>>5209321 Appreciate your service, baker.
Create local movements?
Sure, good idea.
But
>Seems like a psy-op to get you to be lazy and do nothing.
You don't seem to know that there is an international 24x7 team of anons here who are working their asses off, without pay, most of them for 12 hours a day, every day, no weekends off, no holidays, no vacations, just working their asses off to Make America Great Again and Make Earth Great Again. Information warfare, population education/outreach, digital militia.
So you erect a fake strawman ("this movement makes lazy") then attempt to shoot it down? Not an impressive tactic.
Stick with what you know. Make local movements, good idea.
This movement teaches people to think for themselves, research for themselves, don't trust mass media, don't trust traditional information sources without verifying the content, be aware of how the enemy tries to manipulate our minds with a false narrative.
WRWY
The hell they aren't!
Disseminating information is just as much warfare as banging heads with the enemy.
A memeAnon’s notes on
Memetics—A Growth Industry in US Military Operations by Major Michael B. Prosser, USMC. A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Operational Studies, academic year 2005-2006 (dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a507172.pdf)
My notes are not inclusive. I’m focused mainly on my side of things – meme making – and how this paper applies to /Qresearch/. There is a second PDF I haven't studied yet.
Memeanon's Notes
→To attack an ideology, assault a transcendant or central idea, or group of ideas
→Memes are cultural bits of info, transmitted mind-to-mind (via whatever media are prevalent)
→How do you persuade/dissuade enemy combatants? Persuade/dissuade the undecided?
→Analyze cultural ideas, isolate their parts
→Also includes means of spreading the ideas/memes
→Clinical disease analogy to the spread of ideologies: adaptive response of both disease and host organism
→Intentionally persuade large audiences through subtle or overt contact
→Disciplines of sociology, anthropology, cognitive science, behavioral game theory
→Military killing of “infected” people to eradicate an ideology sometimes backfires, transitory effect or even opposite of intended effect (martyrs, hardens opposing position).
→Nonlinear problem
→Requires more than token efforts and resources
→Feedback loop between meme makers, observe effect on target population
→Understand target audience’s aims, mindsets, ways of achieving their strategic objectives
→Metaphysical battlespace fought over culture and ideals.
→“Enemies” are already highly organized and weaponized in the meme warfare space
→Ought to be formalized and resourced within U.S. military + allies, rather than ad hoc as now [circa 2007]
———————————————————–
Memeanon's further observations
→Similarity between memes and what the advertising industry has been practicing (weaponizing!) for >50 years
→Feedback loop is essential between meme-makers, those disseminating them, and those observing/analyzing changes in the target population: not only how well it’s spreading, best vectors of spread, recruitment of new spreaders, immediate reactions, but more broadly how to discern/measure actual changes in target pop’s ideology, and feed this data back to meme generation unit.
→Continuous adaptive improvement loop
→Ideas and concepts are subjective and hard to quantify
We could do more in the area of the feedback loop.
There is also a potential division of labor between - autists with deep cultural knowledge (movies, TV, games.)
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autists with psychological insight into target pop
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autists who know how to frame ideology-challenging ideas in a way that is funny, sardonic, ironic
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graphic artists who can convert these ideas into visual form
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meme distributors (droppers) who are in a position to observe immediate feedback and adoption of the ideas by target pop
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autists who can analyze changes in target pop's ideology
Also see https://www.robotictechnologyinc.com/images/upload/file/Presentation%20Military%20Memetics%20Tutorial%2013%20Dec%2011.pdf
Mimetics is a recognized military discipline for information warfare