(edited 3.11.2014)
Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Third Reich WANTED this sort of synthetic telepathy for control of others. That's what we need to discuss, now, because Mr. Hitler may be dead, but we face an international "Fourth Reich" now. That is what has occurred objectively.
LOGIC
IF the entire world gathered to fight the Axis Powers during that war -- including the legendary French Resistance -- and it DIDN'T WORK, IT FAILED and despite all the killing and the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki --
we STILL have our problems with global totalitarians -- espocially neoNazis in American Business and Politics (George HW Bush, George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Don Rumsfeld)
if we STILL have these problems -- OBVIOUSLY waging more direct military action
would just FEED the agenda of the New Nazis, the Fourth Reich as i am calling them here.
so: i'm not 'down' for "organized" militaristic or paramilitaristic plans to strike against this NWO mind-attack power.
my current view is that the International Court of Justice and United Nations are basically impotent organizations easily manipulated by the criminal groups mentioned here -- but they CAN be transformed into useful areas for people to air grievances.
(when i started to type this i had to get away from the computer and walk around. it felt like SOMETHING was trying to stop me from thinking about what i was thinking. i meditate, though...)
as they are in 2013 they are almost useless, and more useful to the global tyrannies.
that's what i feel. does anyone else have a view?
tanstaafl! projections: a small group of friends on and offline making a movie version of Robert A. Heinlein's little known sci-fi novella: The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress
http://www.enotes.com/topics/moon-harsh-mistress
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress Summary
Summary (Masterpieces of American Literature)
Heinlein received his fourth and final Hugo award for The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. Though the work is a masterpiece in every way—scientific background, plot construction, setting, characterization—it is usually remembered for the brilliant characterization of “Mike,” the supercomputer that develops a personality. Though Mike receives the most attention, all the major figures are among Heinlein’s most completely realized characters. Mike’s first friend, the computer technician Manuel Garcia O’Kelly (“Mannie”), is the narrator of the novel. Born free, but the son of criminals transported to the moon when it was a prison colony, Mannie shows the cautious independence of an ex-con in a repressive system.
Mannie’s narration is a stylistic masterpiece in itself, for Heinlein has created, as he does in no other novel, a version of the streamlined language a moon colonist (or “Loony” as they proudly call themselves) might speak in the year 2076...
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