I know many of you have done this one before, but if you haven't, than try it... don't spoil it either.
Clearly this is evidence that the human mind is capable of being programmed in a manner which we fully do not understand. The chances of people having understood this potential in man must stretch back farther than the last few decades.
Mind control is real and you are subjected to it every single day of your life, and in not so lucky circumstances you are a slave to it.
Any other good examples you can think of? I may research this a little more over the next while, I might not.
The most famous examples I can think of which had clear and obvious effects that are undeniable are the Pokeman Episodes, and perhaps the Twilight series, if that rumor is true.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denn%C5%8D_Senshi_Porygon
The episode is infamous for certain repetitive visual effects which induced photosensitive epileptic seizures in a substantial number of Japanese viewers, an incident referred to as the "Pokémon Shock" (ãƒã‚±ãƒ¢ãƒ³ã‚·ãƒ§ãƒƒã‚¯ Pokemon Shokku?) by the Japanese press. 685 viewers were taken to hospitals; two people remained hospitalized for more than two weeks. Due to this, the episode has not been rebroadcast worldwide. After the incident, the Pokémon anime went into a four-month hiatus, and it returned on TV Tokyo in April 16, 1998. Since then, the episode has been parodied and referenced in cultural media, including The Simpsons and South Park.
Epilepsy specialist Dr. Michael G. Chez, said the scene may be triggering
Seizures can be brought on by flashing red lights in those that are predisposed to photosensitive epilepsy.
A 1990s episode of the television show Pokémon, caused seizures in children
The phenomenon is more common in video games than films
Designers no longer put strobe effect lights in modern games
Blue lens sunglasses can filter out the red light and filter out the red light
episodes of photosensitive epilepsy in those that are predisposed to it.Seizures can be brought on by flashing red lights in people who are genetically predisposed.
'It’s like a light switch going off, because it hits your brain all at once,' Dr. Chez told CBC Sacramento.
One episode of TV show Pokémon, broadcast in the 1990s caused a wave of seizures in young children.
'The trouble with theaters, it’s dark, the lights flashing in there is more like a strobe light,' he added.A one-off seizure does no real long-term damage in the majority of cases, Dr. Chez said.
These are not fake. I myself have caught someone rapidly inducting me once in the past, and it was only something I caught because the wife of the man inducting me, interrupted the procedure in protest, at which point I regained wakefulness. I also have memories of being interrogated by the same person without any recollection of the meeting taking place.
The key to avoiding these situations, is simple. Never let your guard down. The first and most important step that every mind controller insists is necessary is to build rapport and trust. to relax the nervous system, putting it off guard. Simple, never let your guard down, and never trust other people in situations that are questionable.
Another general rule is that people will not do something they normally would not be predisposed to do. If it goes against thier normal will, than suggestions will not work, however, you can see clear as day that hypnosis, mind control, and mind programming are real thing.
They are not particularly dangerous things, however they are clearly practices that keep you from your own path in life.
Welcome to Hyper Consumerist Culture.
http://www.csun.edu/science/health/docs/tv&health.html
According to the A.C. Nielsen Co., the average American watches more than 4 hours of TV each day (or 28 hours/week, or 2 months of nonstop TV-watching per year). In a 65-year life, that person will have spent 9 years glued to the tube.
This is why typically I prefer youtube videos, and avoid high budget productions and commercial television.
This is where I will get highly speculative. I believe there are more than just one branch of mind control camps. Meaning, Hypnosis is not the only art out there. NLP, and Psychology does not count. I am fairly certain having met people in my time that there are other arts at work which are not out in the open at all.
Anyways, if you do watch commerical television, I believe it important to step outside of your consciousness, and ask yourself, what you are thinking after every message is drilled into your head. It's not the easiest thing to do when you are relaxed, but with some careful thought and diligence you can see where some techniques are in use. Generally however it follows classical conditioning rules from general psychology.
Bright interrupting flashes serve a double purpose. They look great, they add an element of excitement, but they also very naturally work to pound the living crap out of our ability to keep awareness happening with our consciousness.
The NAZI's invented closed curcuit televisions. In fact, it was a mandatory course in one of our more beatnik style teachers to understand the full implication of Olympia. Which is something we simply do not consider these days without trained minds.
I will get highly speculative again. Color Television, historically purposely has a red band channel which is compressed and low resolution. Newer technologies to my understanding do not have mechanisms in place to block out high resolution RED channels. You are welcome for the outer space theories. You know the old saying. Never wear Red on television.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6208004
Red-coloured flicker is claimed to be more epileptogenic than white or that of other colours matched for subjective intensity. A feature of the colour opponent system is that the response of luminosity-sensitive cortical units to stimulation of ganglion cells of a particular spectral sensitivity is reduced when cells of other sensitivities are simultaneously stimulated. We hypothesized that the apparent effect of colour on photosensitivity was not a property of red light per se but arose simply from the fact that, with commercially available filters a light can be provided to stimulate only red sensitive cones, but owing to the overlap of the absorption spectra of the visual pigments it is difficult to stimulate only green or blue sensitive cones. Such stimulation of a single cone population can be achieved by the 'silent substitution method' which has been used for evoked response studies. In 12 photosensitive epileptic patients we find that, using stimulus intensities (less than 20 nits) at which white flicker is without effect, stimulation of either red or green cones by the silent substitution method may produce epileptiform discharges, there being a slight (and not significant) excess of patients showing a greater sensitivity for green than for red cone stimulation. The findings are considered to support the hypothesis set out above.
Unfortunately I just to not scrutinize television commericals the way I used to. However start to pay attention to what children watch onm saturday mornings compared to what everyone else does.
Consider that MacDonalds never (usually, depending) run commercial at night. There is no opportunity to send a mindless zombie out for a treck to get a burger. (Even though thier cupboards are probably full of food).
Pizza commericals do not generally run at times which are not considered optimal times to interrupt the time of day people are involved in dinner making decisions. And so on...
Seems pretty straight forward, but these are things we tend to ignore, because we do not value our own autonomy.
So generally this is nothing revelational, only a public service announcement. Whether you care or not, is none of my business.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impulse_purchase
An impulse purchase or impulse buying is an unplanned decision to buy a product or service, made just before a purchase.[1] One who tends to make such purchases is referred to as an impulse purchaser or impulse buyer. Research findings suggest that emotions and feelings play a decisive role in purchasing, triggered by seeing the product or upon exposure to a well crafted promotional message.[1]
Now you know why the top commericals are canned emotionally feel good adverts.
Marketers and retailers tend to exploit these impulses which are tied to the basic want for instant gratification. For example, a shopper in a supermarket might not specifically be shopping for confectionary. However, candy, gum, mints and chocolate are prominently displayed at the checkout aisles to trigger impulse buyers to buy what they might not have otherwise considered.[2] Alternatively, impulse buying can occur when a potential consumer spots something related to a product that stirs a particular passion in them, such as seeing a certain country's flag on the cover of a certain DVD. Sale items are displayed in much the same fashion.
Impulse buying can also extend to more expensive items such as automobiles and home appliances. Automobiles in particular are as much an emotional purchase as a rational one. This in turn leads auto dealers all over the world to market their products in a rapid-fire, almost carnival-like manner designed to appeal to emotion over reason.
Now you know why, Walmart is not a place where you save money, and you sure as hell have no fucking clue whatsoever, on how to live better.
In fact, has anyone noticed over the last decade or so, that advertisers, have blatantly resorted to flat out ambiguous lies in thier promotional tactics? Only a hunch. I believe this generation coming up has been recognized as being generally dishonest compared to previous generations, and lies are something we can relate to at a sub-conscious level. Only a hunch.
Also, can someone please tell me if I am going crazy (besides MacBhudda).
When someone say the "the fact lies in", is that a sub conscious slip, along the lines of a Freudian slip?
The correct saying is "the fact lays in". Generally I have grown super distrustful (or entertained the idea as being generally false) of any information that uses that euphemism.
Am I crazy or what?
Now that I've said all this, and maybe you've opened your eyes a little bit.
Quick. Where did the Earths Water come from?
I will give you a clue. Hydrogen + Oxygen + Energy = H2O