Methods of Mass Mind Correction
Chapter 7
Women’s Activities and Propaganda
The man who used four rich women to get the rest of American women smoking cigarettes, devotes surprising spare wordage to the field of social manipulation he hijacked from the old witches that put John Barley Corn in prison for a decade. This chapter is Slick Eddie’s briefest, and, because he is the master of slickery, we shall be well advised to unzip his most compressed file.
“Women’s most obvious influence is exerted when they are organized and armed with the weapon of propaganda.”
WEAPON.
The weaker sex, who, when given military power are 30% more likely to wage war, and are twice as likely to attack weaker persons [children, elderly and lesbian mates] in domestic settings, have, by Bernays and his colleagues, been enabled to use their penchant for gossip to change the world. Bernays points out that professional female politicians had yet to make a significant impact. This is a huge fact, pointing to the collective female mind as readily molded and directed by the propagandist without the need for a political puppet. He left that part out, I sense, I bet, on purpose, so as not to give away his ultimate boss secret weapon. Any observation of hens on the homestead will show this propensity towards a pecking order as, feminine, beyond human bounds.
“They can justifiably take credit for much welfare legislation,” being the transfer of money from the worker to the non worker, that has, by our time, made the working man into the “chump,” of the American End Time.
“Undoubtedly, prohibition and its enforcement are theirs, if they can be considered an accomplishment.”
Even Eddie cringes at the growth of national law enforcement via a bitch law that cannot be enforced to achieve the desired end, being sobriety. Indeed the rebooting of prohibition as the War on Drugs, that made USG policing into a war on Americans, was promoted by First Lady Nancy R. when I was just turned 18.
Women are shown to be key drivers in exporting jobs overseas, importing cheap labor to undercut native labor, and of the need for an income tax, all in their short sighted quest for lower prices. This love of bargain shopping, a practical domestic skill, was taken by the propagandist and used to smash tariffs, necessitating the never before seen American income tax. This tax, was instituted politically as a means of paying for The Great War, a war which Bernays points out that women were instrumental proponents of.
The most significant aspect of the soul-crushing value of “women in politics” transmogrifying the public mind towards the feminine urges of greed, hysteria and debt, over the masculine governmental values of restraint, passion and duty, was, “… because they afford a particularly striking example of the intelligent use of the new propaganda to secure attention and acceptance of minority ideas,” such as the acceptance of millions of violent criminals from other nations given plane tickets, new cars, free rentals and middle class incomes in 2020-24.
In other words, giving the female voice equal time with the male, offered the propagandist a blue print for how a society might be manipulated into committing cultural suicide.
“In the General Federation of Women’s Club’s, there are 13,000 clubs.”
Of ominous interest, is that today, though we still have many of these clubs, such as the League of Women Voters, it is against the law under USG to have any type of men’s club! Women were of such use as organized vote bots to USG that a hundred years later, only women may form clubs, with any men’s club a threat to our recently modified humanity.
Bernays predicts the hideous medusa known as Karen, when he suggests that women are of special utility “in raising standards of social or political morality,” which is to say “in dethroning traditional, honorable and faithful morality with a purely material, greed and need-based morality, actuated via propaganda-induced hysteria.
“There is a tremendous field for women as active protagonists of new ideas and new methods of political and social housekeeping… to mold the world into a better place to live,” like Queen Victoria, under whose reign the preconditions for the first and second wars of industrial extermination of the 50 million best men on the planet, and Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot who rendered the same service to civilians.
Bernays, in his brief on women under the new propaganda as the most suitable remakers of the world, has returned us to Adam and Eve in the Garden, with the propagandist as The Serpent.