The Price Is Right ALWAYS Ends With A Mental Health Message... One, Of Countless Embedded Mental Health Seeds

If I’m not mistaken Dr. Farrell predicted this countless moons ago; that “they” would use “mental health” as a back door, to achieve their Technocratic Totalitarianism goal posts.
He also targeted their psychotropic drugs; as a possible cause of ongoing mass shootings.
[Albeit, my memory is suspect; to say the least]

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On the same day as the Kirk shooting there was a school shooting in my hometown of Evergreen, CO. It was ignored in the national media, of course, so nobody really knows about it. But that day an incredibly left-leaning woman I know from Evergreen started virtue signaling on social media re: getting the traumatized students immediately into counseling and therapy. And because I pretty much disagree with everything this woman says, I had to re-evaluate my own feelings on therapy in the moment. I hadn’t realized before how many of my left-leaning, woke friends treat psychiatry as their religion. Guess I wasn’t paying attention and that day it sort of smacked me in the face. Now I can’t unsee it.

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“Oh, your emotions are all jiggly about reality? Here, take these pills and we’ll talk.”

David Icke had a wonderful expression to describe their indoctrination process: The Totalitarian Tiptoe …

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… this can be applied in “therapy” and “counseling” …

… see also https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/am-pdf/10.1002/ana.25088

https://philpapers.org/archive/HOHTNC-2.pdf

… see this if you are wondering how Neuro can be weaponized (via “trauma”) and the induction of Dissociative Disorders. Ask yourself if you or anyone you know has experienced the following:

Types of Dissociation

  • Depersonalization disorder. This can feel out of body or like separating from yourself.
  • Derealization disorder. The world seems dreamlike and separate from you. …
  • Dissociative amnesia.
  • Dissociative identity disorder.

Can you say COVID boys and girls?

… and BTW folks this has been going on for a long time … look into the literature and you’ll be surprised how far back it goes.

The Predictive Mind by Jakob Hohwy (2003) … book blurb

A new theory is taking hold in neuroscience. It is the theory that the brain is essentially a hypothesis-testing mechanism, one that attempts to minimise the error of its predictions about the sensory input it receives from the world. It is an attractive theory because powerful theoretical arguments support it, and yet it is at heart stunningly simple. Jakob Hohwy explains and explores this theory from the perspective of cognitive science and philosophy. The key argument throughout The Predictive Mind is that the mechanism explains the rich, deep, and multifaceted character of our conscious perception. It also gives a unified account of how perception is sculpted by attention, and how it depends on action. The mind is revealed as having a fragile and indirect relation to the world. Though we are deeply in tune with the world we are also strangely distanced from it.

The first part of the book sets out how the theory enables rich, layered perception. The theory’s probabilistic and statistical foundations are explained using examples from empirical research and analogies to different forms of inference. The second part uses the simple mechanism in an explanation of problematic cases of how we manage to represent, and sometimes misrepresent, the world in health as well as in mental illness. The third part looks into the mind, and shows how the theory accounts for attention, conscious unity, introspection, self and the privacy of our mental world.

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