Tuesday, April 23, 2013

"Reality Is a Psyop" by Jon Rappoport

"There is more than one space and time.

"What would happen if the three major networks, each with considerable power, had come up with three vastly different versions of the Boston massacre?

"You would see a serious conflict of 'spaces and times.' It would happen before your eyes.

"It would put people into an existential warp. They wouldn't know what to do. They'd feel as if their innards were separating, as if they were being drawn and quartered.

"Consensus reality would begin to disintegrate.

"A psyop depends on being able to engineer one story line."


--Jon Rappoport, 4-21-13

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HIGHLY RECOMMENDED:  Jon Rappoport's latest article entitled "Reality Is a Psyop."  Here's Rappoport's introduction to the piece followed by a link to the full article, which can be found on Rappoport's always illuminating blog (as well as on Rappoport's related site, nomorefakenews.com):

Jack True was one of the most innovative hypnotherapists of our time. Largely unknown in academic circles, uninterested in publishing his work, Jack focused on his patients.
We met in 1987. We became friends and colleagues. Over the course of several years, I interviewed him many times.
Jack eventually gave up on straight hypnosis-and-suggestion as a way to do therapy. He said, "I'm finding that people who come to my office are already in a hypnotic state, so my job is to wake them up."
Here is an excerpt from one of our interviews:
Q: What does "mind control" mean to you?
A: The total sum of all influences that put people in a reality trance.
Q: And what's that?
A: A state in which people consider this the only space and the only possible time.
Q: And it isn't?
A: Reality is a psychological operation. "Here we are, this is the only space and time, and we're inside it." Whereas, music, for example, invents its own time and even space, and you can see, from people's reaction to it, how profound other deeper realities can be.
If we define ourselves as creatures only capable of living inside one space and time, then we adjust our behavior, our prospects, and we adjust the scope of our desires.
The space-time continuum is one reality. And at some level, a human being knows this. That's the point. He knows this. And he doesn't want to stay glued to one reality.
So if a person becomes all wound up in this continuum---which of course he does---then he loses sight of what? Desire. Because it seems then that reality defines what can be legitimately desired. Everything is backwards. Desire becomes diluted and blunted. And power drains away.
Imagine it this way. There's a machine that keeps manufacturing reality. Space, time, reality. And people, however it happens, hook themselves up to it. They're addicts.
Q: So who is really carrying out this psychological operation, as you call it?
A: The people who run the machine, and the people who, whether they realize it or not, choose to stay attached to what the machine produces. It's a two-way street. But the trump cards are played by the addict. He can either cure himself or remain a slave.

Q: When you say there is more than one space and time, do you just mean there are alternative realities or possibilities?
A: I mean that, yes, but also more. Space and time are constructs. They can be manipulated. They can be invented by artists. They can be imposed. They can be, at a deep psychological or spiritual level, perceived for what they are: elements that spring out of our state of mind. In one state of mind, you'll perceive one corresponding space-time. In another state mind that is quite different, you'll perceive another space-time.
Q: And knowing that, what can be done?
A: Well, with patients, I have them invent different spaces and times.
Q: How?
A: Several ways. One way is by inventing dreams.
Q: What's the effect of that?
A: They begin to receive new feedback.
Q: What kind of feedback?
A: Every space and every time has different emotions and feelings attached to it. These become chronically experienced feelings. By getting out of a central space and time, the patient feels new things. He is freer.

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You can read Rappoport's entire article HERE.

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