In Part I of "Deconstructing the Power of the
Global Elite," I discussed a threefold model of power: Brute
Force, the Power to Hurt and Psychological Control. In Part II,
I will address several forms of psychological control designed
to induce states of mind that are inherently disempowering, that
eliminate or severely diminish our will to take corrective
action in the face of grievous harm.As stated in a famous quote
from Henry David Thoreau, the mass of men live lives of quiet
desperation, marked by a state of resignation which is confirmed
desperation. This phenomenon, which is so antithetical to the
joyful natural instincts of newborns, has not come about by
accident, but rather through the careful crafting of a
cold-blooded global oligarchy. An oligarchy whose insidiousness
calls to mind an ancient story in which a perfect murder is
committed by Brak the ice man, who kills a woman with an icicle
dagger: both he and his weapon melt away in the next day's sun,
leaving nothing behind as a basis for prosecuting the crime.
For in addition to brute force
and the power to hurt, the global elite uses another form of
power that is as stealth like and chilling as Brak's perfect
crime: sophisticated techniques for psychological control
stemming in large part from the ability to mold the perceptions
and behavior of the populace through mental and emotional
manipulation of the very reality it experiences. As observed by
Aldous Huxley in 1962 in explaining his novel Brave New World,
these are methods of control that are "probably a good deal more
efficient" than control "exercised wholly by terrorism and
violent attacks upon the mind-body of individuals."1
Although it would take volumes
to do justice to deconstructing the crimes against the human
spirit perpetrated by the globalists, I will here attempt to
expose several of their common themes: normalizing the abnormal,
learned helplessness, and the disorientation of the betwixt and
between syndrome. In my view, if we explore the ways these
states of mind disempower us, they will be stripped of their
disabling mystique and reveal the very ways they can be
neutralized. This truth is stated well by Jungian Analyst and
wise woman Clarissa Pinkola Estés in discussing the core agenda
of terrorists, that of casting a net of mental poison over their
victims by trying to deprive them of hope - by trying to limit
their living life as a completely free person focused on
goodness, love, peace, and happiness:
"How strongly that
poisonous net holds when one is unaware of what it is made
of, and how easily it falls apart when one consciously
begins to contradict its malicious urgings."2
Normalizing the
Abnormal
Dr. Estés observes that the
disorder of normalizing the abnormal is rampant across cultures.
When there are formidable punishments for breaking silence, for
pointing out wrongs, for demanding change, we cut away our
rightful rage and become used to not being able to intervene in
shocking events. Despair, fatigue and resignation follow.3
Normalization of the abnormal
has been achieved in large part through the power elite's
control of the news media and entertainment. This dominance has
permitted not only deciding the "information" the public is
allowed to receive, but also the molding of public opinion and
behavior. One example is sponsorship of the TV show 24,
carefully designed to desensitize the viewers to the use of
torture. Another is the use of TV commercials showing stars
cheerfully endorsing invasive personal identification
technology, as part of a carefully designed program for grooming
us to accept Big Brother surveillance and control, including the
eventual implantation of microchips under our skin.
The power elite goes to any
lengths to keep the public misled, distracted, fearful, and
ultimately imprisoned in a matrix of disinformation, rampant
consumerism and the lowest common denominators of human nature,
including raw violence and mindless sexuality. As Huxley
observed in 1962, the controlling oligarchy has long been at
work developing scientific methods of control to "induce people
to love their servitude" - to make them "enjoy a state of
affairs which by any decent standard they ought not to enjoy."4
This dystopic scenario was echoed by Bertrand Russell, who
predicted that as a result of the gradual and ruthless use of
technological advances, "a revolt of the plebs would be as
unthinkable as an organized insurrection of sheep against the
practice of eating mutton."5
I would contend that the
disorder of normalizing the abnormal consists in large measure
of reshaping our very construct of human nature in terms of its
basest parameters, especially in the areas of acquisitiveness,
violence, and sexuality. Massive effort has gone into studying
and modifying human behavior to serve the global elite's greed
for money and power. The modern consumer is not reflective of
genuine human nature, but rather a phenomenon created in great
part by the psychoanalytic studies, experiments and
recommendations of the brilliant capitalist asset Edward
Bernays. The widespread aberration of a dumbed down populace,
unaware and largely uncaring regarding its destiny, has taken
years of careful elitist effort to orchestrate. And the
disgusting extremes of human sexual behaviors that are fast
approaching the excesses of the infamous last days of the Roman
Empire are similarly a product of diligently researched
scientific techniques of psychological and social control.
It is terrifying but essential
to come into awareness that it is in great part the knowledge of
human nature gained through the application of torture
techniques by intelligence agencies that has infused the broader
mind control strategies of the ruling class. More generally, its
control techniques have evolved in large measure from "black"
psychological operations (psyops) that are carefully
compartmentalized and hidden from our bone fide representatives
in all three branches of government. Many of the current mind
control techniques have been derived from barbaric projects
secretly conducted by governments, private laboratories and
universities. In his 2000 book titled The Mind Controllers, Dr.
Armen Victorian used the Freedom of Information Act to document
experiments by the CIA and other agencies exploring new forms of
"non-lethal" weapons which exploited hospital patients, pregnant
women, school children, prisoners and military veterans without
their consent. Other extremely dangerous experiments, including
nuclear radiation experiments, have been conducted on an
unsuspecting public at large, and even on our troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan.6
Learned Helplessness
The phenomenon of normalizing
the abnormal was given experimental validation in the 1970s
through controlled studies with groups of dogs. The experiments
revealed a great deal about the innate flight or fight reactions
to danger and indicated that self-protective instincts can be
overriden by inducing "learned helplessness." In one experiment
the bottoms of cages were wired to produce a shock on one side
only, resulting in the expected avoidance behaviors; then the
entire floors of the cages were wired to give random shocks,
resulting in confusion, then panic, and then just lying down in
resignation, taking the shocks as they came and no longer trying
to avoid or outsmart them. Next the cage doors were opened, but
the dogs did not move to escape as expected, leading to the
hypothesis that they had adapted to or "normalized" their pain
and were consequently exhibiting symptoms similar to chronic
clinical depression.7
Learned helplessness manifests
in everyday situations or environments in which people perceive,
rightly or wrongly, that they have no control over what happens
to them, e.g., war, famine, or detention (those who refused to
care or fend for themselves in the Nazi concentration camps were
called Muselmänner). When the instincts for self-determination
are injured, as observed by Dr. Estés, humans will 'normalize'
assault after assault, acts of injustice and destruction toward
themselves, their offspring, their loved ones, their land, and
even their moral and spiritual values.8
The electroshock of the dogs
in the learned helplessness experiments has, as Naomi Klein
documents, been copied on a societal level by the financial
oligarchy. The capitalist elite shocks a nation with an event
like 9/11, and in the ensuing stage of confusion and panic
rushes in with salvation in the form of protective father
figures who provide a narrative that offers a perspective on the
shocking events that allows the profoundly disoriented victims
to make sense of the trauma.9 Hence the extraordinary power of
the mind control matrix known as the War on Terror.
But what is learned can be
unlearned; what has been forgotten can be relearned. Especially
in the case of our inherent instincts of preservation, we can
engage in forensic analysis with a view to restoring the natural
skills that give us power:
"[The] normalizing of the
shocking and abusive is refused by repairing injured
instinct....To re-learn the deep...instincts, it is vital to
see how they were decommissioned to begin with....[We
compose] a map of the woods in which we live, and where the
predators live, and what their modus operandi is....[Then]
if our wild nature has been injured by something, we refuse
to lie down to die. We refuse to normalize this harm. We
call up our instincts and do what we have to do."10
Klein demonstrates a similar
optimism: "Once the mechanics of the shock doctrine are deeply
and collectively understood, whole communities become harder to
take by surprise, more difficult to confuse-shock resistant."11
The Betwixt and
Between Syndrome
The relentless march toward
tyranny in the United States and other nations with a heritage
of freedom, underscored by the blatant criminality of the recent
bailout package implemented against the political will and
interest of the populace, seems to portend a terrifying future
for humanity. It leaves us in a no man's land between the
familiarity of our previous reality and the uncharted dangers
lying ahead.
This loss of bearings should
be seen as a form of psychological control by the globalists
over the populace for two reasons. First, it is a situation they
have engineered, and engineered in such a way as to serve their
self-interest. Second, our fear of a destiny they have designed
for us keeps us from exercising our full potential of actively
opposing its unfolding. At a time of the implementation of what
can only be perceived as their endgame, we find ourselves
floundering and cut off from our inner fire.
Humans have an instinctive fear of the unknown, which is
exacerbated if trends indicate an unknown that is negative
rather than positive. In the present case the unknown seems to
be characterized by the probability of enormous global
destabilization, with massive suffering in store for the
populace. Although the world as we have known it is far from
acceptable, the horizon appears quite possibly unbearable--hence
the phrase "looking into the abyss" used recently by a number of
analysts.
This makes the betwixt and
between predicament more difficult to navigate than it would be
in less extreme situations, such as adolescence as a normal and
predictable transition from childhood to maturity. Another
exacerbation is the endless onslaught of crises that the
oligarchy orchestrates in order to keep us in a state of
continual disorientation, seemingly unable to process one trauma
before the next one hits.
But as in the case of
normalizing the abnormal and learned helplessness, the solution
lies in keen understanding of the problem. Once we dissect the
betwixt and between predicament, a predicament that all of us
have experienced and navigated in our personal lives but may
well not have recognized and named as such, our fear will lose
its hold and we can reclaim our power.
The betwixt and between
predicament occurs whenever we are forced to revise our previous
sense of self and reality, and are required to remain in a zone
of unfamiliarity, disorientation and loss of control until a new
set of truths emerges and is integrated. All of us have faced
this predicament again and again in our lives, e.g., during the
teen years, after a major loss, and in our daily lives when our
personal growth process entails the death of old aspects of the
self and the birth of new ones. Even transitions that one
welcomes gladly, such as marriage, a better job, or moving, are
in fact highly stressful because of their magnitude.
Anthropological insights on
initiations and rites of passage have much to teach us regarding
the betwixt and between phenomenon. Rites of transition are
marked by distinct (although often overlapping) stages:
"Separation: a detachment
or departure from a previous state, whose familiarity
provided a sense of security;
Marginality / Ambiguity: entering the margin between the
former and the new state of being, not quite here but not
quite there, having lost the security of familiar boundaries
and facing disorientation; * Consummation: a culmination in
which one integrates a new state of being and sense of
self." 12
In a classic essay on the
betwixt and between predicament, Victor Turner observes that the
transition from separation to ambiguity is marked by temporary
invisibility: one cannot be classified either in the old or the
new way and is therefore structurally invisible.13 This goes a
long way in explaining the fear that marks major transitions and
initiations.
The good news is that, as with the process of grieving, there is
a well-charted process by which we can move from the frightening
state of ambiguity and achieve a new equilibrium: a new
equilibrium that is in fact healthier and more resilient because
it is based on full awareness of the truth of things. It is less
painful to accept the need for change than to stay in denial.
Indeed, as the renowned mythologist Joseph Campbell stresses,
there is great dignity in answering the call to heroism, a call
that is now sounding to all of humanity.
The good news goes further:
Turner and others in fact see potential gifts in the betwixt and
between ambiguity that is so emotionally difficult. The
inability to classify oneself, while one is in the stage of
uncertainty and not-knowing, is also freedom to explore new ways
of constructing reality and identity. The stage of ambiguity can
become one of enormous creativity and fertility as we move to a
new reality that we ourselves construct. It is vital to
keep this awareness as we face and oppose the unfolding of the
financial elite's endgame of cementing its global control
through the current economic crises and so-called solutions it
has itself engineered. As an advancing power nears its goal of
full spectrum dominance, its crimes break the surface for all to
witness, as evidenced by the audacity of the corporatocracy in
forcing the passage of the bailout package and in its brazenly
self-serving implementation.
Our Republic was not always
ignorant and apathetic in the face of such criminality. In
reaction to an offer in 1905 of a $100,000 donation by John D.
Rockefeller for the missionary work of the U.S.
Congregationalist Church, its most eminent leader asked, "Is
this clean money? Can any man, can any institution, knowing its
origins, touch it without being defiled?" The Reverend
Washington Gladdington, echoing the prevalent outlook of the
era, berated the accumulation of wealth on every side "by
methods as heartless, as cynically iniquitous as any that were
employed by the Roman plunderers or robber barons of the Dark
Ages. In the cool brutality with which properties are wrecked,
securities destroyed, and people by the hundreds robbed of their
little, all to build up the fortunes of the multi-millionaires,
we have an appalling revelation of the kind of monster a human
being may become."14
No longer can the oligarchs
use the insidiousness of the iceman Brak to further their
agenda. And longer do we need to allow them to disempower us
through technocratic techniques of psychological control. The
efficacy of these techniques has stemmed in great measure from
our internalization of oppression, a process we can work to
reverse once we understand it.
The technocrats would have us
believe we are helpless to join battle. We are not. I support
this optimistic claim with a comment on Part I of my
deconstruction of the power of the global elite, which serves as
a powerful ending to end Part ll:
"I for one have been
subjected to much of this torture as being part of a
marginalized class of society. The criminal global elites
like to practice their abuse experiments on the less
fortunate that cannot defend themselves and offer any
resistance, but as the author so rightly observed, the human
spirit is indominitable and will not go quietly into the
night. Excellent job in exposing these psychological crimes
for what they are. When people start realizing they were
once human beings and hate what the behavioural criminals
are doing, we can stop this learned helplessness and say
with Patrick Henry, 'Give me Liberty or give me death.' "15