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Yes: being mind-controlled is the new little black dress.
brekin wrote:barracuda wrote:Yes: being mind-controlled is the new little black dress.
But it is their programming which makes them special in the first place so there is always the sense that if "they" could get it right we all could have Matrix like abilities and not have the bummer of being a mindless government stooge. I think it makes it more attractive because it is forbidden, for example how many movies, shows, or books have the main character as a normal who spends their time trying to rescue the victims of mind control? I can't think of any off-hand, usually it's the ever so precious damaged ones who are anointed to save everyone else. It's like the ultimate resume builder now for Heroes, "Have you ever been a victim of mind control techniques?"
I actually hate the way those sort of shows tend to promote the idea that the only way to get these special powers is to submit to some horrible mindwashing process. Thats what I find the most sus thing about them is.
Instead of training hard yourself you have to become a pawn of the dark side to get the skillz.
marmot wrote:LilyPatToo wrote: If there's one thing that the Controllers must fear, it's all their broken guinea pigs' programing breaking down as the tampered-with minds age. If that were to happen, then mental health professionals all over the country would begin seeing highly dissociative patients with oddly systematic, rigidly structured systems of personalities.
..........
--it just sounds too much like paranoid schizophrenia to me--
I suspect, LilyPatToo, that IF the programming broke down the mental health professionals would not SEE and interpret the condition in dissociative terms, but something more along the delusive lines of paranoid schizophrenia, or some new spectacular disorder.. The institutional glasses their professional education has equipped them with would conveniently provide them with new lenses in which to understand and deal with the phenomena..
brekin wrote:I can't think of any off-hand, usually it's the ever so precious damaged ones who are anointed to save everyone else.
beeline wrote:Don't forget Zoolander
Allegations mostly from nationalists, later emerged that the Royal Ulster Constabulary had been informed of the abuse at the home for years previously, but had not moved to prevent it because the manager of the home, William McGrath, was also the leader of an obscure loyalist paramilitary group, called Tara, and was being blackmailed by MI5 into providing intelligence on other loyalist groups. The tabloid press then linked the home with a whole series of Establishment figures without any evidence being provided.
The Hill of Tara... according to tradition, was the seat of Árd Rí na hÉireann, or the High King of Ireland. Current scholarship based on the research conducted by the Discovery Programme, indicates that Tara was not a true seat of Kingship, but a sacral site associated with Indo-European Kingship rituals...
AhabsOtherLeg wrote:I don't understand the sudden surplus (it really is a surplus) of mind-controlled female spies and assassins on TV nowadays. It might just be an idea who's time has come, and ideas come thick and fast these days. Zamyatin's "WE" came out in 1921 - Huxley's "Brave New World" in '32 - Orwell's "1984" in '49. All essentially the same book, or the same idea, being explored in different ways at different times.
jingofever wrote:
Edit: We sounds a lot like THX 1138.
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