Tuesday, July 09, 2013

Metabunk 7/9


I wish we had a better entertainer in chief now, merely my perspective. Maybe the corporate media/government hive mind should look into getting an actor to play the part of the CEO again. A satire: "An official source just took a leak on me about what went on at the Bohemian Grove... so this crisis actor should be president!" Relevant to the topic because the point is, when the "mainstream" or corporate/government media messes around with people's perceptions and perspectives as much as the military industrial media has in the past, perhaps it's little wonder that more and more internet types are crazy enough to speculate about crisis actors now. Internet types on "the web"* that is in the processes of coming into existence faster than conspirators and the military industrial media can keep up with it.

*Note one of the slogans of conspirators that seem to like to think of themselves as Illuminated Gods Inc. and the manipulators of perceptions among the multitude of pawns on the Grand Chessboard: "Weaving Spiders Come Not Here". One might imagine that as a reference to a mythological conspiracy theorist:   
In Greco-Roman mythology, Arachne (pron.: /əˈrækniː/) was a great mortal weaver who boasted that her skill was greater than that of Athena, goddess of wisdom and [war] strategy. Arachne refused to acknowledge that her knowledge came, in part at least, from the goddess. Offended by Arachne’s arrogance, Athena set a contest between the two weavers. According to Ovid, the goddess was so envious of the magnificent tapestry and the mortal weaver’s success, and perhaps offended by the girl’s choice of subjects (the loves and transgressions of the gods), that she destroyed the tapestry and loom and slashed the girl’s face. “Not even Pallas nor blue-fevered Envy \ Could damn Arachne’s work. \ The goddess raged at the girl’s success, struck through her loom, tore down the scenes of wayward joys in heaven.″ Ultimately, the goddess turned Arachne into a spider. Arachne simply means “spider” (ἀράχνη) in Greek. –Wikipedia

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