20 Comments

As a student currently in my third year of uni, this article resonates with me greatly.

Expand full comment
Jul 21, 2022Liked by John Carter

Yikes!!

Even having read so many articles and blogs & Jordan Peterson’s stand-off on Canadian Bill C16, and witnessing the insane reactions of students in 2016 after Trump was elected, and reading about the C-19 & Zoom classes, etc., et al - reading through this more thorough explication from someone who has seen the horror of the situation from your up-close and personal vantage point almost makes me feel queasy and beyond sick to my very soul.

Whilst reading, the thought kept popping into my mind — Oh now I see how TMI (Transmarginal Inhibition) has been applied to an entire generation of students young and college age — using fake science, indoctrination, propaganda, stockholm syndrome, guilt-tripping, emotional-physical-financial-existential threat hypnosis tactics to achieve the goals of breaking the spirit.

Another instance of the spiritusl war being waged on all of humanity.

No way out is the thought which the controllers seek to bludgeon into our psyches.

They want us to accept and adopt the belief that there is literally no way to escape the prisons they are intending to incarcerate us in.

Mental, emotional, physical, spiritual, psychic prisons.

I read where DARPA is engaged in psyops operations to weaponize our own minds against ourselves. So as to extend war to include each individual being at war with him or herself by way of left and right brain hemispheres of our brains warring against each other.

******

Transmarginal Inhibition was one of Pavlov’s less well known experiments.

The story goes that he gathered a good size group of dogs upon whom he wished to conduct his experiment. (Shades of Fauxci and the beagles!!)

He intended to find out how to break their spirits. He experimented with various methods and techniques.

Results: some of the dogs broke quite quickly; others required more and harsher methods; and a few were impossible for him to break.

So, Pavlov being Pavlov, he came up with a workaround — which succeeded by the way.

How did he achieve it?

He wrecked their physical health.

With their bodies weakened and rendered less able to resist, they finally caved.

Sounds to me like how torturers operate.

And — according to the Cassiopaeans, this virus was developed at Ft. Detrick and injected into US military personnel before being sent to Wuhan China to participate with soldiers from several countries in military games.

The reason given to justify all this was because the PTB were concerned about the protests happening across the planet; yellow-vests, xtinction rebellion, etc.

They believed they needed to re-assert their authoritarian control over the masses.

It was less about the danger of contracting the virus itself and more about setting the stage for the “sting” operation follow-up — the quackxines.

I also read that 10% of the population is constitutionally resistant to being hypnotised - 30% are easily hypnotized - and 60% go along with the herd.

Have no proof those figures are accurate. However, just witnessing the world-wide population’s responses to this psycho show, I’d be hard-pressed to discount it being at least semi-accurate.

Practicing external consideration towards zombies is an exercise in conscious suffering. Not much joy, but lots of self-discipline required.

Thank you John for these DIE posts. The situation is even worse than I suspected.

Blessings 🌈

Expand full comment

Kudos to the writer for taking time to write such a long piece which treats quite alot that affects a learner and someone whom just want to make a living. The world gets clearer to look at with insights like this.

Expand full comment
May 29, 2023Liked by John Carter

Nice summary of what we’ve suspected. My daughters’ classmates from an Ivy League masters program all couldn’t believe they had to work 40 or more hours / week at their jobs after graduation. Tells me a lot about the degree of difficulty of Masters programs, even at the elite schools.

Expand full comment
Apr 28, 2022Liked by John Carter

Simply brilliant.

A nitpick, though: Pinocchio, not Pinnochio.

Expand full comment
Apr 26, 2022Liked by John Carter

First, proofread, alerts: 12 lines from bottom - you forgot (?) a "far" i.e. "far from happy" / 6 lines from bottom: - probably "their life" (not the life)

= =

More later - I am at my day job! (The one that has allowed me, perhaps, to have been more of an "academic" than if I landed a tenure track in "academia" - long story)

Expand full comment

I agree very much. In last two years I have been very disappointed in academia and I really think there should be some reforms. Even thought my personal experience at university is different - maybe I am just lucky one. I studied at small university with focus on hard sciences (biology, physics, math, informatics) and finished my master degree before this all started. I can personally say, that there has been the highest standard and I really appreciate all my professors who thought me a lot and gave me really useful skills for work and life carrier.

Sadly, the more I go into bigger universities I started to noticed, this has been exception. In big universities it's really about number of students, almost everyone will pass. Also since few years back the trend with woke and gender started to gather monumentum. The covid was last drop. In my humble opinion the universities should be the first one who understand, that it's not deadly virus and try to run some studies or experiments to either prove or deny this claim. What has happened to academia is incredibly disturbing and I really think it will have serious cost in future.

Expand full comment