The Elimination of Reason

Guest post by Jeff Thomas

 

Recently, I paid for an item with the exact amount requested, including 89 cents in change. The salesgirl stared at the coins and clearly wasn’t sure what to do. Eventually, she reached for a calculator and began to total them up one at a time: 25 + 25 + 25 + 10 + 10 + 4. Having been schooled in the age prior to calculators, I’m accustomed to doing arithmetic in my head, but this particular instance evidenced a level of “dumbing down” over the last fifty years that was beyond what I had realised.

Since the dumbing down has been so consistently prevalent over the decades, it’s clear that this is no accident, nor is it an experiment in “alternative education” that hasn’t worked out as was intended. It’s clearly the result of a conscious effort to diminish the average person’s ability to think. As such, it’s had a long gestation period and was expected to require generations, but was nevertheless a conscious goal.

But, why on earth would the controlling elite of any country seek to diminish the power to reason? Surely, reason is the basis of all independent thought – the catalyst for new ideas and improvement on existing goods and systems.

The answer, in a word, is control. Independent thought is the prime enemy of those who seek to dominate a people. For that reason, those who rule will happily sacrifice technological and social progress if it means that their dominance can be increased.

Controlling both the answers and the questions

It’s the nature of humans to question their situation and their surroundings. However, a clever leader will surmise that that means that he needs not only to provide the answers, but the questions. If he can keep the people pre-occupied with questions that are of little consequence to him, and provide answers that are easy for the people to absorb, he will control the areas of thought and, in so doing, will diminish the likelihood that he or his actions will be questioned.

Since time immemorial, successful leaders have understood that, in order to take the attention of their actions, carefully constructed distractions are called for.

For centuries, when leaders have been under criticism by their minions, they’ve used the distraction of war. War not only tends to unify a people, it also helps them to accept the removal of their basic rights for an “emergency” period. (Of course, most leaders don’t replace the rights after the emergency has ended. War therefore is also a good tool to increase tyranny, generally.) As Ludwig von Mises observed,

“War was not an affair of the peoples; it concerned the rulers only. The citizens detested war, which brought mischief to them and burdened them with taxes and contributions.”

However, in modern times, propagandists have become far more sophisticated. Let’s look at a few. Adolf Hitler said,

“Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually, they will believe it.”

Vladimir Lenin was a great believer in the idea that,

“The art of any propagandist and agitator consists in his ability to find the best means of influencing any given audience, by presenting a definite truth, in such a way as to make it most convincing, most easy to digest, most graphic, and most strongly impressive.”

Two of the greatest inventions in making propaganda easy to sell have been political parties and television. In the days of kings, it was common to hate the king and want his downfall, but, with political parties, it’s possible to get one half of the people hating one party and the other half hating the other party. Then, all that’s necessary is to assure that each party has roughly the same amount of apparent power and the people will focus all their attention on the hatred of the opposing party and fail to notice those who are pulling the strings equally for both parties. The kings thereby remain the kings forever, whilst remaining invisible. The idea is not to defeat the anger of the people, but to redirect it. As Friedrich Hayek commented,

“The skilful propagandist then has the power to mold their minds in any direction he chooses, and even the most intelligent and independent people cannot entirely escape that influence if they are long isolated from all other sources of information.”

That last phrase is key. In today’s world, we possess the most significant propaganda tool that has ever been invented: television. Through this medium, we can create a major issue out of a minor incident, create two opposing viewpoints, each designed to appeal to one group or the other, then repeat the propaganda unceasingly, until the people have become thoroughly polarised from each other on the issue. In this fashion, we can begin with a minor incident, such as the one in Ferguson Missouri in 2014, arrange for one set of pundits to state unequivocally that the problem was racist Caucasian police, whilst presenting another set of pundits who just as vehemently proclaim that the problem is lawless blacks. Then, as Brother Adolf states, repeat the message endlessly – in this case, on the news seven days a week, from morning till night, for over six months.

Mission accomplished. The conservative group has redoubled its belief in the necessity for an increased police state, whist the liberal group dug in its heels on its perception of class warfare and the need for increased collectivism to combat that class warfare.

Once this issue has played itself out, it can disappear completely from the television and a new issue takes its place.

As stated above, in creating this means of propaganda, we have first created the question in the mind of the people, then we have spoon-fed two opposing answers – one designed to appeal to those who are by nature conservative and one to those who are by nature liberal. If we do our job well, the groups will become so blindly polarized that no gathering, such as a dinner party, will contain both liberals and conservative invitees, or it will be a disaster.

All liberals will be unified in their thinking, just as all conservatives will be. Of course, those who are libertarian will be vilified by both of the other groups, as they represent a third alternative. (The success in indoctrinating a people and destroying their ability to reason can be measured by their vehemence in rejecting a third choice of reason.)

However, reason must be blocked out on a continuous basis, or there is danger that it may return over time. As early as 600 BC, Lao Tzu had figured this out:

“The muddiest water is cleared as it is stilled.”

Hence the importance of the endless repetition of the message. As a news item, Ferguson was deserving of a minor mention, perhaps once a week. But by suspending the outcome (whether charges would be laid against the officer), fuel could be added to the rhetoric fire day in, day out, for months on end. When it had finally outlived its usefulness, it was time to create another event. Of course, one shooting every six months in a population of 320,000,000 is a minor blip, but, through the continuous carpet bombing of the viewer’s brain with the same rhetoric, two such events a year would seem like an epidemic.

Once we reach this level of thought control, it’s possible to offer utterly unacceptable candidates for public office and still have them gain election. All that’s needed is that they parrot the some rhetoric the people have become dependent on as a replacement for reason.

Whether it be Communist Russia, Nazi Germany or Fascist America, once the people have been successfully conditioned to allow Big Brother to dictate thought, the next step has always been totalitarian rule.

###

Jeff Thomas
email: [email protected]

Jeff Thomas is British and resides in the Caribbean. The son of an economist and historian, he learned early to be distrustful of governments as a general principle. Although he spent his career creating and developing businesses, for eight years, he penned a weekly newspaper column on the theme of limiting government. He began his study of economics around 1990, learning initially from Sir John Templeton, then Harry Schulz and Doug Casey and later others of an Austrian persuasion. He is now a regular feature writer for Casey Research’s International Man and Strategic Wealth Preservation in the Cayman Islands.


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20 Comments
M.I.A.
M.I.A.
October 28, 2016 12:31 pm

Recently, I paid for an item with the exact amount requested, including 89 cents in change. 25 + 25 + 25 + 10 + 10 + 4 = 99 cents not 89 cents. Jeff needs a Common Core refresher course in math also.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  M.I.A.
October 28, 2016 1:01 pm

It’s common core arithmetic: It can be anything you want it to be!

Homer
Homer
  M.I.A.
October 28, 2016 3:25 pm

It was fat fingers folks! Nothing to get exited about!

Macumazahn
Macumazahn
  M.I.A.
October 28, 2016 4:29 pm

Actually, no – he never said she entered the numbers correctly. Sadly, the poor ignorant salesgirl couldn’t get the correct answer… even using a calculator!
If you really want to pose a head-scratcher, fork over $2.14 to pay a bill of $1.89. They’ll look at you as if you’re from another planet.

Speaking of ignorance – my first job in an office involved counting completed welfare benefits forms. The previous “worker” (a black woman) had left behind some partially-completed counts, and I was amazed to discover that she didn’t even know how to make tally-marks in groups of five. Nope, the paper was covered with row upon row of marks like:
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I was surprised back then, but now I know better than to be surprised at any degree of ignorance.

Jason Calley
Jason Calley
October 28, 2016 12:34 pm

Hmmm… 89 cents? 25 + 25 + 25+ 10 + 10 + 4 = 89? You might want to check that…

🙂

LOL! You know that the worst time for a typo is always when it comes to get you!

Jason Calley
Jason Calley
October 28, 2016 12:49 pm

Hey Jeff! Great post! Yes, the masses have been dumbed down for a reason and the reason is to make them more controllable. There is a problem with that…

The Powers That Be rarely have any experience with actual struggle, real effort and prolonged hard work. Most of them have been born into wealth and power, and those that have not, have generally been powerful for so long that they may have forgotten the struggles of their youth. The result? TPTB have no real understanding of exactly where wealth and power come from. They want a steak, BAM!, someone brings them a steak. They want to fly to Paris? ZIP! There is a private plane for them. They want to vacation at their home on the beach? Here is the man with the car to take them… To them, all these things “just happen”. They imagine that all the attributes of wealth and power can be produced by ignorant sheep with thumbs. They have no idea, not really, of how many millions of man-hours of work and calculation went into the process of creating that plane they fly in, or that telecommunications system they use. They have no conception of how many years of study and effort went into those engineers just to get a few of them to the point where they could even begin to work on the design. TPTB are severely, immensely deficit in their understanding of how many people and how much work is contained in all those lower layers of the pyramid which they inhabit the top of.

Sure, they can dumb down the education system. Sure they can bring in millions of uneducated (often ineducable) dirt poor immigrants from third world countries. What they cannot do — and what they do not understand — is that after they have done these things, they will no longer be able to control a technologically advanced country, because that country will no longer exist.

Stucky
Stucky
October 28, 2016 12:50 pm

Simply terrific article.

One of the very hardest things for me to accept is that there is NO difference between Dems and Repubs.

In fact, I still hold on to that belief to some extent as evidenced by my support for Trump … that he can/will do some things Hillcunt won’t. And even if that’s really true, the bottom line still may be that there is no real difference — only superficial difference.

I_S, Bea, and others who say voting doesn’t matter may very well have been right all along. Imagine that ….

Did I use the word “may” often enough to cover my ass?

Homer
Homer
  Stucky
October 28, 2016 2:53 pm

Stucky, it’s a big ass to cover, but I think you did.

Wip
Wip
October 28, 2016 12:55 pm

Not only reason but also obfuscation. The largest amounts of money are made off of you without you even knowing it.

D.B.Cooper
D.B.Cooper
October 28, 2016 1:57 pm

Math is hard

Homer
Homer
  D.B.Cooper
October 28, 2016 2:55 pm

Ya! I find math hurd, but I find English hurder.

Rise Up
Rise Up
October 28, 2016 2:51 pm

Add the effect of chemtrails, fluoridated water, and GMOs in our food to the dumbed down education, and we now have complete idiots running around.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
October 28, 2016 3:07 pm

If you are going to quote selectively and omit the actual meaning of the passage in order to make your point, is that not a form of propaganda?

Most people know zip about our own time, never mind post World War One German political movements. Erich Ludendorff was a Prussian General Officer that delivered Germany two of it’s greatest victories of the war, Liege and Tannenberg. After the war he blamed the defection of Marxist units and the subsequent agreement to the Treaty of Versailles signed by communist factions within the German government for it’s defeat and the subsequent wrecking of what was left of Germany’s economy. The press at that time was heavily left leaning and threw it’s full weight back at him, blaming Ludendorff for the German defeat. The public, having no other means of learning the facts behind the matter, came to accept this defamation as truth. Hitler wrote about it in chapter 10 of Mein Kampf.

On the concept of “The Big Lie” and what it actually describing.

“But it remained for the Jews, with their unqualified capacity for falsehood, and their fighting comrades, the Marxists, to impute responsibility for the downfall precisely to the man who alone had shown a superhuman will and energy in his effort to prevent the catastrophe which he had foreseen and to save the nation from that hour of complete overthrow and shame. By placing responsibility for the loss of the world war on the shoulders of Ludendorff they took away the weapon of moral right from the only adversary dangerous enough to be likely to succeed in bringing the betrayers of the Fatherland to Justice.

All this was inspired by the principle—which is quite true within itself—that in the big lie there is always a certain force of credibility; because the broad masses of a nation are always more easily corrupted in the deeper strata of their emotional nature than consciously or voluntarily; and thus in the primitive simplicity of their minds they more readily fall victims to the big lie than the small lie, since they themselves often tell small lies in little matters but would be ashamed to resort to large-scale falsehoods. It would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously. Even though the facts which prove this to be so may be brought clearly to their minds, they will still doubt and waver and will continue to think that there may be some other explanation. For the grossly impudent lie always leaves traces behind it, even after it has been nailed down, a fact which is known to all expert liars in this world and to all who conspire together in the art of lying.”

Frankly, it sounds exactly like the Dilbert guy. What the heavily excerpted quote doesn’t describe is Nazi propaganda.

Of course now that you can actually buy a copy of the book legally, feel free to read it yourself and make up your own mind about the intent of that passage.

DaBirds (Comey's playing us again, citizen beware)
DaBirds (Comey's playing us again, citizen beware)
  hardscrabble farmer
October 28, 2016 7:26 pm

Cliff notes by Samuel Clemens “it’s easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled”

racistwhiteman
racistwhiteman
October 28, 2016 3:40 pm

Hell….this is nothing new here. It is, in fact, the new norm. I for one refuse to even acknowledge them in public. Counting change is far above them.

daddysteve
daddysteve
October 28, 2016 4:05 pm

I like speeding in school zones!

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
October 28, 2016 5:11 pm

George Carlin was wayyyy ahead of this guy in his assessment or our education system back in the 70’s/80’s. To wit:

[imgcomment image?1398528920[/img]

Homer
Homer
October 28, 2016 7:22 pm

The dumbing down of youts is the German plan for creating the perfect interchangeable cog in the corporate-State machinery. The Progressives latched onto that philosophy like Rufus latches on to a bitch in heat. We gave up 80 yrs of rational thinking for that little gambit. It’s all Karl Marx’s fault.