By Mac SlavoJanuary 16, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - As the United
States seemed to teeter on the edge of yet another
war, this time with Iran, the biggest concern was
just how much support the government had for its
mass-murdering schemes. But psychologists say that
that is no mistake. As Americans, we have been
conditioned for war all of our lives.
Americans have been programmed to accept the
violence and domination with a belief that the mass
murders are done for some kind of “good.” Propaganda
has been widely used along with patriotic images to
make even those who consider themselves peaceful
cheer for death, violence, and destruction.
Americans are taught from a young age to
accept their country’s militarism without
question. This conditioning has numerous
ingredients. Themes of nationalism and
militarism are frequently injected into public
life through the media and other institutions,
for example, as is a sense of righteousness, a
rarely challenged belief
that the country is almost always a force for
good. –Psychology
Today
Fear is also a major element in conditioning
minds for war. Americans of all ages are
often reminded, by their government and the
media, that perceived enemies pose a constant
danger. The Soviet threat was used to justify
military spending and adventurism around the globe
for much of the later twentieth century, validating
the warning given by President Eisenhower in his
1961 farewell speech of the growing influence of
the “military-industrial
complex.”
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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More recently, through constant reminders of the
“war on terror,” Americans are effectively
conditioned to see evildoers as always looming.
There is little to no debate about whether
slaughtering people and killing others thousands of
miles away is right or wrong. Militarism and force
through mass murder is always the conclusion drawn
by most Americans.
Anti-intellectualism seems to be an
important ingredient in conditioning the
American mindset for war, with the system
relying on a population motivated by fear and
forgoing critical thinking. We can see this
anti-intellectualism taking shape even in the
way society molds young minds. The United States
is the only developed country that expects
schools to regularly conduct a loyalty oath (a
“Pledge of Allegiance”). This kind of exercise
does nothing to encourage critical thinking or
an understanding of the complexities of
contemporary geopolitics but may go far in
solidifying a sense of national greatness that
can subsequently be used to portray
aggression as justified.
The fact that those who question American
militarism are seen by many as troublemakers is
further evidence of how the national mindset has
been conditioned for war. –Psychology
Today
The surest sign of successful conditioning is a
population that not only complies with the desired
outcome but does so without question. We see this
every time a new president is elected. Whether the
laws are “right” or “wrong” morally, Americans will,
by and large, see them as moral and acceptable if
their master was chosen to rule the slaves.
Morality is out the window. We’ve been taught to
just accept that the ruling class has authority over
our lives and we have two choices: obey or have
violence used against you.
What’s worse, is we are taught to glorify the
government and that just because the U.S. isn’t as
violent and tyrannical as say, North Korea, we are
to accept our fate as slaves to powers that
shouldn’t be.
Larken
Rose makes this behavior rather apparent in his
book,
Most Dangerous Superstition.
The primary threat to freedom and justice is not
greed, or hatred, or any of the other emotions or
human flaws usually blamed for such things. Instead,
it is one ubiquitous superstition that infects the
minds of people of all races, religions, and
nationalities, which deceives decent,
well-intentioned people into supporting and
advocating violence and oppression. Even without
making human beings one bit more wise or virtuous,
removing that one superstition would remove the vast
majority of injustice and suffering from the world.
Start thinking for yourself. Ask yourself one
question: who owns you?
H/T [Psychology
Today, David Niose]
This article was originally published by "SHTFplan.com"
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