To: familyop
...and remember to
keep your powder dry.
oh, wait, that's what you said, just not in so many words.
Beared repeating! ;^)
More seriously, the distraction thesis may sound far-fetched, but upon reflection has some plausibility.
Would like to follow the newswriter around for a bit, just to see if I could figure out what she's made of. Or if she exists at all. The article did come through AP after all.
35 posted on
12/14/2009 11:05:50 PM PST by
BlueDragon
(there is no such thing as a "true" compass, all are subject to both variation & deviation)
To: BlueDragon
She has another article in April about spring water in CO.
To: BlueDragon
"More seriously, the distraction thesis may sound far-fetched, but upon reflection has some plausibility."
I should probably have written terms other than the word, distraction. The effort is actually to cause readers and listeners to reject information about how our business, political and academic leaders have betrayed their own Nation.
Carried further, though, embellishments to stories about efforts like those of, say, the Club of Rome, for example, can amount to floods of information that seem like a sort of white noise to listeners and readers. ...or saturations of publications with headlines shouting about celebrities and politicians. ...also the use of neo-Nazi, UFO and chem-trail nut groups to further the rejections of information about real efforts.
40 posted on
12/14/2009 11:25:31 PM PST by
familyop
(cbt. engr. (cbt), NG, '89-' 96, Duncan Hunter or no-vote)
To: BlueDragon
That’s a good idea on your part—to look for more work by such writers.
46 posted on
12/15/2009 12:00:10 AM PST by
familyop
(cbt. engr. (cbt), NG, '89-' 96, Duncan Hunter or no-vote)
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