First rule in politics: Never trust a politician. Sure, they don’t trust each
other. The counselors assemble, make deals, and exchange tangible
assets. The voting public, however, does not realize a personal relationship
with their leading lights (yet fawn over them just the same). Nay, there is no
patent exchange. Rather, the electorate accepts dark hope and doles out blind
trust. Standing on the sidelines wearing skirts and cheering for a political
party leader while the administration their leader embodies enhances a magic
money mountain, spurs a migrant invasion, blesses gender and race ideologies.
Can a person’s intentions change according to the whims of remote stewards?
Yes, they can. However, on average, people believe they govern themselves when,
in fact, they’re governed, indeed, by those they fall over backwards for. Their
master spirits keep this rule close to the vest (no amount of news
gathering can compensate for individual reflection). For instance, the circle
of light crusades encompassed the mind in fear and prompted individuals to
perform rituals or acts they didn’t agree with. The key is the participant, or
subject, responds predictably to known stimuli introduced into their closed
environment by distant entities.
So, one’s mind—hacked. Thoughts and behaviors used to suit another’s
purposes, like one’s banking assets. Alas, you’ll never see the perpetrator
approaching or leaving. And, you don’t realize a tangible loss, thus, never
ascribe the circumstance to anybody but oneself. Genius!
