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The speaker discusses the tactics used by industries to spread disinformation when scientific findings go against their interests. They mention examples from various industries, such as coal, gas, energy, agriculture, and pharmaceuticals. The speaker believes that the pharmaceutical industry is the most skilled and devastating practitioner of these tactics. They describe tactics like "the blitz," where doctors and scientists who support inconvenient science are harassed. The speaker shares their personal experience of being targeted by the pharmaceutical industry and the censorship they faced on platforms like YouTube. They express their commitment to documenting and exposing these tactics in a book.

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In this session, the speaker discusses how disinformation is not just about lies, but also about distorting and manipulating the truth. They introduce the 4 D's model: dismiss, distort, distract, and dismay. The audience is given cards to identify these tactics in quotes from different organizations. They discuss examples of dismiss, distort, and distract, and someone adds a fifth D, divide. The session focuses on the various ways people twist stories and attack those who present uncomfortable evidence.

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The way to win is to flood a country's public square with raw sewage. Raise enough questions, spread enough dirt, and plant enough conspiracy theories so that citizens no longer know what to believe. Once people lose trust in their leaders, the mainstream media, political institutions, each other, and the possibility of truth, the game is won.

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The speaker states that the "Russian story" would be called a covert influence campaign if they were doing it. The speaker also claims they would be the last to say they've never tried a covert influence campaign.

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Members and front organizations aim to discredit critics by labeling them as fascist or Nazi. By associating opponents with negative terms repeatedly, it becomes accepted as truth. The conspirators manipulate the American public to ignore warnings by ridiculing patriots as extremists, racists, and fearmongers, paving the way for mob violence. Translation: The group discredits critics by calling them fascist or Nazi, making the public believe it. They also ridicule patriots to silence warnings and incite mob violence.

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We demonize and then use the wrap up smear tactic in politics. This involves smearing someone with falsehoods, getting it reported in the press, and then using that as validation. It's a tactic that is self-evident.

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The speaker discusses a tactic called the "wrap up smear" in politics. This tactic involves smearing someone with false information, then publicizing it and using the press to validate the smear. It is a diversionary tactic used to demonize individuals or groups. The speaker believes this tactic is self-evident and worth considering.

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The speaker recalls how, in the Mossad, they dealt with a problem in the United States who was speaking out against Israel—specifically, a person who claimed Israel was bombing Lebanon with cluster bombs. They referred to this critic as “Pete McAfee,” and they also called him “Pete the cockroach” because he was noisy and hard to get rid of. The tactic described involved contacting a station in New York or Washington and telling the people at Bneighbred to label him. A campaign would then start, and before long, the critic would be labeled an anti-Semite, a stain that “you cannot wash.” The speaker then says it shames him as a Jew to tell you that, but that’s the fact, and those perpetrating it don’t really understand what they’re doing because they’re losing their own liberty.

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The session discusses the use of misinformation tactics, including dismiss, distort, distract, and dismay. Participants analyze quotes to identify these tactics. Trump is cited as a prime example of spreading disinformation. The group also introduces a fifth tactic, divide, to the discussion. The audience actively engages in identifying these tactics throughout the session.

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The speaker discusses a strategy to manipulate public opinion by creating confusion and mistrust. They mention flooding a country's public square with raw sewage, raising questions, spreading dirt, and promoting conspiracy theories. The goal is to make citizens lose trust in their leaders, the mainstream media, political institutions, and even each other. Once trust is lost, the game is won.

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Speaker 0 accuses someone of filming kids and lying about it being okay to show on the internet. Speaker 1 explains that making false accusations is a common tactic used to paint someone in a negative light. Translation: Speaker 0 accuses someone of filming children and lying about being allowed to share it online. Speaker 1 explains that making false accusations is a common strategy to portray someone negatively.

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In 1943, a directive was allegedly issued from party headquarters to communists in the U.S. It instructed them to label obstructionists as fascist, Nazi, or anti-Semitic after building them up, and to use anti-fascist organizations to discredit them. The directive stated that associating opponents with names that "already have a bad smell" would, after repetition, become fact in the public mind. The speaker claims this 1943 directive predicted what "the left does today." They add that in 1971, Saul Olensky wrote in "Rules for Radicals" that "he who controls the language controls the masses." The speaker concludes that this tactic is not new for the radical left, and it is "crazy" how much the 1943 directive resembles what is seen today in 2025.

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Information laundering occurs when lies are made to sound credible by being repeated in Congress or mainstream outlets. This hides the lie and makes the information's origins seem less atrocious. Examples include Rudy Giuliani's statements on Ukraine and TikTok influencers claiming COVID can cause pain. People should take note of information laundering and not support lies with their wallet, voice, or vote.

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The speaker discusses a tactic called the "wrap up smear" in politics. This tactic involves demonizing someone by spreading falsehoods about them. The goal is to then use these false claims to validate the smear by pointing to media reports. This tactic is referred to as the "wrap up smear" because it involves merchandising the press's report on the smear. The speaker emphasizes that this tactic is a diversionary and self-fulfilling problem in politics.

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Information laundering involves spreading lies in a sophisticated way, making them seem less harmful by presenting them in a respectable manner. This tactic is used to conceal the true origins of misinformation. The show jokingly reveals that the events discussed are not real, but the issue of misinformation is serious, especially when it involves individuals with prestigious academic credentials. The academic system that supports the elite in America is criticized as being a farce.

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The "wrap-up smear" is a tactic where someone is smeared with falsehoods, and then that smear is reported in the press. This press coverage then validates the original smear, allowing it to be further merchandised. So, we create a smear and get the press to report on it, then we use those reports to reinforce the smear's credibility. It becomes self-fulfilling.

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After campaign work, corporations hire people to implement a playbook. The playbook begins with broad attacks questioning facts and claims of lying. If that doesn't work, they move to character assassination, digging up negative aspects of the target's past and leaking them to the press to cause embarrassment, hoping the target will quit. If the target persists, the next step is to label them a liar. If that fails, they are labeled an antisemite and a racist. "Crazy," "kook," "crank," or "nut job" are also used as a nuclear option to make everything the target says suspect. Examples of this tactic were shown in New York Magazine (1995, 2023), Vanity Fair (2006, 2023), and Rolling Stone (1992, 2023).

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The speaker discusses a tactic called the "wrap up smear" in politics. This tactic involves demonizing someone with false information, then using the press to validate the smear by reporting it. The speaker refers to this as merchandise, where they use the press's report on the smear to further promote it. They emphasize that this tactic is a diversionary and self-fulfilling problem in politics.

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In 1943, the following directive was issued from party headquarters to all communists in The United States. It read: When certain obstructionists become too irritating, label them after suitable buildups as fascist or Nazi or anti Semitic and use the prestige of anti fascist intolerance organizations to discredit them. In the public mind, constantly associate those who oppose us with those names which already have a bad smell. The association will, after enough repetition, become fact in the public mind.

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The speaker describes a deliberate strategy to corrode public trust by raising questions, spreading dirt, and planting conspiracy theories, thereby causing citizens to doubt the credibility of leaders, mainstream media, political institutions, and even each other and the concept of truth. The aim is to overwhelm citizens with suspicion until a sense of shared reality dissolves, enabling whoever orchestrates the tactic to prevail. A country's public square with enough raw sewage. You just have to raise enough questions, spread enough dirt, plant enough conspiracy theorizing that citizens no longer know what to believe. Once they lose trust in their leaders, the mainstream media, in political institutions, in each other, in the possibility of truth. The game's won. This is presented as a win for the manipulators.

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Information laundering occurs when lies are made to sound credible by being stated in Congress or on mainstream media. This makes the information's origins seem less atrocious. Rudy Giuliani sharing bad intents on Ukraine and TikTok influencers claiming COVID can cause pain are examples of information laundering. People should take note of this and not support these lies with their wallet, voice, or vote.

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To brainwash people, wrap a dark agenda in a trendy cause to manipulate the masses. By framing good people as bad through media manipulation, real debate on societal progression is hindered. This tactic keeps us stuck in easily swayed trends, preventing meaningful discussions on moving forward.

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Information laundering occurs when lies are made to sound credible by being stated in Congress or a mainstream outlet. Examples of information laundering include Rudy Giuliani sharing bad intel from Ukraine and TikTok influencers claiming COVID can cause pain. Disinformation should not be supported with wallets, voices, or votes.

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If an opinion requires people to be silenced, it's a psyop. When people are silenced or publicly shamed for sharing basic information, not outlandish claims, it's a psyop, no matter what. Public shaming is a key component. Look at the Harvard and Stanford doctors who were removed from the internet for disagreeing. The Great Barrington Declaration is another example; people who disagreed with the government's approach were silenced and treated as fringe, not respected physicians. Even crazier, these strategies of silencing dissenters were openly discussed in emails. The government contacted Twitter to remove people. Mark Zuckerberg even spoke about the FBI contacting Facebook. Hopefully, people have learned from the past four years and recognize this behavior.

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The speaker claims the CIA popularized the term "conspiracy theorist" to discredit those questioning the JFK assassination. A leaked 1970s document, "Countering Criticisms of the Warren Report," allegedly detailed tactics to discredit truth speakers, including portraying them as obsessed conspiracists or linking them to communist propaganda. The speaker asserts these tactics are still used today, labeling people "foreign propagandists" and "conspiracy theorists" to discredit them. Negative labels like "racist," "xenophobic," and "antisemitic" are used to discourage association. The speaker says that "they" manufacture boogeymen and create caricatures, then associate people like Candace Owens and Ian Carroll with them to discredit them. The speaker concludes that these tactics were perfected after JFK's assassination and promotes Classicallearner.com, which helps parents teach their kids about information control, the history of fake news, the banking system, the corrupted food system, and morality.
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