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8bitagent wrote:So yes, what you say is very plausible...but it also means that
what went down on 9/11 is close to the Lone Gunmen pilot if were assume it was "leaked" for a script.
OR...
it was leaked as preemptive muddying of waters, like Rumsfeld and his "missile" Freudian slips.
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:I haven't read 'Six Days of the Condor' but the movie 'Three Days of the Condor' is based on that book.
The CIA analyst character that Robert Redford plays says that 'the CIA reads everything and analyzes plots and characters to find covert plots and messages.'
That was back in 1974.
The FBI had unsuccessfully looked for the author of a bad porn book that seemed to be the script for the SLA-Patty Hearst events. The match was that close.
So 'Six Days of the Condor' may have been written to fictionalize that situation since the idea of scripted political events is dangerous to power. Can't have the kids knowing about psy-ops and generating psycho-political events.
This suggests that even if the writers of 'The Lone Gunmen' were just riffing on the WTC as Bullseye meme that had developed ever since 1993, the spooks would have noticed the script and thought, 'Putin did it so why can't we?'
People steal script ideas all the time.
FourthBase wrote:8bitagent wrote:So yes, what you say is very plausible...but it also means that
what went down on 9/11 is close to the Lone Gunmen pilot if were assume it was "leaked" for a script.
OR...
it was leaked as preemptive muddying of waters, like Rumsfeld and his "missile" Freudian slips.
I'm inclined to say it was leaked to poison the well not muddy the waters.
8bitagent wrote:FourthBase wrote:8bitagent wrote:So yes, what you say is very plausible...but it also means that
what went down on 9/11 is close to the Lone Gunmen pilot if were assume it was "leaked" for a script.
OR...
it was leaked as preemptive muddying of waters, like Rumsfeld and his "missile" Freudian slips.
I'm inclined to say it was leaked to poison the well not muddy the waters.
What do you make of Rumsfeld "slipping" and saying a missile hit the pentagon and a missile downed Flight 93? I consider it total disinfo, like how the media propigated the "Jews did 9/11 is a big belief" meme weeks after 9/11 to make any future 9/11 questioning seem buffoonish
theeKultleeder wrote:8bitagent wrote:Isnt it funny how all the anti government shows, be it Family Guy...Simpsons, Xfiles, American Dad, etc have mostly all been on Fox?
Huh?
FourthBase wrote: I think the "Jews did it!" and "4,000 Israelis skipped work" disinfo memes were designed to 1. discredit all 9/11 skepticism with the taint of anti-semitism and 2. distract from the actual involvement (for whatever purpose) of military-intel Israeli Jews on 9/11.
8bitagent wrote:theeKultleeder wrote:8bitagent wrote:Isnt it funny how all the anti government shows, be it Family Guy...Simpsons, Xfiles, American Dad, etc have mostly all been on Fox?
Huh?
Fox Corp is ran by Rupert Murdoch who also runs Fox News.
But all the shows with a heavy anti government bias are on Fox.
The Simpsons, Family Guy and American Dad always have full episodes
making fun of the post 9/11 world, bashing the Bush regime, saying how war is based on lies, etc. Xfiles too, of course another anti government show.
All on Fox. Just an interesting observation.
Conservatives learn to say 'ay carumba!'
By: Helena Andrews
Jul 27, 2007 10:32 AM EST
It was a moral quagmire no 10-year-old should be tortured by: On Thursdays at 8 o’clock, I could either pedal up Canyon Road to my Awana Club meeting, memorizing Bible verses for the chance to fasten a new pin on my vest, or stay home and watch “The Simpsons.”
Most weeks I chose eternal damnation.
In 1990, “The Simpsons” -- once crude drawings on the “The Tracey Ullman Show” and now rude heroes for the nation’s youth -- were borderline heretical.
In 1992, at the annual meeting of the National Religious Broadcasters association, former President George H.W. Bush famously vetoed the show: “We seek a nation that is closer to ‘The Waltons’ than to ‘The Simpsons.’”
When the show first debuted, the “moral majority” folks felt Fox was marketing bad manners to kids (“The Simpsons” reportedly sold 1 million T-shirts per week at the height of Bartmania). This was before “Adult Swim” and cartoons for grown-ups.
Nearly one-third of “The Simpsons’” adult audience describe themselves as conservative, according to the Simmons Research National Consumer Study conducted in fall 2006.
Of respondents who had viewed the show in the last week, about 34 percent said they were “any conservative,” compared to about 42 percent of average American adults who’d describe themselves the same way.
Conservative columnists have lauded Homer has a hero, and GOP strategists discovered that the show does well among young Republican male viewers. The experts say it’s because the longest-running sitcom in history paints every political gag with the same brush.
Many of the early shows were centered on the Bartman and his latest catchphrase, which was never “Mother, may I?”
He was the rude dude with a ’tude, and those on the right didn’t want their children eating each other’s shorts, having cows or underachieving, being proud of it and having a T-shirt to prove it.
“I remember that T-shirt,” laughed Marcus Skelton, D.C. Young Republicans’ chairman and national director of minority outreach, “and my parents saying, ‘There’s no way you’re getting that shirt.”
Friday, Evergreen Terrace is blowing up to fit the big screen in “The Simpsons Movie,” which involves Spider Pig, Bart’s doodle, the environment and President Arnold Schwarzenegger -- and right-wingers will be woohoo-ing it in the theater alongside all the heathens.
Bart must’ve slipped Bush Sr. an invisible pen, because almost a generation after his decree, the show has managed to attract a significant swath of young Republican males.
In 2004, according to an oft-cited Ad Age article and, later, Thomas B. Edsall’s “Building Red America,” Republican strategists used data gathered by Scarborough Research to trace the entertainment preferences of potential voters.
Matthew Dowd and crew used that info to sharpen the GOP’s media-buying budget, focusing on those shows that appealed to the “missing” Republicans.
What they found out was pretty simple and perhaps disquieting to fans of the subversive sitcom: Young Repubs really like “The Simpsons.” They even watch “South Park.”
“It doesn’t surprise me at all that these guys like it,” said Johanna Blakley, deputy director of the Norman Lear Center, a think tank based in Los Angeles that analyzes the impact of entertainment on society.
“It was a very calculated decision on the part of Rupert Murdoch to attract a young, male, educated audience,” added Blakley, “… and it totally worked.”
A reviewer of “The Simpsons Movie” wrote similarly in The Guardian this week: “Over the years, liberals have learned to clench their teeth and admit that it was News Corp.’s demon king Rupert Murdoch who sponsored the world’s greatest TV programme.”
Sweet Tooth wrote:So... did anybody HERE have any premonitions or dark forebodings about 9-11?
That's where I draw the line with people on this forum. I'm sorry, say that again: Tapping into a psychic grid of ideas seems more plausible than actual advanced knowledge somehow leaking to writers of the world's #1 conspiracy-themed TV show who have a history of collaborating on story ideas with agents from the FBI and NASA?
And actually, I haven't seen any of those shows bash Bush.
Seventhsonjr wrote:Inoculation
inoculate, inoculating, inoculated
1. To communicate a disease by inoculation.
2. To bud; to insert, or graft, as the bud of a tree or plant in another tree or plant.
3. To insert a foreign bud into; as, to inoculate a tree.
4. To communicate a disease to (a person) by inserting infectious matter in the skin or flesh; such as, to inoculate a person with the virus of smallpox, rabies, etc.
5. To introduce into the mind; used especially of harmful ideas or principles.
6. To imbue; such as, to inoculate someone with treason or infidelity.
7. Etymology: from Latin inoculatus, past participle of inoculare "to ingraft"; in-, "in, on" + oculare "to furnish with eyes", from oculus, "an eye"; also, "a bud".
inoculation
5. Informal, a preemptive advertising tactic in which one party attempts to foresee and neutralize potentially damaging criticism from another party by being the first to confront troublesome issues.
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