New World Order???
Date: October 02, 2003 07:57PM
Because they’re an elitist group, they believe they’re not accountable to the lower echelon for their actions. It’s difficult for us, “average folk,” to disseminate between the information and the disinformation with this secrecy mentality. Disinformation can be more damaging than no information. Take the “false memory debate” for example; throwing the baby out with the bath water is a common outcome of disinformation being thrown into the bat with information, contaminating it all. When we say, “oh it’s just the conspiracy theorists . . . it’s all hogwash,” we’re also encouraging others not to look past the propaganda that the elite is selling us.
Mind-control cults are a perfect way to keep a large group of the population in an altered state of submission. I do believe in parts of the “conspiracy theory.” I believe they are, and have been for many years, using our children as chattel to trade for more power. The falsely accused are part of the coverup and disinformation process. The decline in moral structure of our country and the epidemic abuse of children is setting the stage for following generations. Desensitization to these atrocities is visible in our society today; churches being infiltrated by pedophiles, destroying the faith factor, is but one tactic used to take away our freedom.
Kaiser Foundation Research Institute, Oakland, California, USA recently examined the associations between childhood sexual and physical abuse, chronic physical symptoms in adulthood, PTSD, and health care utilization (detailed below).
"For four groups of women: no abuse, physical abuse alone, combined sexual and physical abuse, and unclear about memories of abuse, we examined the associations between childhood sexual and physical abuse, chronic physical symptoms in adulthood, PTSD, and health care utilization. Of a randomly selected sample of 600 adult female members of a health maintenance organization, 86 (14%) chose to participate. Women with a history of physical and sexual abuse in childhood reported significantly more cardiovascular, immune, musculoskeletal, neurologic, and reproductive symptoms than those without this history. While the Sexual/Physical Abuse group had the most chronic physical symptoms, medical visits, emergency room visits, prescriptions, and severe PTSD, the Unclear Memory group consistently ranked second on these same measures--higher than either Controls or the Physical Abuse group. Findings underscore the importance of screening for trauma history among patients seen in medical clinics, and the importance for psychotherapists of attending to patients' physical as well as psychological symptoms of childhood trauma."
Farley M, Patsalides BM. (2001). Physical symptoms, posttraumatic stress disorder, and healthcare utilization of women with and without childhood physical and sexual abuse. Psychol Rep. 2001 Dec;89(3):595-606.