Module 1: Neuro-Cognitive Warfare
- Soft Kill: Renunciation of Faith & Humanity
- The War Against Your Brain and Thinking
- Slicing and Dicing the Brain & Cognition
- Recognizing our Biases and Dealing with Them
Using the Two-Edged Sword to Combat the Techno Brain Hack Beast System
We are about to embark on the journey about the brain and cognitive warfare that we find ourselves in. The current Sit Rep report is that we are behind enemy lines. We are restrained in a electromagnetic prison. Our body and brain are being dismantled and in the lingo of the day, repurposed.
How do you secure the free "Get out of Jail Card"?
The Bible instructs us not to be ignorant of the devils devices. This series is going to unpackage the neuro-cognitive battle using the two-edged sword using the Word and the written logos [word] in article format. You may be surprise to learn that the enemy of our body and soul actively uses techno-logos (words) against us. Because images are worth a thousand words, I will use images so that you have the opportunity to see the overview and detail of the this battle.
I attended a military Transhumanism conference in 2018 a very applicable slide. In the name of "fear" and "catastrophe" the planetary managers are shepherding you to renounce your:
- Faith
- Humanity
- Consciousness
- Culture
- Lifestyle
- Behavior
What does it mean to renounce something?
Basically, renounce means to give up. This may include a verbal declaration, but as you will see in this Cognitive Warfare series, it may mean that you capitulate or to global demands because they have implemented a series of algorithmic barriers that cause you to forsake what was normal in your life previously. You decide, "I just can't resist any longer."
Every facet of our being and reality is being plumbed to be exploited and modified. This is all out Cognitive Warfare and you need to know what is arrayed against you. The purpose of this 7-part SitRep Cognitive Warfare series is to bring awareness so that you can make wise decisions for your future outside of influence operations.
Slicing and Dicing the Brain
Here is an infographic from the World Economic Forum (you must sign up-free-to view) in their now infamous spike protein-we are-going-to-change-the-world image with details on how they are slicing up your behavior. Remember, this graphic on Behavioral Science is only the tip of the ice berg. It is many levels deep:
Your 188 Brain Threats to the Globalists
Our next infographic comes to us from the Visual Capitalist with 188 Cognitive Traits you have that are a threat to globalism. In their eyes, humans are flawed, and therefore must be eradicated. This is why they kicked off (operationalized) their post-human agenda. Their ideology goes much deeper than that the original design of creation is defective, and must be replaced.
Each of is infused with nanoparticles. Solar storms, 4-5G activate the nanoparticles are rewiring our bodies and creating an Avatar or Digital replica of each of us.
Consider the deployment of the following:
Nano-robot swarms, Refers to both those unable to replicate (as in utility fog) and those able to replicate unconstrained in the natural environment. As in a grey goo and synthetic biology-nano-robots are able to replicate outside of a restricted factory environment do not form a necessary part of a purported productive nanotechnology.
Utility fog (also Foglets) is a collection of tiny nanobots that can replicate a physical structure. As such, it is a form of self-reconfiguring modular robotics.
Please review my article, Aerogel: Smoke from the Abyss
What is the purpose? I am beginning to gain clarity on this. My hypothesis right now is that it is to merge us, or shepherd us, into the Satanic Virtual Domain where the AC rules.
Cognitive Bias
Four problems that biases help us address:
- Information overload,
- Lack of meaning,
- The need to act fast,
- Figuring out what needs to be remembered for later.
Problem 1: Too much information
There is just too much information in the world, we have no choice but to filter most all of it out. Our brain uses a few simple tricks to pick out the bits of information that are most likely going to be useful in some way.
- We notice things that are already primed in memory or repeated often.
- Bizarre/funny/visually-striking/anthropomorphic things stick out more than non-bizarre/unfunny things.
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We notice when something has changed.
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We are drawn to details that confirm our own existing beliefs.
We notice flaws in others more easily than flaws in ourselves.
Yes, before you see this entire article as a list of quirks that compromise how other people think, realize that you are also subject to these biases.
Problem 2: Not enough meaning
The world is very confusing, and we end up only seeing a tiny sliver of it, but we need to make some sense of it in order to survive. Once the reduced stream of information comes in, we connect the dots, fill in the gaps with stuff we already think we know, and update our mental models of the world.
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We find stories and patterns even in sparse data. Since we only get a tiny sliver of the world’s information, and also filter out almost everything else, we never have the luxury of having the full story. This is how our brain reconstructs the world to feel complete inside our heads. Our adversary uses undercover stories and narratives these days to access the deep recesses of our brain.
- We fill in characteristics from stereotypes, generalities, and prior histories whenever there are new specific instances or gaps in information. When we have partial information about a specific thing that belongs to a group of things we are pretty familiar with, our brain has no problem filling in the gaps with best guesses or what other trusted sources provide.
- We imagine things and people we’re familiar with or fond of as better, than things and people we aren’t familiar with or particlarly fond of.
- We simplify probabilities and numbers to make them easier to think about. Our subconscious mind is terrible at math.
- We think we know what others are thinking.
- We project our current mindset and assumptions onto the past and future. Magnified also by the fact that we’re not very good at imagining how quickly or slowly things will happen or change over time.
Problem 3: Need to act fast
We’re constrained by time and information, and yet we can’t let that paralyze us. With every piece of new information, we need to do our best to assess our ability to affect the situation, apply it to decisions, simulate the future to predict what might happen next, and otherwise act on our new insight.
- In order to act, we need to be confident in our ability to make an impact and to feel like what we do is important. In reality, most of this confidence can be classified as overconfidence, but without it we might not act at all.
- In order to stay focused, we favor the immediate, relatable thing in front of us over the delayed and distant. We value stuff more in the present than in the future, and relate more to stories of specific individuals than anonymous individuals or groups.
- In order to get anything done, we’re motivated to complete things that we’ve already invested time and energy in.
- In order to avoid mistakes, we’re motivated to preserve our autonomy and status in a group, and to avoid irreversible decisions.
- We favor options that appear simple or that have more complete information over more complex, ambiguous options.
Brainstorming
The next infographic comes from thethinkingshop.org and is attempting people to engage with critical thinking. This is a wall poster for Brainstorming. The also have a 54 Creative Thinking cards including:
• Idea Generators
• Perspective Shifts
• Mental Models
• Provocations
• Group Brainstorming Tools
Thou Shalt Not Commit Logical Fallacies
Couched in a biblical looking format, from thethinkingshop.org comes a false Ten Commandments of sorts. We must be careful, even with seemingly "safe" concepts or sites, because they can worm their way into our perceptions, and impact our value system.
A logical fallacy is a flaw in reasoning. Logical fallacies are like tricks or illusions of thought, and they're often very sneakily used by politicians and the media to fool people. Don't be fooled! This website has been designed to help you identify and call out dodgy logic wherever it may raise its ugly, incoherent head.
Humans Make Mistakes
Another infographic comes from the Visual Capitalist on our cognitive bias and mental mistakes.
Of course, AI is also bias, but that is acceptable. One look at this website and you will see immediately that once again we are defective humans. .