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There Is Nothing To Fear

FEAR is one of the controllers' favourite tools, and for good reason. It is an extremely powerful and efficient way for them to get what they need, which is of course the submission of the 99 per cent.



Fear works hand-in-glove with the worldwide disinformation industry, whose primary purpose is to feed us a constant stream of impending threat.

Take note that none of the enormous threats to humanity, such as AIDS, nuclear war, or catastrophic climate change, have ever actually come to pass.


But that's okay, it is only the threat that matters, and the media are faithfully reporting the universal truth that there is always something to be afraid of.

Because most people have traditionally trusted authority and government, they believe the dangers that are faithfully reported by the mainstream media and come to two quite rational conclusions.



First, that the world is clearly a dangerous place, and second, that we are only kept safe by being able to take cover under the protective wing of 'society'. Thank goodness for that!


But the idea of society, of course, is now nothing more than a cover for a universal system of globalist control. We are social creatures, and this collectivism simply abuses our natural tendency to trust and rely on our fellow tribe members.


The great thing about fear is that, used in the right (wrong) way, it can extinguish any risk of undesirable behaviours such as free thought and resistance.


Now, a moderate dose of concentrated, acute fear stimulates release of the hormone adrenaline, which can help us to take extreme measures to resolve an immediate threat. It is potent, invigorating, and empowering. A warrior uses adrenaline to achieve great things.


Chronic fear, however, really is the mind-killer.

Living under a constant cloud of intangible threat does not stimulate adrenaline but cortisol, the stress hormone. The constant influence of cortisol is profoundly bad for our health. It suppresses our ability to think rationally and drives us down into a state of mild depression where the idea of taking any kind of radical, positive action becomes unthinkable.


That is precisely the ideal state in which slaves should be kept. A terrified slave is still able to continue with its mundane tasks, but unlikely ever to rise up against its owners. It is why Niccolò Machiavelli, the original life-coach of tyrants, wrote: 'It is better to be feared than to be loved, if one cannot be both.'


In times gone by, the slaves' constant fear may have been of being flogged or having their food withheld. Today, it is not much different. So many of us fear being unable to put food on the table, as almost 40 per cent of UK households are living just one paycheck away from destitution.


What does constant fear do to a human being? It turns us into quivering cowards, which is exactly what the controllers rely on. Live under the illusion long enough and Stockholm Syndrome sets in, where the captive begins to experience feelings of compassion and even love for their captor.


And how the people have been groomed to relish in that feeling of being protected! Remember the muzzled hordes shuffling round the supermarkets with their carefully wiped-down trolley handles and obediently following the arrows?


Look under the bed. There is no monster!

So where is the fear? It's not anywhere out there, it's in here. It exists only in our own minds, and only when we allow ourselves to be spellbound by the evil ones. And the genius of their system of fear is that it is designed to keep us keeping ourselves imprisoned. Gandhi put it well: "There would be nothing to frighten you if you refused to be afraid."


The fear trap is a virtual open prison.

Long-term exposure to scary stories, this nightmare that never ends, creates invisible bars that prevent us from overstepping our allocated boundaries. We are our own prison guards, and some of us still revel in being awarded that duty!


What if we gave up the mass addiction to cowardice? Most people would be utterly lost with no idea of what to do.



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