The New Mind Control
The internet has spawned subtle forms of influence that can flip elections and manipulate everything we say, think and do.
By Robert Epstein
Gmail users are generally oblivious to the fact that Google
stores and analyses every email they write,
even the drafts they never send –
as well as all the incoming email they receive from both Gmail and non-Gmail users.
The technology has made possible undetectable and untraceable manipulations of entire populations that are beyond the scope of existing regulations and laws.
We are living in a world in which a handful of high-tech companies,
sometimes working hand-in-hand with governments,
are not only monitoring much of our activity,
but are also invisibly controlling more and more of what we think, feel, do and say.
March 02, 2016 "Information Clearing House" - "Aeon" - Over the past century, more than a few
great writers have expressed concern about humanity’s future. In The
Iron Heel (1908), the American writer Jack London pictured a world
in which a handful of wealthy corporate titans – the ‘oligarchs’ – kept the
masses at bay with a brutal combination of rewards and punishments. Much of
humanity lived in virtual slavery, while the fortunate ones were bought off
with decent wages that allowed them to live comfortably – but without any
real control over their lives.
In We (1924), the brilliant Russian
writer Yevgeny Zamyatin, anticipating the excesses of the emerging Soviet
Union, envisioned a world in which people were kept in check through
pervasive monitoring. The walls of their homes were made of clear glass, so
everything they did could be observed. They were allowed to lower their
shades an hour a day to have sex, but both the rendezvous time and the lover
had to be registered first with the state.
In Brave New World (1932), the
British author Aldous Huxley pictured a near-perfect society in which
unhappiness and aggression had been engineered out of humanity through a
combination of genetic engineering and psychological conditioning. And in the
much darker novel 1984 (1949), Huxley’s compatriot George
Orwell described a society in which thought itself was controlled; in
Orwell’s world, children were taught to use a simplified form of English
called Newspeak in order to assure that they could never express ideas that
were dangerous to society.
These are all fictional tales, to be sure, and in
each the leaders who held the power used conspicuous forms of control that at
least a few people actively resisted and occasionally overcame. But in the
non-fiction bestseller The Hidden Persuaders (1957) –
recently released in a 50th-anniversary edition – the American journalist
Vance Packard described a ‘strange and rather exotic’ type of influence that
was rapidly emerging in the United States and that was, in a way, more
threatening than the fictional types of control pictured in the novels.
According to Packard, US corporate executives and politicians were beginning
to use subtle and, in many cases, completely undetectable methods
to change people’s thinking, emotions and behaviour based on insights from
psychiatry and the social sciences.
Most of us have heard of at least one of these
methods: subliminal stimulation, or what Packard called ‘subthreshold
effects’ – the presentation of short messages that tell us what to do but
that are flashed so briefly we aren’t aware we have seen them. In 1958,
propelled by public concern about a theatre in New Jersey that had supposedly
hidden messages in a movie to increase ice cream sales, the National
Association of Broadcasters – the association that set standards for US
television – amended its code to prohibit the use of subliminal messages in
broadcasting. In 1974, the Federal Communications Commission opined that the
use of such messages was ‘contrary to the public interest’. Legislation to
prohibit subliminal messaging was also introduced in the US Congress but
never enacted. Both the UK and Australia have strict laws prohibiting it.
Subliminal stimulation is probably still in wide use
in the US – it’s hard to detect, after all, and no one is keeping track of it
– but it’s probably not worth worrying about. Research suggests that it has
only a small impact, and that it mainly influences people who are already
motivated to follow its dictates; subliminal directives to drink affect
people only if they’re already thirsty.
Packard had uncovered a much bigger problem, however
– namely that powerful corporations were constantly looking for, and in many
cases already applying, a wide variety of techniques for controlling people
without their knowledge. He described a kind of cabal in which marketers
worked closely with social scientists to determine, among other things, how
to get people to buy things they didn’t need and how to condition young
children to be good consumers – inclinations that were explicitly nurtured
and trained in Huxley’s Brave New World. Guided by social
science, marketers were quickly learning how to play upon people’s
insecurities, frailties, unconscious fears, aggressive feelings and sexual
desires to alter their thinking, emotions and behaviour without any awareness
that they were being manipulated.
By the early 1950s, Packard said, politicians had
got the message and were beginning to merchandise themselves using the same
subtle forces being used to sell soap. Packard prefaced his chapter on
politics with an unsettling quote from the British economist Kenneth
Boulding: ‘A world of unseen dictatorship is conceivable, still using the
forms of democratic government.’ Could this really happen, and, if so, how
would it work?
The forces that Packard described have become more
pervasive over the decades. The soothing music we all hear overhead in
supermarkets causes us to walk more slowly and buy more food, whether we need
it or not. Most of the vacuous thoughts and intense feelings our teenagers
experience from morning till night are carefully orchestrated by highly
skilled marketing professionals working in our fashion and entertainment
industries. Politicians work with a wide range of consultants who test every
aspect of what the politicians do in order to sway voters: clothing,
intonations, facial expressions, makeup, hairstyles and speeches are all
optimised, just like the packaging of a breakfast cereal.
Fortunately, all of these sources of influence
operate competitively. Some of the persuaders want us to buy or believe one
thing, others to buy or believe something else. It is the competitive nature
of our society that keeps us, on balance, relatively free.
But what would happen if new sources of control
began to emerge that had little or no competition? And what if new means of
control were developed that were far more powerful – and far more invisible –
than any that have existed in the past? And what if new types of control
allowed a handful of people to exert enormous influence not just over the
citizens of the US but over most of the people on Earth?
It might surprise you to hear this, but these things
have already happened.
Google decides which web pages to include in search
results, and how to rank them. How
it does so is one of the best-kept secrets in the world, like the formula for
Coca-Cola.
To understand how the new forms of mind control
work, we need to start by looking at the search engine – one in particular:
the biggest and best of them all, namely Google. The Google search engine is
so good and so popular that the company’s name is now a commonly used verb in
languages around the world. To ‘Google’ something is to look it up on the
Google search engine, and that, in fact, is how most computer users worldwide
get most of their information about just about everything these days. They Google it.
Google has become the main gateway to virtually all knowledge, mainly because
the search engine is so good at giving us exactly the information we are
looking for, almost instantly and almost always in the first position of the
list it shows us after we launch our search – the list of ‘search results’.
That ordered list is so good, in fact, that about 50
per cent of our clicks go to the top two items, and more than 90 per cent of
our clicks go to the 10 items listed on the first page of results; few people
look at other results pages, even though they often number in the thousands,
which means they probably contain lots of good information. Google decides
which of the billions of web pages it is going to include in our search
results, and it also decides how to rank them. How it decides these things is
a deep, dark secret – one of the best-kept secrets in the world, like the
formula for Coca-Cola.
Because people are far more likely to read and click
on higher-ranked items, companies now spend billions of dollars every year
trying to trick Google’s search algorithm – the computer program that does
the selecting and ranking – into boosting them another notch or two. Moving
up a notch can mean the difference between success and failure for a
business, and moving into the top slots can be the key to fat profits.
Late in 2012, I began to wonder whether highly
ranked search results could be impacting more than consumer choices. Perhaps,
I speculated, a top search result could have a small impact on people’s opinions
about things. Early in 2013, with my associate Ronald E Robertson of the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology in Vista, California, I put this idea to a
test by conducting an experiment in which 102 people from the San Diego area
were randomly assigned to one of three groups. In one group, people saw
search results that favoured one political candidate – that is, results that
linked to web pages that made this candidate look better than his or her
opponent. In a second group, people saw search rankings that favoured the
opposing candidate, and in the third group – the control group – people saw a
mix of rankings that favoured neither candidate. The same search results and
web pages were used in each group; the only thing that differed for the three
groups was the ordering of the search results.
To make our experiment realistic, we used real
search results that linked to real web pages. We also used a real election –
the 2010 election for the prime minister of Australia. We used a foreign
election to make sure that our participants were ‘undecided’. Their lack of
familiarity with the candidates assured this. Through advertisements, we also
recruited an ethnically diverse group of registered voters over a wide age
range in order to match key demographic characteristics of the US voting
population.
All participants were first given brief descriptions
of the candidates and then asked to rate them in various ways, as well as to
indicate which candidate they would vote for; as you might expect,
participants initially favoured neither candidate on any of the five measures
we used, and the vote was evenly split in all three groups. Then the
participants were given up to 15 minutes in which to conduct an online search
using ‘Kadoodle’, our mock search engine, which gave them access to five
pages of search results that linked to web pages. People could move freely
between search results and web pages, just as we do when using Google. When
participants completed their search, we asked them to rate the candidates
again, and we also asked them again who they would vote for.
We predicted that the opinions and voting
preferences of 2 or 3 per cent of the people in the two bias groups – the
groups in which people were seeing rankings favouring one candidate – would
shift toward that candidate. What we actually found was astonishing. The
proportion of people favouring the search engine’s top-ranked candidate
increased by 48.4 per cent, and all five of our measures shifted
toward that candidate. What’s more, 75 per cent of the people in the bias
groups seemed to have been completely unaware that they were viewing biased
search rankings. In the control group, opinions did not shift significantly.
This seemed to be a major discovery. The shift we
had produced, which we called the Search Engine Manipulation Effect (or SEME,
pronounced ‘seem’), appeared to be one of the largest behavioural effects
ever discovered. We did not immediately uncork the Champagne bottle, however.
For one thing, we had tested only a small number of people, and they were all
from the San Diego area.
Over the next year or so, we replicated our findings
three more times, and the third time was with a sample of more than 2,000 people
from all 50 US states. In that experiment, the shift in voting preferences
was 37.1 per cent and even higher in some demographic groups – as high as 80
per cent, in fact.
We also learned in this series of experiments that
by reducing the bias just slightly on the first page of search results –
specifically, by including one search item that favoured the other candidate
in the third or fourth position of the results – we could mask our
manipulation so that few or even no people were aware that they
were seeing biased rankings. We could still produce dramatic shifts in voting
preferences, but we could do so invisibly.
Still no Champagne, though. Our results were strong
and consistent, but our experiments all involved a foreign election – that
2010 election in Australia. Could voting preferences be shifted with real
voters in the middle of a real campaign? We were skeptical. In real
elections, people are bombarded with multiple sources of information, and
they also know a lot about the candidates. It seemed unlikely that a single
experience on a search engine would have much impact on their voting
preferences.
To find out, in early 2014, we went to India just
before voting began in the largest democratic election in the world – the Lok
Sabha election for prime minister. The three main candidates were Rahul
Gandhi, Arvind Kejriwal, and Narendra Modi. Making use of online subject
pools and both online and print advertisements, we recruited 2,150 people
from 27 of India’s 35 states and territories to participate in our
experiment. To take part, they had to be registered voters who had not yet
voted and who were still undecided about how they would vote.
unlike subliminal stimuli, SEME has an enormous
impact – like Casper the ghost pushing you down a flight of stairs
Participants were randomly assigned to three
search-engine groups, favouring, respectively, Gandhi, Kejriwal or Modi. As
one might expect, familiarity levels with the candidates was high – between
7.7 and 8.5 on a scale of 10. We predicted that our manipulation would
produce a very small effect, if any, but that’s not what we found. On
average, we were able to shift the proportion of people favouring any given
candidate by more than 20 per cent overall and more than 60 per cent in some
demographic groups. Even more disturbing, 99.5 per cent of our participants
showed no awareness that they were viewing biased search rankings – in other
words, that they were being manipulated.
SEME’s near-invisibility is curious indeed. It means
that when people – including you and me – are looking at biased search
rankings, they look just fine. So if right now you Google ‘US
presidential candidates’, the search results you see will probably look
fairly random, even if they happen to favour one candidate. Even
I have trouble detecting bias in search rankings that I know to
be biased (because they were prepared by my staff). Yet our randomised,
controlled experiments tell us over and over again that when higher-ranked
items connect with web pages that favour one candidate, this has a dramatic
impact on the opinions of undecided voters, in large part for the simple
reason that people tend to click only on higher-ranked items. This is truly
scary: like subliminal stimuli, SEME is a force you can’t see; but unlike
subliminal stimuli, it has an enormous impact – like Casper the ghost pushing
you down a flight of stairs.
We published a detailed report about our first five experiments on SEME in the
prestigious Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
in August 2015. We had indeed found something important, especially given
Google’s dominance over search. Google has a near-monopoly on internet
searches in the US, with 83 per cent of Americans specifying Google as the
search engine they use most often, according to the Pew Research
Center. So if Google
favours one candidate in an election, its impact on undecided voters could
easily decide the election’s outcome.
Keep in mind that we had had only one shot at our
participants. What would be the impact of favouring one candidate in searches
people are conducting over a period of weeks or months before an election? It
would almost certainly be much larger than what we were seeing in our
experiments.
Other types of influence during an election campaign
are balanced by competing sources of influence – a wide variety of
newspapers, radio shows and television networks, for example – but Google,
for all intents and purposes, has no competition, and people trust its search
results implicitly, assuming that the company’s mysterious search algorithm
is entirely objective and unbiased. This high level of trust, combined with
the lack of competition, puts Google in a unique position to impact
elections. Even more disturbing, the search-ranking business is entirely
unregulated, so Google could favour any candidate it likes without violating
any laws. Some courts have even ruled that Google’s right to
rank-order search results as it pleases is protected as a form of free
speech.
Does the company ever favour particular candidates?
In the 2012 US presidential election, Google and its top executives donated
more than $800,000 to President Barack Obama and just $37,000 to his
opponent, Mitt Romney. And in 2015, a team of researchers from the University
of Maryland and elsewhere showed that Google’s search results routinely
favoured Democratic candidates. Are Google’s search rankings really biased?
An internal
report issued by
the US Federal Trade Commission in 2012 concluded that Google’s search
rankings routinely put Google’s financial interests ahead of those of their
competitors, and anti-trust actions currently under way against Google in
both the European
Union and India are based on similar findings.
In most countries, 90 per cent of online search is
conducted on Google, which gives the company even more power to flip
elections than it has in the US and, with internet penetration increasing
rapidly worldwide, this power is growing. In our PNAS article,
Robertson and I calculated that Google now has the power to flip upwards of 25
per cent of the national elections in the world with no one knowing
this is occurring. In fact, we estimate that, with or without deliberate
planning on the part of company executives, Google’s search rankings have
been impacting elections for years, with growing impact each year. And
because search rankings are ephemeral, they leave no paper trail, which gives
the company complete deniability.
Power on this scale and with this level of
invisibility is unprecedented in human history. But it turns out that our
discovery about SEME was just the tip of a very large iceberg.
Recent reports suggest that the Democratic presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton is making heavy use of social media to try to
generate support – Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Snapchat and Facebook, for
starters. At this writing, she has 5.4 million followers on Twitter, and her
staff is tweeting several times an hour during waking hours. The Republican
frontrunner, Donald Trump, has 5.9 million Twitter followers and is tweeting
just as frequently.
Is social media as big a threat to democracy as
search rankings appear to be? Not necessarily. When new technologies are used
competitively, they present no threat. Even through the platforms are new,
they are generally being used the same way as billboards and television commercials
have been used for decades: you put a billboard on one side of the street; I
put one on the other. I might have the money to erect more billboards than
you, but the process is still competitive.
What happens, though, if such technologies are
misused by the companies that own them? A study by Robert M Bond, now a political science
professor at Ohio State University, and others published in Nature in
2012 described an ethically questionable experiment in which, on election day
in 2010, Facebook sent ‘go out and vote’ reminders to more than 60 million of
its users. The reminders caused about 340,000 people to vote who otherwise
would not have. Writing in the New Republic in 2014, Jonathan Zittrain, professor of
international law at Harvard University, pointed out that, given the massive
amount of information it has collected about its users, Facebook could easily
send such messages only to people who support one particular party or
candidate, and that doing so could easily flip a close election – with
no one knowing that this has occurred. And because advertisements, like
search rankings, are ephemeral, manipulating an election in this way would
leave no paper trail.
Are there laws prohibiting Facebook from sending out
ads selectively to certain users? Absolutely not; in fact, targeted
advertising is how Facebook makes its money. Is Facebook currently
manipulating elections in this way? No one knows, but in my view it would be
foolish and possibly even improper for Facebook not to do
so. Some candidates are better for a company than others, and Facebook’s
executives have a fiduciary responsibility to the company’s stockholders to
promote the company’s interests.
The Bond study was largely ignored, but another Facebook experiment, published in 2014 in PNAS, prompted
protests around the world. In this study, for a period of a week, 689,000
Facebook users were sent news feeds that contained either an excess of
positive terms, an excess of negative terms, or neither. Those in the first
group subsequently used slightly more positive terms in their communications,
while those in the second group used slightly more negative terms in their
communications. This was said to show that people’s ‘emotional states’ could
be deliberately manipulated on a massive scale by a social media company, an
idea that many people found disturbing. People were also upset that a
large-scale experiment on emotion had been conducted without the explicit
consent of any of the participants.
Facebook’s consumer profiles are undoubtedly
massive, but they pale in comparison with those maintained by Google, which
is collecting information about people 24/7, using more than 60
different observation platforms – the search engine, of course, but also
Google Wallet, Google Maps, Google Adwords, Google Analytics, Chrome, Google
Docs, Android, YouTube, and on and on. Gmail users are generally oblivious to
the fact that Google stores and analyses every email they write, even the
drafts they never send – as well as all the incoming email they
receive from both Gmail and non-Gmail users.
If Google set about to fix an election, it could
identify just those voters who are undecided. Then it could send customised
rankings favouring one candidate to just those people
According to Google’s privacy policy – to which one assents whenever one uses a
Google product, even when one has not been informed that he or she is using a
Google product – Google can share the information it collects about you with
almost anyone, including government agencies. But never with you.
Google’s privacy is sacrosanct; yours is nonexistent.
Could Google and ‘those we work with’ (language from
the privacy policy) use the information they are amassing about you for
nefarious purposes – to manipulate or coerce, for example? Could inaccurate
information in people’s profiles (which people have no way to correct) limit
their opportunities or ruin their reputations?
Certainly, if Google set about to fix an election,
it could first dip into its massive database of personal information to
identify just those voters who are undecided. Then it could, day after day,
send customised rankings favouring one candidate to just those people.
One advantage of this approach is that it would make Google’s manipulation
extremely difficult for investigators to detect.
Extreme forms of monitoring, whether by the KGB in
the Soviet Union, the Stasi in East Germany, or Big Brother in 1984,
are essential elements of all tyrannies, and technology is making both
monitoring and the consolidation of surveillance data easier than ever. By
2020, China will have put in place the most ambitious government monitoring
system ever created – a single database called the Social
Credit System, in
which multiple ratings and records for all of its 1.3 billion citizens are
recorded for easy access by officials and bureaucrats. At a glance, they will
know whether someone has plagiarised schoolwork, was tardy in paying bills,
urinated in public, or blogged inappropriately online.
As Edward Snowden’s revelations made clear, we are
rapidly moving toward a world in which both governments and corporations –
sometimes working together – are collecting massive amounts of data about
every one of us every day, with few or no laws in place that restrict how
those data can be used. When you combine the data collection with the desire
to control or manipulate, the possibilities are endless, but perhaps the most
frightening possibility is the one expressed in Boulding’s assertion that an
‘unseen dictatorship’ was possible ‘using the forms of democratic
government’.
Since Robertson and I submitted our initial report
on SEME to PNAS early in 2015, we have completed a
sophisticated series of experiments that have greatly enhanced our
understanding of this phenomenon, and other experiments will be completed in
the coming months. We have a much better sense now of why SEME is so powerful
and how, to some extent, it can be suppressed.
We have also learned something very disturbing –
that search engines are influencing far more than what people buy and whom
they vote for. We now have evidence suggesting that on virtually all issues
where people are initially undecided, search rankings are impacting almost
every decision that people make. They are having an impact on the opinions,
beliefs, attitudes and behaviours of internet users worldwide – entirely
without people’s knowledge that this is occurring. This is happening with or
without deliberate intervention by company officials; even so-called
‘organic’ search processes regularly generate search results that favour one
point of view, and that in turn has the potential to tip the opinions of
millions of people who are undecided on an issue. In one of our recent
experiments, biased search results shifted people’s opinions about the value
of fracking by 33.9 per cent.
Perhaps even more disturbing is that the handful of
people who do show awareness that they are viewing biased search rankings
shift even further in the predicted direction; simply
knowing that a list is biased doesn’t necessarily protect you from SEME’s power.
Remember what the search algorithm is doing: in
response to your query, it is selecting a handful of
webpages from among the billions that are available, and it is ordering those
webpages using secret criteria. Seconds later, the decision you make or the
opinion you form – about the best toothpaste to use, whether fracking is
safe, where you should go on your next vacation, who would make the best
president, or whether global warming is real – is determined by that short
list you are shown, even though you have no idea how the list was generated.
The technology has made possible undetectable and
untraceable manipulations of entire populations that are beyond the scope of
existing regulations and laws.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes, a consolidation of
search engines has been quietly taking place, so that more people are using
the dominant search engine even when they think they are not. Because Google
is the best search engine, and because crawling the rapidly expanding
internet has become prohibitively expensive, more and more search engines are
drawing their information from the leader rather than generating it
themselves. The most recent deal, revealed in a Securities
and Exchange Commission filing in October 2015, was between Google and Yahoo!
Inc.
Looking ahead to the November 2016 US presidential
election, I see clear signs that Google is backing Hillary Clinton. In April
2015, Clinton hired Stephanie
Hannon away from
Google to be her chief technology officer and, a few months ago, Eric Schmidt,
chairman of the holding company that controls Google, set up a
semi-secret company –
The Groundwork – for the specific purpose of putting Clinton in office. The
formation of The Groundwork prompted Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks, to
dub Google Clinton’s ‘secret
weapon’ in her quest for
the US presidency.
We now estimate that Hannon’s old friends have the
power to drive between 2.6 and 10.4 million votes to Clinton on election day
with no one knowing that this is occurring and without leaving a paper trail.
They can also help her win the nomination, of course, by influencing
undecided voters during the primaries. Swing voters have always been the key
to winning elections, and there has never been a more powerful, efficient or
inexpensive way to sway them than SEME.
We are living in a world in which a handful of
high-tech companies, sometimes working hand-in-hand with governments, are not
only monitoring much of our activity, but are also invisibly controlling more
and more of what we think, feel, do and say. The technology that now
surrounds us is not just a harmless toy; it has also made possible
undetectable and untraceable manipulations of entire populations –
manipulations that have no precedent in human history and that are currently
well beyond the scope of existing regulations and laws. The new hidden
persuaders are bigger, bolder and badder than anything Vance Packard ever
envisioned. If we choose to ignore this, we do so at our peril.
Robert Epstein is a senior research psychologist at
the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology in California.
He is the author of 15 books, and the former editor-in-chief of Psychology
Today. This article is a preview of his forthcoming book, The New
Mind Control.
|
Paul Craig Roberts Translations
What part will your country play in World War III?
CROATIAN ENGLISH GREEK NEDERLANDS POLSKI PORTUGUESE ROMANIAN SPANISH РУССКИЙ
What part will your country play in World War III?
The true origins of the two World Wars have been deleted from all our history books and replaced with mythology. Neither War was started (or desired) by Germany, but both at the instigation of a group of European Zionist Jews with the stated intent of the total destruction of Germany. The documentation is overwhelming and the evidence undeniable. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)
That history is being repeated today in a mass grooming of the Western world’s people (especially Americans) in preparation for World War III – which I believe is now imminent.
Labels
- A Arte da Guerra
- Announcements
- Articles & Columns
- Comitato No Guerra No Nato
- Croatian
- CZECH
- Dave Kranzler
- ENGLISH
- ERIC ZUESSE
- Finnian Cunningham
- FRENCH
- GERMAN
- GREEK
- Guest Contributions
- HELLENIC
- INTERVIEW
- ITALIANO
- Manlio Dinucci
- NATO & NUKES
- NO WAR NO NATO
- NORWEGIAN
- POLISH
- PORTUGUESE
- PUTIN
- ROMANIAN
- RUSSIAN
- SPANISH
- US NATO War Agenda
Friday, March 4, 2016
Is The Die Cast?
sister site
CROATIAN ENGLISH GREEK NEDERLANDS POLSKI PORTUGUESE ROMANIAN SPANISH РУССКИЙ
What part will your country play in World War III?
The true origins of the two World Wars have been deleted from all our history books and replaced with mythology. Neither War was started (or desired) by Germany, but both at the instigation of a group of European Zionist Jews with the stated intent of the total destruction of Germany. The documentation is overwhelming and the evidence undeniable. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)
That history is being repeated today in a mass grooming of the Western world’s people (especially Americans) in preparation for World War III – which I believe is now imminent.
BRUTALITY
BRUTALITY IN ACTION
AND NO ONE REACTS AGAINST AND OPPOSES IT!!!....
BRUTALIDADE EM ACÇÃO
E
NINGUÉM REAJE CONTRA ELA E SE OPÕE!!!...
https://twitter.com/backtolife_2023/status/1589485984361873408?s=20&t=7vdffgzpUFi2yeU4FxCHng
What part will your country play in World War III?
By Larry Romanoff, May 27, 2021
The true origins of the two World Wars have been deleted from all our history books and replaced with mythology. Neither War was started (or desired) by Germany, but both at the instigation of a group of European Zionist Jews with the stated intent of the total destruction of Germany. The documentation is overwhelming and the evidence undeniable. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)
READ MORE
https://www.moonofshanghai.com/2021/05/larry-romanoff-what-part-will-your.html
Discurso do Presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin, na manhã do dia 24 de Fevereiro de 2022
Discurso do Presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin, Tradução em português
Presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin: Cidadãos da Rússia, Amigos,
Considero ser necessário falar hoje, de novo, sobre os trágicos acontecimentos em Donbass e sobre os aspectos mais importantes de garantir a segurança da Rússia.
Começarei com o que disse no meu discurso de 21 de Fevereiro de 2022. Falei sobre as nossas maiores responsabilidades e preocupações e sobre as ameaças fundamentais que os irresponsáveis políticos ocidentais criaram à Rússia de forma continuada, com rudeza e sem cerimónias, de ano para ano. Refiro-me à expansão da NATO para Leste, que está a aproximar cada vez mais as suas infraestruturas militares da fronteira russa.
É um facto que, durante os últimos 30 anos, temos tentado pacientemente chegar a um acordo com os principais países NATO, relativamente aos princípios de uma segurança igual e indivisível, na Europa. Em resposta às nossas propostas, enfrentámos invariavelmente, ou engano cínico e mentiras, ou tentativas de pressão e de chantagem, enquanto a aliança do Atlântico Norte continuou a expandir-se, apesar dos nossos protestos e preocupações. A sua máquina militar está em movimento e, como disse, aproxima-se da nossa fronteira.
Porque é que isto está a acontecer? De onde veio esta forma insolente de falar que atinge o máximo do seu excepcionalismo, infalibilidade e permissividade? Qual é a explicação para esta atitude de desprezo e desdém pelos nossos interesses e exigências absolutamente legítimas?
ARRIVING IN CHINA
J. Bacque
20 questions to Putin
The President of Russia delivered the Address to the Federal Assembly. The ceremony took place at the Manezh Central Exhibition Hall.
January 15, 2020
State of the Nation
Joint news conference following a Normandy format summit
https://tributetoapresident.blogspot.com/2019/12/joint-news-conference-following.html
índice
PORTUGUÊS
GUERRA NUCLEAR: O DIA ANTERIOR
De Hiroshima até hoje: Quem e como nos conduzem à catástrofe
me>
THE PUTIN INTERVIEWS
The Putin Interviews
by Oliver Stone (FULL VIDEOS) EN/RU/SP/FR/IT/CH
http://tributetoapresident.blogspot.com/2018/07/the-putin-interviews-by-oliver-stone.html
http://tributetoapresident.blogspot.com/2018/07/the-putin-interviews-by-oliver-stone.html
TRIBUTE TO A PRESIDENT
NA PRMEIRA PESSOA
Um auto retrato surpreendentemente sincero do Presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin
CONTEÚDO
Prefácio
Personagens Principais em 'Na Primeira Pessoa'
Parte Três: O Estudante Universitário
Parte Quatro: O Jovem especialista
Parte Cinco: O Espia
Parte Seis: O Democráta
Parte Sete: O Burocrata
Parte Oito: O Homem de Família
Parte Nove: O Político
Apêndice: A Rússia na Viragem do Milénio
Daniele Ganser
Açores
Subtitled in EN/PT
Click upon the small wheel at the right side of the video and choose your language.
xmas
“Glory to God in the highest,
and on Earth
Peace, Good Will toward men.”
This Christmas, Give Peace
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.