September 14, 2013

False Flags for Israel by Deanna Spingola © - 2013.09.11

    
      Winston Churchill, a Rothschild minion, referred to the Americans traveling on the ill-fated Lusitania as “live bait,” just one of his tactics for involving America in World War I, which started the flow of money from the pockets of US citizens upwards into the vaults of the ruling elite and their banking partners. They had successfully used the “live bait” tactic with the deaths of American sailors aboard the USS Maine. Banker-backed corporate moguls, via their political puppets then ordered the military to invade the resource-rich Philippines. Meanwhile, the media vilified and dehumanized the innocent Filipinos so that the invaders could rationalize killing them. Industrial interests then exploited cheap labor in the islands to extract resources while the government seized land to build military bases to manage the population and protect those resources. While under US military occupation, American doctors and drug companies used the Filipinos as guinea pigs for their experimental vaccines and drugs.

       To legitimize propaganda for World War I, Walter Lippmann persuaded President Wilson to create the official Committee on Public Information (CPI), which he did on April 13, 1917. Wilson appointed newspaper publisher, George Creel, as chairman. Creel commissioned the nation’s artists to produce paintings, posters and cartoons to promote the war. With the expert help of Edward Bernays, “the father of public relations” and Sigmund Freud’s nephew, the CPI manufactured the most atrocious hate propaganda against the Germans. Bernays manipulated public opinion through crowd psychology, now referred to as herd mentality, his uncle Sigmund’s specialty. Creel had a staff of persuasive wordsmiths – journalists, writers, intellectuals and many advertisers – who later admitted they were willing to lie, use emotional appeal, and enemy demonization to generate hate and fear to elicit support for the war. [1]  

Read more at Deanna's site

3 comments:

1776blues said...

What happened to the file? Just saw it this morning!

foon1e said...

Just click "Read More" at deannas site 1776. Link still works

1776blues said...

I was referring to the mp3, sorry should have specified what was missing.