It should be obvious to any human adult alive in 2023 that our world is adrift in a sea of lies. For one reason or another, We The Fringe were able to resist drowning in the torrents of Covid-1984 untruths spewing from lamestream media outlets since 2020.
Some of us got MSM savvy by living through the official narrative of 9/11. Others came from medical and scientific backgrounds and understood how science actually works. A great many people came to realize the lies only after following all the scamdemic protocols and still getting sick, or worse. For others yet, a basic grasp of the concept of human rights and freedoms was enough to sound an internal alarm that something was amiss.
With so many truth buoys in the plandemic ocean, it’s a wonder anyone on earth is still accepting the official narrative. Then again, Big Lies have historically been successful and many people have a short view of history.
The term “Big Lie” was coined by Adolf Hitler in his 1925 autobiographical manifesto Mein Kampf. Having observed that most people are only comfortable telling small lies, he imagined that others would be equally uncomfortable in perpetuating big ones. People, he reasoned, will tend to believe a big lie because “It would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously”.
While Hitler clearly had a firm grasp of human psychology, analysis of his “big lie” thesis tends to only address lies of an overt nature. Covert lies, on the other hand, are even more effective because they are so well hidden. How can you see a truth buoy if you don’t even know you’re surrounded by water?
Hitler’s rise to power was owed in no small part to his chief propagandist, Joseph Goebbels, who was largely responsible for creating a cult of personality around Hitler. Goebbels was an avid follower of the work of Edward Bernays, the nephew of Sigmund Freud who infused psychology into the sphere of American advertising and who literally wrote the book on propaganda.
As Bernays wrote in 1928:
The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society. Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country. We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, and our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of…. It is they who pull the wires that control the public mind.
~Edward Bernays Propaganda
In other words, control by central planning has nothing on control by central conditioning. As big as it was, Covid-1984 is not the biggest or even the most dangerous lie the world has ever seen.
The biggest lie gained its girth because it has metastasized largely undetected, and this is not by accident. A bit like the way a fish doesn’t understand that it lives in water, it’s very helpful for the social engineers to have this lie so firmly entrenched in the human psyche that few people can see it, let alone question it.
Embedded in the epistemological position known as solipsism, this biggest lie is the most fundamental, prevalent ideology in the western world today and most people have no idea what it means.
In its extreme form, solipsism is the philosophical ideology that one’s own mind is all that can be sure to exist. Its basic tenets are threefold:
1. Everything is perception. Since perception ends at the moment of death, everything amounts to a fleeting time between when we’re born and when we die. Since nothing exists outside of our perceptions, there is no such thing as objective reality.
2. Even if something did exist, nothing can really be known about it.
3. Even if something could come to be known about it, there is no way to communicate this knowledge to another living being.
In sum, solipsism boils down to the underlying belief that there are no such things as truth or knowledge, and even if there were, it wouldn’t matter.
While generally considered by philosophers to be reductio ad absurdum to the problem of explaining human knowledge of the external world, expressions of this ideology nevertheless permeate our society. For example, the proliferation of the phrase “my truth” to describe one’s experiences. Probably originating in a think tank like Tavistock, “my truth” was widely adopted by the “New Age” movement before moving on to fester in society at large.
Calvin Klein used it in their 2019 advertising campaign, which featured a roster of young, A-list celebrities. As an aside, it’s interesting to note that marketers always try to incorporate in their messaging something they know that their audience wants but does not already have. Under the guise of hawking underwear, Calvin Klein helped to re-brand “truth” as a subjective experience.
Obviously, we all have different perceptions, experiences, and opinions. Even people who use the truncated “my truth”, if they stop to think about what they’re saying, would probably agree that what they actually mean is “my perception of the truth” or “my belief about the truth”. But language reaches beyond what we can consciously grasp. Leaving out all the words except “my” and “truth” changes the way people relate to the concept of Truth at a subconscious level.
The fact that speech like “my truth” goes largely unchallenged by society indicates that we are, on the whole, accepting the notion that one’s perceptions are equivalent to reality. Since everyone’s perceptions are different, this is another way of saying that we accept that there is no such thing as objective Truth.
Moreover, even if Truth does exist, it’s not a thing of much importance in our society. As a simple experiment, try asking a random group of people what the most important thing in life is to them. Odds are they’ll say it’s “Family/Relationships”, “Money/Career”, and “Health”, but few if any will tell you it is Truth. This is not to suggest that other things don’t have their place, but merely to point out that objective Truth is a concept all but redacted from our cultural imagination.
The notion that there is no such thing as Truth is the biggest lie this world has ever seen. It was inserted into society by social engineers, who know very well that Truth exists, in order to steer populations away from it and into the arms of relativism where they can be easily manipulated.
We The Fringe, on our better days during the scamdemic, shared many a giggle over masks being required in classrooms but not at restaurant tables, and “essential” retail outlets like pharmacies restricting purchases of “non-essential” items (like socks). For a time, one needed proof of poison injection to buy liquor in Québec but not to work at the liquor store, while in Ontario you could shop at the LCBO but not work there.
The social engineers are now laughing hysterically at everyone who’s still falling for the Covid-1984 psy-op, and are also working 24/7 to make sure the rest of us don’t start waking up to their more insidious matrixes of control.
Objective, moral Truth is self-existing. Like the law of gravity, it doesn’t care how we feel about it, whether or not we believe in it, or even if we exist. It’s just there. If we don’t align ourselves with it, we suffer.
In order to align ourselves with the Truth, we have to care about it enough to find out what it actually is. Because of all the social conditioning we’ve been exposed to, it often involves letting go of previously held beliefs. That’s scary, so hardly anybody wants to do it.
Yet the fact remains that if we don’t look after our own consciousness, somebody else will. The good news is that we don’t have to do it alone.
I feel like I deserve some credit for the inspiration of this article, 😉.