I think the article below is a good example of how the Hegelian
dialectic is used by the Illuminati to create division and hatred in the world.
Let’s review the definition of Hegelian
dialectic. It is thesis vs. anti-thesis equals synthesis or simply put, create
a problem, create a reaction to the problem and then offer an Illuminati
solution. Such a process is not from God, God does not create division. The
Hegelian dialectic is satanic in nature. In the article below Godless communist
atheists used it as a key strategy. By the way, the effects of this
disinformation campaign are still with us today and have cost hundreds of
thousands of people their lives. Below
is the cornerstone of scripture, Ephesians 6:11-12 that governs this blog. We
are indeed engaged in cosmic spiritual warfare.
11. Put on the whole
armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.
12 For we wrestle not
against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against
the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high
places.
The article begins here. On a reporting trip to Gaza, Amman, and
Damascus in 1994, I made a habit of asking Hamas and Muslim Brotherhood leaders
whom I met with the following question: Did they think the Jews had a plan to
dominate the world? I’ll never forget the enthusiastic answer of a pediatrician
named Abdelaziz Rantissi, a Hamas leader, whom I met in his doctor’s office in
Gaza. “Yes, indeed,” he said. “I have a copy right here.” And he pulled down
from a shelf an Arabic-language copy of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.
It was a response I heard again and again.
What I didn’t know at
that time was that the KGB had supplied the books and was spreading
anti-Semitic and anti-Western filth as part of a plan to generate a widespread
Muslim revolt. Now, in his new bookDisinformation,
Lt. Gen. Ion Pacepa, once the deputy chief of the Romanian intelligence service
and one of the highest-ranking Soviet officials to defect to the West,
describes a KGB disinformation campaign focused on theProtocols.
Code-named Operation SIG—an acronym forSionistskiye
Gosudarstva, or Zionist governments—it was designed to seed anti-Semitic antagonism to the United
States throughout the Muslim world.
Pacepa claims that the
KGB and its subordinate services in the Eastern bloc spent more time on
disinformation—dezinformatsiya,
in Russian—than they did actually collecting intelligence. By carefully
planting false stories about prominent leaders, especially those they feared,
they sought to convince the public that the falsehoods were true.
And they succeeded again and again. “This remarkable book will change the way
you look at intelligence, foreign affairs, the press, and much else besides,”
former CIA Director R. James Woolsey writes in the introduction.
The science of dezinformatsiya is complex, and Pacepa learned its
rules from his Kremlin masters. Pacepa explains how Soviet leaders saw these
efforts.
“As that very clever master of deception Yuri Andropov once told me, if a good piece of
disinformation is repeated over and over, after a while it will take on a life
of its own and will—all by itself—generate a horde of unwitting but passionate
advocates.”
Disinformation expands on Operation SIG, one of
Andropov’s signature programs, which Pacepa described in
an essay for the National Review in 2006, during the Second Lebanon
War. “By 1972, Andropov’s
disinformation machinery was working around the clock to persuade the Islamic
world that Israel and the United States intended to transform the rest of the
world into a Zionist fiefdom,” Pacepa writes. He explains that Andropov
told him the goal was to “whip
up their illiterate, oppressed mobs to a fever pitch. Terrorism and violence against Israel and
America would flow naturally from the Muslims’ anti-Semitic fervor.”
The
Romanians, Pacepa claims, were tasked with infiltrating Libya, Iran, Lebanon,
and Syria—all countries where Romania was contributing expertise for
infrastructure projects—with agents trained in anti-Semitic dezinformatsiya and terrorist operations. Pacepa’s
intelligence service, known as the D.I.E., received an Arabic-language
translation of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
along with “documentary” material “proving that the United States was a Zionist
country whose aim was to transform the Islamic world into a Jewish fiefdom.”
By 1978, when Pacepa left Romania for good, the KGB had
dispatched 500 undercover agents to target Islamic countries, he writes. Most
of them were engineers, medical doctors, teachers, and art instructors. They
were part of a Soviet force Pacepa estimates at 4,000, whose job was to spread
anti-Semitic and anti-Western hate. The KGB, he writes, distributed several
hundred thousand copies of the Protocols in Arabic via these agents and others.
Disinformation
has become “the bubonic plague of our contemporary life,” Pacepa writes. Lenin used it to bring communism to
life. Hitler used it to “rationalize” the Holocaust. Khrushchev used it against
the pope to “widen the gap” between Christians and Jews. Andropov used it to
“turn the Islamic world against the United States and ignited the international
terrorism that threats us today.” More recently, the conspiracy-laden
Jew-hatred that permeates the Muslim world reared its head in the ugly rumors
that Mossad was behind the 9/11 attacks. The so-called proof? The canard that
4,000 Jews received cell-phone messages early that morning warning to stay away
from their jobs at the Twin Towers. That story was purveyed not only by Arabic
language media, but by the conspiracy theorists like
Thierry Meyssan, who wrote the French best-seller The
Big Lie.
As I unpacked that chain of disinformation in my
book Preachers of Hate, I pointed out that
Meyssan and his ilk conveniently ignored all the Jewish names in the public
list of the 9/11 victims.
Henry
Kissinger once playfully dismissed critics who accused him of paranoia. “Even a
paranoid can have enemies,” he quipped to Time.
Reading Disinformation will open one’s eyes to those enemies.
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