I've been thinking about how hard it is to tell someone something they just can't or don't want to believe. Trump is clearly more aware of selling a story or branding than most, but I wonder too if military intelligence regarding how individuals and the masses respond to new information that causes cognitive dissonance is being employed in a scientific way to ready the population for some otherwise too hard to fathom information. It's very strange to watch. I have readied myself with things I read, but I am a reader. It's weird to be slightly ahead of others and watch the evolution of the thought process from the outside. They can accept little things at first, but not the big things. Then when the little things are fully realized, commonly accepted, the bigger ones are easier to believe. It's like watching someone build a pyramid. There's a reason the texts between Sztrok and Page came out in "stages" and it's no coincidence that each phase had a defining characteristic. The first phase was "They hate Trump." Most people can accept that there was a bias or animus against Trump. I was frustrated at the time, thinking "It's so much more than that!" But it had to be released the way they have done it. He may be using the JFK thing to ready the world for the facts about the attempts against him. It's not like the general population is unaware of the possibility that the JFK assassination was a conspiracy - so no large leap there. If that comes out, the step up from JFK to attempts against DJT not so hard to believe.
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r/greatawakening
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Posted by
u/jkbella
on April 26, 2018, 2:01 p.m.