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zangtang » Sat Jan 24, 2015 12:29 pm wrote:the implications of HMW's 'stuff' are about as uncomfortable as it gets.
- if he was right.
maybe it was just panopticon schizoid paranoia...............
IanEye » Sat Jan 17, 2015 12:45 pm wrote:Wombaticus Rex » Sat Jan 17, 2015 1:19 pm wrote:I think we're good.
I hope he is happy and feeling productive in the world.
His theories resonate with me whenever I am in a mall or a theater.
Eye know you're gone
I hope you've got some friends who'll come along
Hugh Manatee Wins » Sat Sep 22, 2007 4:11 am wrote:...Remember that the people who call the shots and determine what is in front of your face are honchos in publishing or movie studios and distributors, not the content generator.
I've found instances where the content generator, the name that sells, was steered into a psy-ops device without their knowing it. That's really common and makes for a more secure covert op. Not everyone knows what their product is going to be used for.
So things can be nudged into creation with encouragement or just found and opportunistically promoted and released as a psy-ops device.
If all you're trying to figure out is if Ludlum himself was CIA, yes or no, you really don't know the variables involved and the paths to promotion that decades of CIA infiltration and just plain becoming or buying every useful venue provide for delivering psy-ops.
You think psy-ops movies are the exception? Oh no. Movies are KEY to military recruiting and your megaplex is almost 100% psy-ops. Way over 75% anyway. Easily...
coffin_dodger wrote:I admired Hugh's dedication and vision. He saw it everywhere.
slimmouse wrote:Would that truly include within himself?
Can't speak for HMW, but it's terribly difficult to truly know thyself. God knows, I've been looking for my self for the greater part of adulthood. A slow grind and not always happy with what I find. :shock
Searcher08 » Sat Jan 17, 2015 10:12 am wrote:Elvis » Sat Jan 17, 2015 7:02 am wrote:Just wondering: If it were me, I wouldn't appreciate someone publishing my personal information on a forum where I came to participate anonymously. Worse, it appears the "info" is wrong, identifies the wrong person. Should we be publishing people's real name here just because we can figure out who they are?
And if we get it wrong, is some guy in Massachussets going to start getting weird messages or worse because someone incorrectly identified him on the Web?
Should the "information" be deleted?
I was wondering about this too in retrospect. He was posting under his own name on Amazon the exact same information from RI. I suppose it could be someone else being associated with HMW (this is too convoluted for my head) If anyone thinks my post would be better removed, please ask a mod to delete (and cheers Elvis - I don't often get second thoughts about posting but I'm veering towards that)
FWIW I though HMW had been on the East Coast but was more an archivist / historical researcher with music on the side then moved to San Francisco. Certainly JW is making no effort to be anonymous, which *really* doesnt sound like HMW given the research he was doing.
BrandonD » Wed Jan 21, 2015 2:25 am wrote:brekin » Tue Jan 20, 2015 8:25 pm wrote:Everyone is going to have their own definition, and putting aside for a moment, the general definition of New Age fluffy thinking that throws out any logical or even rational analysis I'd say, for me, for this particular forum, "woo" is any cherished and beloved topic that causes someone to suffer duress and regress when it is put under any rigorous examination.
We all have our woo centers and one man's woo can be another man's hard science, but the woo is out there, because its inside all of us. Dosage will vary of course.
Thank you for that well thought-out answer, it is a bit of a relief to read actually. I associate that word with more mainstream debunkers, and it generally refers to anything paranormal or without a conventional scientific explanation. That word woo is specifically intended to shame and silence people who aren't following the mainstream party line, so when I see such a term being repeated I sometimes instinctively ask myself if I'm in the right place.
I've experienced some very strange things, and I give those experiences serious consideration rather than disregard. Which makes me "woo" from the typical perspective. I'm sure many of us here are like that, actually.
So then, where is the line drawn? Absolutely everyone here is woo from the perspective of the evening news anchor. From where I stand, I find it difficult to draw a hard line between exactly what is "woo" and what is not, because that line presupposes that all the facts are in, that right now at this moment in time we know precisely how physics and time and consciousness and all the rest of it works. Which to me is beyond absurd.
Critical examination is a very enjoyable process, my feeling of objection is more directed towards the attitude that creates terms like "woo" in the first place. People who entertain unconventional ideas are not in any way less stable or less intelligent than the general population. It is in fact a mark of intelligence, as well as courage, to intentionally depart from convention.
Those who unintentionally depart from convention, well, they might lie in another category altogether.
MinM wrote:Also in Hugh's defense, and contrary to prevailing opinion, HMW was not an absolutist. Hugh allowed for the possibility that not all Hollywood productions were originally intended as psyops ...
Hugh Manatee Wins » Sat Sep 22, 2007 4:11 am wrote:...Remember that the people who call the shots and determine what is in front of your face are honchos in publishing or movie studios and distributors, not the content generator.
I've found instances where the content generator, the name that sells, was steered into a psy-ops device without their knowing it. That's really common and makes for a more secure covert op. Not everyone knows what their product is going to be used for.
So things can be nudged into creation with encouragement or just found and opportunistically promoted and released as a psy-ops device. If all you're trying to figure out is if Ludlum himself was CIA, yes or no, you really don't know the variables involved and the paths to promotion that decades of CIA infiltration and just plain becoming or buying every useful venue provide for delivering psy-ops.
You think psy-ops movies are the exception? Oh no. Movies are KEY to military recruiting and your megaplex is almost 100% psy-ops. Way over 75% anyway. Easily...
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