How about some lizard drops?
How about some lizard drops?
Ever been part of "the wave" at a sporting event? Stood up at a show or event and applauded because others were applauding without knowing much about who, or what the clapping was for?
It is trivial to exploit our human propensity for imitation, to go along with the crowd, and use this to propagate unconscious self-replicating social behaviors (fads, trends, crazes) in a culture for purposes of marketing or for social control.
It's common sense that such a phenomenon, ripe for exploitation, is being used by cultist pedovores interested in controlling human behavior โ especially the for controlling the future evolution of social and economic systems.
Pop culture is not the organic phenomena it appears, but a curated artificial medium engineered to permit rapid introduction and transmission of contagious, conditioned behaviors like purchasing and to spread psychogenic illnesses, self-destructive sexual fetishes etc.
Cultures where commerce controls media content and where art is used to sell consumer goods also have the capacity to engineer psychological operations which induce delusions and powerful contagious mental illnesses or collective insanities.
Historical incidents and known forms of contagious psychogenic illnesses are described in "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" by Charles Mackay.
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/24518
In recent years, we have seen mysterious maladies proliferate. Recently, American and European psychologists have been tracking the blue whale game, the Momo challenge, the gorilla glue challenge which use guided imagery, occult symbols sigils and glyphs to evoke a psychic dilemma which persuades victim to ice themselves or huff wasp spray. In addition to obvious mind traps like Momo and the Whale, there are similar cognitive exploits which are far more dangerous.
Rothko's basilisk is a logic trap to which a small segment of the population is especially vulnerable -
https://slate.com/technology/2014/07/rokos-basilisk-the-most-terrifying-thought-experiment-of-all-time.html
The evil clowns create both the pathology, โinduced contagious, epidemic psychogenic illnessโ and the psyops which exploit it, constantly.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Whale_Challenge
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momo_Challenge_hoax
https://indianexpress.com/article/trending/trending-globally/louisiana-man-tries-gorilla-glue-challenge-with-a-cup-ends-up-in-hospital-7188330/
DIG MEME PRAY
There are sons of the buddha whose minds are pure,
who are gentle and of acute capacities,
who under innumerable buddhas
have practiced the profound and wonderful way.
For these sons of the buddha
I preach this sutra of the great vehicle.
And I predict that these persons
in a future existence will attain the buddha way.
Because deep in their minds they think of the Buddha
and practice and uphold the pure precepts,
they are assured they will attain buddhahood,
and hearing this, their whole bodies are filled with great joy.
The Buddha knows their minds and their practices
and therefore preaches for them the great vehicle.
When the voice-hearers and bodhisattvas
hear this Law that I preach,
as soon as they have heard one verse
they will all without doubt be certain of attaining buddhahood.
In the buddha lands of the ten directions
there is only the Law of the one vehicle,
there are not two, there are not three,
except when the Buddha preaches so as an expedient means.
A STRICT LAW* BIDS US HONK
"Honkanywhere,Honkeverywhere, especially in suburbs home to large numbers of satanic subversives and somnambulist NPCs," advises the Honk anon who supports the worldwide FREEHONKmovement.
The FREEHONKmovement is composed of anonymous patriots of every nation, race and religious faith, whoHONK, with truck horns, steam whistles, freighter fog horns, jacked up theramins, steam calliopes, 5D bicycle bells; to awaken the conscience of the guilty and open the eyes of innocents yet asleep.
Honk Anywhere, Honk Everywhere
"Anyone can jump on the bandwagon, 'cause almost anyone canHONK"
"Why should We the People waste time onHONK? What do we have to gain for risking a possibleHONKticket?"
#HONKbecause the world's not good enough,#HONKfor gentleness, modesty and respect.#HONKFOR FREEDOM#HONKfor addicts poisoned with cult fentanyl#HONKfor the poor whose faces they grind#HONKfor America#HONKif you'll die trying#HONKto rid the land of pedovores#HONKfor what we lost#HONKto get it back.#HONKand be counted
HONKwhere you are.HONKwhere you are goingHONKwhen you get there.HONKto bid defiance to the cultHONKfor HOLINESSHONKfor lost homes and farmsHONKfor MAGAHONKto restore sacredHONKFor the hornlessHONKfor the childrenHONKfor the wounded, the junkies and elderlyHONKfor GenerosityHONKfor kindnessHONKfor unrigged electionsHONKFor slack-jawed shills at the end of timeHONKfor the curesHONKfor no mo' pedovoresHONKfor plain truthHONKbecause right now it means more than votingHONKfor the frightened, the lost, the lonely, confused and betrayedHONKTo Make America Great AgainHONKbecause anything can happenHONKBecause anyone canHONKSaturday, the sixth day of creation.HONKfor larvae in hexagonal cubicles.HONKfor a fake UKE war, dawg.HONKfor pedovore smackdownHONKfor ELE number #23HONKfor NPC AwakeningHONKfor 5 Peso gal gasolineHONKfor 12 discrete magnetic polesHONKfor the hornlessHONKFor the hard of horn-ingHONKfor fake celebrities'HONKto infuriate pedovoresHONKto restore meaningHONKfor RevelationsHONKDestruction to the Underground EmpireHONKto chasten the masonHONKfor moreHONKing
NEVER STOP HONKING #HONK FOR LIFE
*God's eternal moral law which governs this and all other universes.
Child stealing networks operate worldwide. They frequently prey on indigenous populations living in remote areas of third world countries.
This witness describes what he saw in the Guatemalan Highlands.
DIG MEME PRAY
latest science from CHY-NA'
Exploring the neural mechanisms behind how social networks shape our decisions
Shedding some light on what happens in the brain when humans are making decisions informed by interactions with others in their social network could also help to better understand phenomena commonly observed in social groups. For example, it could help to unveil the neural underpinnings behind misinformation, the propagation of information across social groups and polarized views.
Researchers at Peking University have recently carried out a study aimed at better understanding how humans learn new things from observing the decisions of others. Their findings, published in Nature Neuroscience, pin-point a neurocomputational mechanism through which the brain filters sources of information and that could explain phenomena like biased learning and misinformation.
"We suspected that the human brain processes information differently when the information is transmitted through social networks versus when it is not," Lusha Zhu, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told Medical Xpress.
"This is because messages flowing along social connections are often entangled, contradictory, or unnecessary, making it very difficult for the brain to reconcile disparate sources of network-derived information. In our recent study, we asked the following questions: how does the brain integrate information received from connected peers? Why people perform differently when they are embedded in a same network? And how does the structural location of an individual on a network affect how that individual performs in a networked environment?"
As part of their study, Zhu and her colleagues asked groups of human participants to play a game that involved observing others' behavior and learning from it. Basically, the participants were randomly allocated to different 'locations' in a temporary artificial society made of an interconnected network of people and could only communicate with people that were their direct 'neighbors' in this network configuration.
While the participants completed this group task, their brain activity was recording using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technology. FMRI is a well-known imaging technique that allows researchers to create 3D and detailed images of brain activity when individuals are performing certain tasks.
"The goal of the subjects was to make a series of decisions by observing their neighbors' decisions, similar to deciding which movie to watch on a weekend by checking out the one's friends have watched," Zhu explained. "We recorded subjects brain activity while subjects were observing each decision made by each neighbor."
After recording their data, Zhu and her colleagues analyzed it using advanced computational models. These models allowed them to unveil connections between the brain activity they observed and the decisions made by their study participants, to gain insight on the brain processes involved in decision-making influenced by social networks.
"We find that the brain makes decisions in ways both similar to and different from that in the non-networked environment," Zhu said. "Similar to the non-networked environment, our brain holds a belief about, say, the quality of the competing movies, and update the belief based on how surprising neighbors' choices are. The more surprising the neighbors' choices are, the more likely the brain is to update its belief."
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-03-exploring-neural-mechanisms-social-networks.html