Author: Gordon Duff
Lobotomized: Secrecy and the “Dis-enlightenment”
Column: Society
Region: USA in the World
As we enter 2019, one thing above all others is clear, the mechanisms
of human engagement, education, media and information, even what passes for
human contact through social media and email, is all subjected to “algorithms,”
whatever those are.
It was Snowden that brought it to our attention, from the Guardian back
in 2014:
“Increasingly, we are
watched not by people but by algorithms. Amazon and Netflix track the books we
buy and the movies we stream, and suggest other books and movies based on our
habits. Google and Facebook watch what we do and what we say, and show us
advertisements based on our behavior. Google even modifies our web search
results based on our previous behavior. Smartphone navigation apps watch us as
we drive, and update suggested route information based on traffic congestion.
And the National Security Agency, of course, monitors our phone calls, emails
and locations, then uses that information to try to identify terrorists.”
Documents provided by Edward Snowden and revealed by the Guardian today
show that the UK spy agency GHCQ, with help from the NSA, has been
collecting millions
of webcam images from innocent Yahoo users. And that speaks to
a key distinction in the age of algorithmic surveillance: is it really okay for
a computer to monitor you online, and for that data collection and analysis
only to count as a potential privacy invasion when a person sees it? I say it’s
not, and the latest Snowden leaks only make more clear how important this
distinction is.”
When we look back on 2014 from where we are today, Edward Snowden’s
warnings of an Orwellian nightmare seem innocent. Maybe it was Donald Trump
that opened our eyes, if so, whatever contribution history attributes to him,
he might well want to hang his hat on this one.
The fake science of intruding into lives in order to recognize and
control “influencers” began in the private sector and was “tuned up” for
political races, crime and terrorism prevention and more.
By “more,” we mean “dumbing down” the “masses,” as they are called,
presenting reality as a consumer product, custom engineered to be believable,
to create drama or fear, to raise concerns of imaginary threats, to distract,
and, above all, to control.
Social scientists have postulated that humans can actually be
programmed to respond to the most basic stimuli, touch, hearing, taste, based
on “fake” information, that the human mind can be fooled into filtering out such
basic sensory responses as smell.
The basic synaptic connections that tie sensory input to ideas or
concepts, let’s look at one glaring example. Try to say the word “Palestinian”
without following it with “terrorist.”
Then again, let’s go back one more step and define the difference
between an “armed militant” and a “freedom fighter.” Nothing here is new, the
rules were laid out a century ago.
Einstein predicted this in his “Autobiographical notes” on
epistemology. It was some 50 years ago when Dr. John Ward of Michigan State
University pounded this into my head in his Philosophy of Science lectures.
“The relationship between sense experiences and concepts is entirely intuitive
as are the relationships between all concepts. You see what you see, not because
of what you see but because of what you think.”
It was quite one thing when such pursuits were endeavors of science and
philosophy at our great universities, but it became something quite different
when Wilson Bryan Key, back in 1973, wrote the seminal work, Subliminal
Seduction, demonstrating how altered images could reach into the most basic
primitive drives, the “reptile brain,” as it were, driving an unknowing viewer
to alter both perceptions and reasoning, even toward lowering human
survivability.
Key’s imagery, taken from popular magazines,
strange figures of death’s heads or nude women, airbrushed into ice cubes, were
an opening salvo. If thanatotic drive could sell liquor or cigarettes, how easy
might it be to sell a war?
No more films like Sergeant York or Red Dawn needed, or perhaps only as
a “supporting actor,” pounding the nail in just a bit more.
Twenty years prior to the publication of Key’s work, the US government
began a project known as MK Ultra. Though it officially ended in 1973 after 20
years of poorly documented “research” into every form of psychological
manipulation, in truth, MK Ultra and other programs as well, simply “went
dark.”
The reason, of course, we are traveling his historical path today is
that those programs, after not 50 but 65 years of still classified efforts,
after billions of dollars in black funding, programs with no oversite, programs
carried out on unsuspecting citizens, sometimes entire cities, sometimes on
unwilling victims in “black sites,” are the precursors to the world of Google
and Facebook today.
Looking at 2018, there were some obvious “projects,” the White Helmet
staged fake gas attacks for sure. This involved Facebook posts, fake videos,
but the key is that they were channeled directly to the President of the United
States who had been programmed to ignore credible intelligence sources. Thus,
Trump ordered an attack on Syria entirely based on a Facebook post.
But there are millions of Facebook posts every day. Why did he get this
one? Who put it in front of him? Is Trump surrounded by handlers, traitors?
You see, it is one thing when something is put on the internet, the
equivalent of leaving a post-it note in a public restroom on the “wrong side of
town.” It is quite something else when the message, a parentless bastard of
disinformation, is given to a man who has, according to sources within the
White House, openly advocated use of tactical nuclear weapons against Syrian
people in retribution for wildly fabricated accusations.
Consider the implications, even if someone, perhaps General Mattis, had
taken the nuclear option off the table. Simply put, it lowers the standards of
the United States exercising war powers in attacking a sovereign nation to an
anonymous social media post.
Again, we ask, it is one thing posting something malicious and
dangerous and quite something else when a national leader with access to
nuclear weapons is programmed to seek out and act upon same.
Then again, were any other president to order a missile strike based
on, well, based on nothing whatsoever, not even a decent lie, one might expect
negative repercussions.
Let’s take a second to juxtapose. If a fake public narrative exists,
and it is reasonable to postulate that “the public,” such as it is, is more
than aware that a “real world” exists in which what is generally known and
accepted as true is, in fact, utterly false.
In fact, some of the most popular television series of the past decades
have exposed the flummery of generally accepted history. Shows like The Secret
History of World War II and many if not endless others, feed a hungry public a
continual diet of debunked reality.
What we are left with is this, an ongoing process, a spiral as it were,
around and down, around and down, ever faster, ever more hopeless, intrusion
into lives, into thoughts, planted feelings, manipulated responses, altered
perceptions, until nothing can be trusted, especially not ourselves.
Gordon
Duff is a Marine combat veteran of the Vietnam War that has worked on veterans
and POW issues for decades and consulted with governments challenged by
security issues. He’s a senior editor and chairman of the board
of Veterans Today, especially for the online
magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
No comments:
Post a Comment