Implied Content
Will people wake up from their dream state? Or will they be forever lost in a made-up world of implied content? Here’s more from Truthstream Media.
Will people wake up from their dream state? Or will they be forever lost in a made-up world of implied content? Here’s more from Truthstream Media.
Are algorithms being used to divide everyone into separate camps, each camp only aware of a sketchy, limited reality?
That’s the question Truthstream Media addresses in this new video. It explores how the Internet has given us all enormous freedom as well as almost certain blindness, laced with a heavy dose of fanaticism.
Jean Nolan, host of Inspired, admits that, yes, we are all really watching a movie.
“Some people argue that we have been watching a movie for the last four years, maybe eight years,” Nolan says. “But there is a much bigger picture.” Nolan says you could go back as far as the state of the media allows–TV, radio and everything in between–and do your own research, you’ll find this has been a scripted reality show since the beginning.
Nolan says it traces back to before there were actual movies. “So when you hear the phrase, “we’re watching a a movie, we’re saying what Shakespeare said, ‘All the world’s a stage and each must play a part.'” Nolan peels the onion and digs for the truth layer in the following episode.
When you look for the news, do you care most about getting the truth or having your political opinions reinforced?
Thanks to the internet, we can get news from an endless number of sources. A few networks and major newspapers no longer control the news cycle. But are we seeking the facts, wherever they may lead, or do we only want our news from outlets and reporters who share our political beliefs?
Sara Carter reports on a new Pew Research Center survey shows that about 40 percent of Americans on both sides of the political divide make a point of getting news from people who share their ideology. And that factor dwarfs any other characteristic news consumers care about with respect to reporters. Here’s her report.
It’s becoming more and more important to give yourself a break from social media. It’s becoming more demented by the day and making us lose our minds.
Do not harden your hearts. Take a break. Here’s more from Hugo Talks.
Mike Benz is the founder and executive director of Foundation For Freedom Online (FFO), a free speech watchdog that protects Americans from internet censorship. He was previously a Trump administration official, serving as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Communications and Information Policy in the U.S. State Department. Follow Mike Benz on X at
/ mikebenzcyber
Here’s more from Benz, as he’s interviewed by Kim Iversen.
Does the Internet have us by the short and curlies? How about smart phones?
Do any people remain who turn toward their Bibles to understand and sort through the latest global crises?
Here’s more from Hugo Talks.
Brace yourselves, folks! The mind manipulation era is here.
Chile has become the first nation to safeguard “neuro rights” and to protect its citizens from companies that not only want to read your mind, but also to directly rewrite your brain. Chilean President Sebastian Pinera signed the bill into law before his term ended in 2022.
The implications are enormous. You could receive messages about what to buy, what to eat or how to behave. Everything you know could be overturned, with new false assumptions planted. All this could be done via algorithms transmitted while you surf the Internet!
An American firm, Emotiv, based in San Francisco, has been spearheading this drive. Its CEO, Tan Le, is a Vietnamese woman, raised in Australia, before immigrating to the United States. Here, author Joseph Farrell touches upon this era of mind manipulation. He forecast many of the issues at stake in his book Microcosm and Medium, published in 2018.
On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear the case Murthy v. Missouri (formerly Missouri v. Biden), which could decide the fate of the federal government’s massive campaign to force social media companies into censoring Americans.
“It’s the most important free speech case in the country,” Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-MO) tells Glenn Beck. Sen. Schmitt, who filed the case while he was Attorney General of Missouri, describes the “Orwellian” things this lawsuit has uncovered: “The full power of the federal government was being used to silence Americans.”
But will this be enough to stop our power-out-of-control government?