Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:You are comparing a Google search of two keywords to major news stories within 24 hours of each other? C'mon. Be serious.
You're showing no sense of context or proportion whatsoever.
You could have taken this in any of three ways... affirmation, neutrality, or negation. You chose the latter which is the height of irony as my very purpose was to produce context. It seems there is some disconnect going on here. The google search for the terms business and pentagon
together yields the result of the two stories you cite 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th on the first page. The Times article is the first result. The second, third and fourth results are coverage of Gates' speech. Following those links one can read many different versions of Gates' remarks and thereby test your theory. What this means I was leaving to the reader and you.
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:brainpanhandler wrote:Any predictions?
Just that these stories go by not much noticed by the masses due to another Magician's Other Hand, the Pennsylvania Democratic primary.
Did you notice that DNA testing of the families at the Texas cult compound was announced the same day as highly-controversial new Fed rules on DNA samples from all people arrested?
That's yet another news cycle Magician's Other Hand I pointed at in another thread but since your casting aspersions on the very idea.
This seems more probable, but for criminy's sake Hugh, don't you suppose that a large part of the reason these stories go by unnoticed is simply because a lot of people just don't care? Isn't that most of it? And why is that? Maybe the magicians had a hand in that?
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:brainpanhandler wrote:The Times story ought to be explosive. My prediction... it won't be. But not as a result of the tenuous sleight of hand you suggest.
Don't mistake effectiveness with intent. That's not 'debunking' what I'm claiming, just judging it's effectiveness. Which is often a crap shoot for the people whose job it is to just do it.
Gates' nonsense story about asking the Air Force to do more because of being "stuck in old ways of doing business" was absolutely to counter the previous day's story indicting the Pentagon.
I am specifically suggesting a different cause for my prediction that the Times story will go unnoticed. How can that be construed as judging the effectiveness of the techniques you claim are being used? Let's not mistake nonexistence with ineffectiveness.
I'll leave the "absolutely" bait untouched, except to say, I'll leave the "absolutely" bait untouched, twice.
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:brainpanhandler wrote:People suspect these things. They don't care.
That's vague. If you mean that there's no reason to do any psy-ops, that's absurd.
That (some) people (sometimes) suspect (some) things is all the more reason to spin mightily and craftily at all times.
Glad you can find a use for the word
if.
I'm wondering what portion of the population is targeted by the type of psyops you suggest here? Presumably the portion of the population that is very unlikely to read the NYT need not be targeted? Yes? What about the portion of the population that even if they read the Times article would not be in the least fazed by it? Imbeciles that still believe the war in Iraq was justifiable and Bush has been a good president? Cold hearted cynics who just wish they could find a place at the trough and figure anyone who does not realize that it's money that makes the world go 'round is a faggot commie? People who distrust the media already and are convinced it's all one big conspiracy by the military/industrial/corporate media/entertainment complex to enslave us all? You? Me?
Are these psy-ops tailored to an audience? Is it plausible that psy-ops are contrived in a way that focuses their effect on a portion of the population strategically significant and likely susceptible? Or are these unsophisticated dummies that use a scattershot approach? Or is that an unfair dichotomy?
"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." - Martin Luther King Jr.