No More Fake News.com The myth of the limited solution
The myth of the limited solution
by Jon Rappoport
October 17, 2013
www.nomorefakenews.com
From
a certain angle, history could be called the sum of succeeding limited
solutions to basic problems. The result is a pile and a mess, which
appears to have no exit, except more limited solutions.
On and on it goes.
In
other words, things are so far gone, so muddled, there can be no going
back to the original basic problem. There can be no working on the
basic problem. The basic problem is buried so deep, it can't be
retrieved and resolved.
Imagine
a nation whose people, over the course of a few hundred years, have
undergone a vast reduction in intelligence. At this point, a small
group asserts, "If we few, who have somehow retained our IQ, want to
communicate with these morons, we'll have to deploy horrifically
simplified language and ideas. We'll have to bring them, one tiny step
at a time, toward an even rudimentary consciousness about life, current
affairs, and situations that need repair."
" Only limited solutions will work."
But
this doesn't pan out. It only serves to make things worse. The morons
inevitably pervert these limited solutions and parlay them into more
problems. Each glint of light turns into a cloud of darkness.
The
history of public relations reveals these developments. Finding
simpler and simpler ways to reach audiences, PR people discover they
have to resort to more infantile strategies, because the audience is
becoming more brain-addled.
No, it turns out that the way to resolve all this is to return to the beginning, where the corruption first took place.
That's the place where individual freedom, power, imagination, and the desire for uncompromising justice were bent and twisted.
Returning to the beginning works because people never really forget. They try to, they pretend to, but they don't.
Somewhere down deep, they recall freedom and power and they want it again. Somewhere down deep, they aren't morons at all.
If
you can strike THERE, astonishing things can happen. A tremendous
amount of spoilage and degradation and passivity can ignite and burn
off.
But
this requires faith, and it requires the knowledge that time
(opportunity) is endless. There is no deadline, despite all
appearances.
This
also requires realizing that offering limited solutions geared to
severely limited minds accomplishes exactly the opposite of what you
want.
There
is a further temptation. Often it is the limited solution that has
backing, money, significant support, whereas striking at the heart of
the problem and addressing it begins to pay dividends with only a
whisper of a few people.
Imagine
this: In the year 2982, all 600 million Americans are getting their
food from Government Central bins. Instead of taking five of these
people out to a farm in the wild and showing them food at its source, in
nature, emerging from the earth in the rain and sun, you decide the way
to go is:
"
Let's try to wean 500 million people away from the packets of ketchup
at Central. It's a start. If we can do that, then we might be able to
show them the mayo is a bad idea. And then we can work on revelations
about the fries..."
But
lo and behold, this doesn't yield positive results. People don't seem
to care about attacks on ketchup. They yawn and tear open the packets
and squeeze the red stuff on their fedburgers.
"
Well," you say, "maybe we aimed too high. Let's go slower. Let's
reboot and attack aspartame packets for the coffee. You see, people can
always resort to sugar. They have an option. Let's promote sugar, not
aspartame..."
But again, nothing. No results.
Whereas,
if you said, GOVERNMENT CENTRAL FOOD IS EVIL AND AN ASSAULT ON YOUR
FREEDOM, a few people, at first, would wake up to the basic problem. A
small spark, but one that travels deep.
Now
you're dealing with the subconscious memory of all 500 million people,
where the desire for freedom still lives, where instinctive knowledge of
what's evil still resides.
Despite
media attacks on Ron Paul, despite arguments about his credentials, his
past record, his "horrendous" potential to steal votes from Republican
candidates, when he said LET'S BRING ALL OUR TROOPS HOME FROM AROUND THE
WORLD NOW, a hundred thousand people started to wake up that day.
"
What are we doing with all those soldiers of ours? Why are they
overseas in hundreds of places? What the hell is this? What's our
agenda? BRING THEM HOME. The Constitution specifies military force for
direct defense of the United States, that's all. BRING THEM ALL HOME."
Paul
didn't say, "I believe we can soon initiate a partial draw down of
troops in the area surrounding Kabul, given that our effort to build
A-frames and swimming pools in Afghan villages are bearing fruit..."
The
method of limited solution is a mirror of what the individual tends to
do with his own mind. He looks for potential answers that swim across
the surface, answers that appear clever, "in light of what he's dealing
with."
As opposed to going to the place where his freedom and power live.
Jon Rappoport
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