Friday, August 16, 2013

CATALYSTS OF TIME: The neglected knowledge

Posted by George Freund on August 16, 2013 at 12:05 AM

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There are epochs in time that are either not known at all or are not very well known and perhaps labelled 'conspiracy' theory because they offend the programming most minds have been subjected to. Like all computers, if they are fed data that the programmers haven't made acceptable by the machine in question, it will be rejected. In the human term, it will be scoffed at and rejected because all the lies we have been told set the framework of our worldview. That is why propaganda is the greatest weapon devised. If the mind can be thought to think a circle is a square, then it is. In reading a book on the history of MI6, I came across a couple of events I hadn't heard of before. They were before my time and yours unless you are both very, very old and very, very well informed. I would call these events catalysts in effect like the effect in the chemical reaction. A small amount of something is added to other chemicals producing a massive effect way out of proportion to the other chemicals. Outside of propaganda there can occur thought catalysts whereby a small idea can stimulate the minds of the masses and determine destinies of cultures and civilizations. Propaganda and the control of thought processes by media concentration effect a firewall to the human mind. We think we are free until we touch the forbidden fruit. That is the raison d'etra to the classifications of state secrets that headline the whistle blower stories of Bradley Manning, Julian Assange, and Edward Snowden. If we were really and truly free, we couldn't be a threat to the system from knowing its secrets.
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One of the little jewels in the book was the Zinoviev letter. I had never been exposed to that one before. In its day, it graced British newspapers days before a general election. It was designed as a catalyst to defeat the existing government at the polls by way of deception. James Ramsay McDonald the Prime Minister and leader of the labour party was a little too left for the business element. He might be prone to give a little more of the pie to the workers. That has always been a formula for a mass mind control operation. Treaties with Russia, the Communist state it was in 1924, were being negotiated. Information 'terrorists' were speaking out and labelled seditious because they were telling things to military men that might exceed their programming.
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Where, in fact, that was quite true; the Soviets were EVIL, but as we proceed we can assume Comrade Stalin was a British agent. I digress. Days before the election, the intelligence services acquired a letter from one Grigory Zinoviev to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain. It called for communist mobilization of forces within the governing labour party and propaganda against the military. The intelligence services verified the letter. It was released to the media. Newspapers like the Daily Mail screamed for blood with banner headlines of Civil War Plot. Of course labour lost the election not because their following dropped but because the liberal vote collapsed as fear drove their supporters to the conservatives. All in all it was a very effective psyops. The pistol is fired, and we stampede like cattle. If we were programmed with the book of tricks, we would very well recognize the technique and hold fast. 
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The letter was found to be the work of Ivan Dmitrievich Pokrovsky of the White (Tsarist) Russian security services. He took comments from Zinoviev's speeches and coined them into the letter. He was paid by a Captain Black of the British intelligence services. The Latvian political police discovered the link. I'm sure it didn't make headlines. The British Intelligence services denied they faked the letter even after the smoking gun evidence filled the room. They staked their reputation on it. The new Foreign Secretary, Sir Austen Chamberlain, brother of future Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain the appeaser of dictators as he as labelled by history in his relations to negotiations with Adolf Hitler; dealt with the issue. The intelligence services must have sworn tooth and nail the risk of the Nazi leader to brother Neville, but at a crucial time before they lied about rigging an election. They stonewalled after they got caught. They got away with it. However, the mothers of the intelligence leaders probably never read The Boy Who Cried Wolf to them. They shouted wolf when there wasn't one. When there was no one listened all that well. The wolf burst among the flock. Tens of millions died for it. The Zinoviev letter was a catalyst of time. It made World War II a certainty. 
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In a more modern rendition a President assured us a country had weapons of mass destruction based on a flawed report on yellowcake.
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Another catalyst occurred with the work of a so called staunch anti-communist of the cold war era Boris Georgievich Bazhanov. Hardly a household name he shaped modern history at a key juncture. He was the party secretary to the Central Committee of the Soviet government in revolutionary days. That's quite a switcheroo to be an anti-communist in his senior years. The reason why was he was a British agent passing Central Committee documents to the British. Talk about a coup. However, actions speak louder than words. He solved one of the great mysteries of life although no one can begin to even understand the play. We are programmed by a pop culture movie to believe that the only winning move is not to play the game. That makes good sense sort of except the enemy is going to play whether you like it or not. So if you don't play, you lose outright. A better winning move is to learn to play the game. It is a long and arduous process. The best winning move is to change the rules as well to their original.
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That stratagem is used all the time. The free trade treaties are one good example. Workers and countries rights are eliminated while the bulk of people pay absolutely no attention to the effect. Even though they will be relegated to servitude, they are too lazy to look the word up in the dictionary. Another main one would be gun control. You are programmed to trust and disarm so that when the wolf bursts among the flock, you will be helpless and they will win easily. It works almost every time. This time I'm riding shotgun on the stage. Hands up varmints! No changing the rules. The right to bear arms existed since Britain's Bill of Rights and the people were liberated from the Inquisition. Sounds like an important rule you shouldn't mess with.
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no royal interference in the freedom of the people to have arms for their own defence as suitable to their class and as allowed by law (simultaneously restoring rights previously taken from Protestants by James II)
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And you thought it was a crazy American idea. They wrote it down too. They knew their history. It repeats. The next Inquisition will teach us again that the ultimate power belongs in the hands of the people. It is a hard lesson. That's why it lasted as long as it did. There's a few other things being stripped away as well like courts, taxation, free speech, fines and forfeitures, excessive bail, cruel and unusual punishments, and the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679. You see the right to bear arms is the cornerstone of civilization whether we like it or not. We change the rules with the dictator's adage only the police and the military should have arms. The wolf from Little Red Riding Hood would add, "The better to kill you with my dear." Of course a few massacres orchestrated by the intelligence services dark hand make the icing on the disarmament cake. We always stampede.
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Of course we can't forget Boris. As Committee secretary and British agent of MI1c as it was known then, he rewrote the rules for ascension of party leadership. Leaders like Lenin and Trotsky were most likely too busy to read all that dry material. He paved the way for Comrade Stalin to assume control. Even though outed twice as suspect, he was never eliminated in the purges that swept Russia killing millions with so much as a rumour. George's axiom of you don't shoot your own dog bears witness here. Boris escaped overland through Persia and took up residence in Paris in the 30's. He wrote intelligence reports for the Polish on Russia a country that invaded and took half. That's some catalyst. It set the stage for World War II as well. The broad agenda of the intelligence services was to get the nationalized Russian oil wells returned. We never learn. I wonder if the cartoon character Boris Badenov was his memorial.
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Boris, Natasha and Fearless Leader
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Those who don't know their history are condemned to repeat it. Therefore, if you wish to see the future, look back. It's all there. All you have to do is turn your head. If you don't prepare for the stampede it's a certainty. The neglected knowledge tells us so. The British agent assigned to assassinate Stalin, Stephen Alley, was sent home by Mansfield Cumming the infamous 'C.' He didn't shoot his own dog either.

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