression. Fast
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moving and dimly lit images and pictures do the same. And
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here is the freaky part: While there may be no conscious
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recollection of these data, the information is permanently
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stored in your mind. Researchers, including Canadian
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neurosurgeon Dr. Wilder Penfield, have established that the
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subconscious and unconscious memory are vast storehouses,
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holding countless facts unavailable to the conscious mind.
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the unnerving discovery is that this unconsciously
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perceived information definitely influences behavior. "Many
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researchers have recorded brain waves or heartbeats or skin
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electrical activity, then presented words with emotional
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meaning, such as SEX, CANCER, MOTHER, and SNAKE mixed in with
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words that rarely arouse the emotions, such as BUILDING,
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CARPET, NECKTIE and the like. When the emotion-producing
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words are presented subliminally, there are strong changes in
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the reactions in the physiologic system, but no changes when
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the other neutral words are given," says Barbara Brown.
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More proof of the impact of subliminals comes from one
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Texas university psychologist who began to salt his lectures
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with disguised slides showing graphic sex and violence at
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light levels outside the audience's conscious ability to see.
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His lectures, which had nothing to do with the slides being
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projected, were apparently more interesting to the students
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than in the past, as reflected by test scores. Test results
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indicated a significant increase in memory!
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Chief among the weapons for secretly influencing
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behavior-including yours-are subliminal commands. As Dick
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Sutphen explains, "Subliminals are hidden suggestions that
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only the subconscious perceives. They can be audio, hidden
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behind music, or visual, flashed on a screen so fast that you
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don't consciously see them or cleverly incorporated into a
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picture or design."
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Just how much information do you take in at subconscious
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levels? According to Dr. Key, "Theorists speculate that as
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little as 1/1000th of a total, single perception registers at
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the conscious level." And your mind is influenced by these
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unconsciously perceived messages just as much as it would be
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by consciously presented information. In fact, the mind is
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more susceptible because it cannot consciously defend against
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information it might reject.
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Used consciously as a result of free choice, this
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discovery offers real benefits. A booming industry currently
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sells subliminal tapes for everything from weight control to
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achieving financial independence. At the conscious level,
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these tapes sound like ocean waves or innocuous music. At
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the subconscious level, however, are messages such as "I am
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losing weight" and "I am quitting smoking." There is
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dramatic proof that such tapes work. Many users report major
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life improvement from doing no more than passively listening
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to their tapes while sleeping or going about routine chores
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and job duties. No concentration and no effort were
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involved. Yet listeners say they have accomplished
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everything from losing 20 pounds in a month without dieting
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to stopping smoking painlessly.
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Even in this commercial marketplace, however, a gray
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line is often approached and sometimes crossed. Consider the
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case of a woman who wanted a slimmer husband. Unbeknownst to
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her overweight spouse, she played a weight loss tape
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constantly for a month. He lost 26 pounds. In another
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instance, one company markets a seduction subliminal in major
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men's magazines. Play the tape, the advertising suggests,
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and women will find you irresistible.
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There is no questioning the wrongness of advertisement
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that bury secret commands to win higher sales. Dr. Key has
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filled three books with documented examples of covert
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manipulation by advertisers. In one case, Key tested a
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sample of PLAYBOY readers on their recall of a Christmas
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magazine ad centered around a wreath. Just two pages in a
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260-page magazine, the ad was recalled by a stunning 95%.
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How can this be? Says Key: "The reader need only ask what
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kind of flowers were used for the wreath. The first
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conscious perceptual defense is to see the wreath flowers as
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nuts-possibly walnuts. A more careful examination reveals
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they cannot be nuts. This wreath has been cleverly
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constructed of objects which resemble vaginas and the heads
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of erect penises." No wonder readers remembered the ad!
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Some men's magazines, according to Key, also routinely
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imbed faintly sketched words such as SEX, CUNT and FUCK on
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centerfolds and cover models. Such words emphatically grab
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attention--although viewers have no idea why they are so
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attracted to particular photographs.
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Called imbedding, this technique--using an airbrush to
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hide emotionally charged words or images in seemingly
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harmless ads and photographs--is extraordinarily widespread.
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"Imbedded words and picture illusions are part of most
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advertising throughout <span class="LOC" title="LOC">North America</span> today," says Key.
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"These subliminal stimuli, though invisible to conscious
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perception, are perceived instantly at the unconscious level
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by virtually everyone who perceives them even for an instant.
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"
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Key and his research associates have documented hundreds
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of cases of such imbeds in major advertisements, including
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ads run by Crest toothpaste, Vaseline, Johnnie Walker Scotch,
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Kent cigarettes, Calvert whiskey, Bacardi rum, Sprite, and
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Seagram's Gin. In every instance, the goal is to use imbeds
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to arouse viewer attention and increase memory.
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Imbeds are merely the tip of a gargantuan iceberg of
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mind control techniques. Tachistoscopic projection, for
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instance, involves the high-speed flashing of words or
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images. Commonly used in movies and TV commercials, this
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high-speed technique is like the one used in the New Jersey
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theater to boost Coke sales.
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Visual subliminals can also be transmitted with simpler
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techniques, including the use of dimly lit images, such as
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the slides of sex and violence.
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But perhaps the most powerful subliminals are delivered
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in sound. THERE IS NO WAY TO KNOW EXACTLY WHEAT YOU ARE
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HEARING WHEN YOU WATCH TV OR LISTEN TO RADIO. Tales of rock
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groups using hidden messages are too numerous to recount--and
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yes, many groups commonly use subliminals, according to music
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industry insiders. The fact is, it is incredibly easy to hid
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messages in music or spoken words. Using modern synthesizer
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equipment, words can now be psychoacoustically modified to
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sound like musical instruments--but the impacts of these
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words are every bit as strong as they would be if audibly
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spoken. Words can easily be made to sound like white noise
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(Ocean waves, for instance) or pink noise (the steady hum of
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an engine).
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sounds without content and simple colors can be mood and
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mind manipulators when skillfully used by professionals.
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Much harpsichord and organ music--often heard in churches--
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rapidly propel most of any audience into an altered state of
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highly receptive and accepting consciousness. And colors, as
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proven by clothing designers, are directly associated with
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feelings and emotions.
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the potential for abuse of these techniques goes very
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far indeed. Says Dick Sutphen: "The techniques are still
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being used today by Christian revivalists, cults, human-potential trainings, some business rallies, and the United
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States Armed Services...to name a few."
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Don't think politicians are not using such covert
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methods. Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent annually
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on political campaigns, and the high-level consultants hired
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by politicans are well versed in all methods of manipulation.
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Dr. Key even cites one example of sex imbeds being used by
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Congressional candidates in Virginia. Another researcher
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discovered sex imbeds in an official portrait of President
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Jimmy Carter.
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Besides imbeds, politicians are using a full range of
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techniques to influence voters. Sutphen, a leading hypnotist
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, reports he has been approached by several political
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candidates to teach them how to do the characteristic "voice
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roll"-- a methodical, slow way of speaking used by hypnotists
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to induce trances in subjects. Properly used, even so simple
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a technique as the voice roll will dramatically escalate an
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audience's receptivity to whatever the speaker says--from
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"Ban pornography" to "Vote for me!" Sutphen has always
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declined these jobs, but you can bet less scrupulous
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hypnotists do not.
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As powerful--and potentially dangerous--as subliminals,
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voice rolls, false heartbeats and so on are, there are more
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menacing tools available to mind controllers, and, as with
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subliminals, you need not assent or be aware you are being
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manipulated. According to Dr. Andrija Puharich, at this very
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moment the Soviet Union is intensively exploring extra-low
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frequency electromagnetic waves (ELFs) that have the
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potential to exert enormous influence on human behavior. In
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one demonstration, Puharich sealed several volunteers wired
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to electroencephalographs (EEGs) in a metal room. Within a
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few seconds, one-third of the people in the room were
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dramatically affected by the ELFs. Notes Dick Sutphen:
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"Their behavior followed the anticipated changes at very
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precise frequencies. Waves below 6 cycles per second caused
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the subjects to become very emotionally upset and disrupted
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bodily functions. At 8.2 cycles they felt very high...at 11
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to 11.3 cycles induced waves of depressed agitation leading
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to riotous behavior."
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Puharich maintains that ELFs can travel not only through
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metal but also many miles through the earth. Are the
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<span class="NORP" title="NORP">Russians</span> beaming ELFs at the United States today? Nobody
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knows. At least nobody is saying. But this much is certain:
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ELFs exist and sooner or later somebody will begin using them
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to exert still further control on human behavior.
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Closer to home, researcher Patrick Flanagan has already
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demonstrated the power of his "neurophone." Tersely
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described by Dr. Flanagan as "an electronic way of accessing
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the brain," the neurophone is a soundless device that taps
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into the immense sensitivity of skin, which is packed with
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sensors for heat, light, vibration and so forth. With the
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neurophone, an audience sees nothing and hears nothing--but
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its effects are felt nonetheless. Relates Dick Sutphen: "In
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one of his recent tests, Pat conducted two identical seminars
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for a military audience. When the first group proved to be
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very cool and unwilling to respond, Patrick spent the next
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day making a special tape to play at the second seminar. The
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tape instructed the audience to be extremely warm and
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responsive and for their hands to become tingly. The tape
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was played through the neurophone, which was connected to a
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wire he placed along the ceiling of the room. There were no
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speakers, so no sound could be heard, yet the message was
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successfully transmitted from that wire directly into the
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brains of the audience. They were warm and receptive, their
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hands tingled and they responded according to programming."
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Granted, there is a futuristic, science-fiction quality
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to ELFs and the neurophone, but there is nothing more
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familiar than the television--and there just may be no more
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effective tool of mental manipulation. As noted by Conway
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and Siegelman: "As important as the content of the
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information that television puts out and its widespread
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social repercussions is the manner in which it may affect
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personality--not simply an individual's actions and behavior,
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but the way he or she perceives the world."
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Again, this propels us into a murky area of research,
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but what science knows about brain physiology is that it
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consists of two hemispheres. The left half is logical and
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factual; the right half is creative and intuitive.
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Unmanipulated, all of us bounce back and forth between right-and left-brain states of consciousness. Some of us are
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more lopsided in orientation than others. Very little else
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is known at this point except this: THE RIGHT-BRAIN IS FAR
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LESS CRITICAL IN ITS ASSESSMENT OF NEW INFORMATION.
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And that opens up a giant opportunity for manipulators.
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If the left-brain can be numbed, the right-brain just may
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accept whatever is presented.
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Guess what? That television in your living room...and
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the one in your bedroom...and even the tiny one in your car
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all have the ability to rapidly thrust you into a right-brain
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stat. That's because TV, while appearing to be a static
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medium, is actually composted of millions of flickering
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lights that can easily put a large percentage of the audience
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into a low-grade hypnotic state. Once in that state, they
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are far more receptive to suggestions and, possibly,
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commands. Says Dick Sutphen: "Recent tests by researcher Dr.
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Herbert Krugman showed that while viewers were watching TV,
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right-brain activity outnumbered left-brain activity by a
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ratio of two to one."
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A second series of experiments, by psychophysiologist
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Thomas Mulholland of the Veterans Hospital in Bedford,
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Massachusetts, uncovered still more eerie findings.
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Mulholland wired TV-watching children to an EEG. Whenever
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brain-wave activity indicated the kids had entered a low-grade hypnotic trance, the TV automatically shut off. Since
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the shows were ones the kids wanted to watch, they were
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motivated to remain fully conscious. They could not.
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Virtually all the TVs flicked off within 30 seconds, which
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underlines how powerfully television propels viewers into
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semiconsciousness.
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Still more experiments have been conducted by
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psychologist Jacob Jacoby, who tested 2700 viewers on the
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contents of television shows, such as BARNABY JONES, and
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commercials they had just finished watching. Jacoby asked
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very simple questions--yet, on average, these viewers missed
|
|
one-fourth to one-third of the answers. "Of course they
|
|
did," explains Dick Sutphen, "they were going in and out of a
|
|
trance!" And in trancelike states, we are far more likely to
|
|
accept and believe information and commands which, if we
|
|
were fully alert, we would immediately dismiss. "The medium
|
|
for takeover is here." Sutphen concludes.
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|
Indeed it is. According to USA TODAY research, by age
|
|
18 the typical teenager has digested more than 15000 mind-numbing hours of television--or, to put it another way, the
|
|
teenager has spent the virtual equivalent of two entire years
|
|
sitting in front of the tube.
|
|
Don't think advertisers are unaware of the potential of
|
|
TV to manipulate. "More and more," according to Sutphen,
|
|
"radio and television commercials are using techniques that
|
|
tend to alter consciousness to maximize effectiveness...Any
|
|
time patterned voices, songs, music or visual patterns are
|
|
used, this potential exists. "Plop..plop..fizz..fizz' is an
|
|
excellent example."
|
|
Sutphen elaborates: "When you start to combine
|
|
subliminal messages behind the music, subliminal visuals
|
|
projected on the screen, hypnotically produced visual
|
|
effects, sustained musical beats at a trance-inducing
|
|
pace...you have extremely effective brainwashing. Every hour
|
|
you spend watching the TV set, you become more conditioned."
|
|
Adds Dr. Key: "Madison Avenue account executives
|
|
actually brag about planting subliminals which, they claim,
|
|
no-one will be able to find. One executive at a major
|
|
international agency told of burying the words BUY! BUY!
|
|
continuously behind ten seconds of applause at the end of a
|
|
60-second TV commercial." Did the viewers follow
|
|
instructions? Absolutely! "Tests showed the instructions
|
|
worked superbly," says Key.
|
|
Don't think the entrenched political and religious
|
|
groups are unaware of this potential. Right-wing money
|
|
sources have long funded the Christian Broadcasting Network,
|
|
even vaulting one of its celebrities into Presidential
|
|
candidate status.
|
|
Jerry Falwell and his minions also attempted to seize
|
|
control of the mammoth <span class="ORG" title="ORG">CBS</span> television network. There is
|
|
little need to wonder why. Put a TV network under the
|
|
control of political or religious extremists, and in short
|
|
order, the airwaves could be even more saturated with hidden
|
|
messages and other mind-altering techniques than they
|
|
currently are. Add in, say, ELF technology in the hands of
|
|
these extremists and the nightmare increases.
|
|
Consider the potential. A show like MIAMI VICE, or any
|
|
MTV fare, already presents a richly saturated texture of
|
|
sights and sounds. The spadework for mind control has been
|
|
accomplished. A few high network officials could easily
|
|
retain for themselves "final review" of all programming, and
|
|
in the course of that review all manner of orders could be
|
|
inserted into a TV program. A mind numbing ELF overlay could
|
|
be inserted as well. Much of this mind-control arsenal has
|
|
already been proven to exist and to work in TV commercials.
|
|
Programming is just a logical extension--and a massive upping
|
|
of the mind-control stakes.
|
|
What can you do to guard against these present day (and
|
|
possible future) hidden manipulators? While experts agree on
|
|
the scope and severity of the problem, there is little
|
|
consensus about how to win a degree of self-protection. Dick
|
|
Sutphen speaks for most experts when he says: "I don't know
|
|
how the misuse of these techniques can be stopped." This
|
|
battle is critical--our free will is at stake. Unfortunately
|
|
, with the exception of turning off our TV sets, there are no
|
|
easy remedies. That is the one sure step we can take to win
|
|
back control over our subconscious minds. Beyond that, the
|
|
experts urge only that we be very, very careful about what we
|
|
listen to or watch.</p>
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<p>Taken from HUSTLER magazine, Nov. 1989 by Robert McGarvey.
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GOOD LUCK. PLEASE SPREAD THIS INFORMATION AS WIDELY AS
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POSSIBLE. </p>
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