Social Conditioning In The West

Maddox

Heritage
Protestant
For a number of years now, social conditioning has been going on in the US, and I suspect, other Western countries too.

One of the more obvious tactics of the enemy to bring about the destruction of the West is using humor to reduce men to bumbling idiots. This has slowly and methodically been introduced into our society via commercials, TV shows, and movies. They especially like to aim their sights at fathers to destroy the family structure. In fact, there seem to be more TV shows with the dynamic of strong wives/weak husbands/insolent children than ever before. And just like in years past, it's usually a comedy to normalize this dynamic and sell it to the public.

The wife rules the household, and the only authority figure in the house the children respect is their mother. The father is almost always a pathetic case who can barely care for himself, let alone his family. Even as far back as the 1980s, this was slowly introduced to American households in shows like Family Ties and The Cosby Show. In these shows, the wife was a strong woman who had a large say in family discussions while the husband frequently would act silly or throw his arms up in the air in despair as his wife overruled him on certain matters. And while there were only a few of these shows around back then, it would lay the groundwork for what came in the following decades.
 
Additionally, when the man is competent, he is almost never virtuous. Walter White is a good example of this, his self-confidence and competence rises with his increasing manipulation and ruthlessness. I enjoyed Breaking Bad, but it’s sad that men are either lovable fools or ruthless criminals.
 
The phrase “conspiracy theory” is a good example. Anyone who questions the “official” narrative is shamed, demoralizing people from speaking out,
 
For a number of years now, social conditioning has been going on in the US, and I suspect, other Western countries too.

One of the more obvious tactics of the enemy to bring about the destruction of the West is using humor to reduce men to bumbling idiots. This has slowly and methodically been introduced into our society via commercials, TV shows, and movies. They especially like to aim their sights at fathers to destroy the family structure. In fact, there seem to be more TV shows with the dynamic of strong wives/weak husbands/insolent children than ever before. And just like in years past, it's usually a comedy to normalize this dynamic and sell it to the public.

The wife rules the household, and the only authority figure in the house the children respect is their mother. The father is almost always a pathetic case who can barely care for himself, let alone his family. Even as far back as the 1980s, this was slowly introduced to American households in shows like Family Ties and The Cosby Show. In these shows, the wife was a strong woman who had a large say in family discussions while the husband frequently would act silly or throw his arms up in the air in despair as his wife overruled him on certain matters. And while there were only a few of these shows around back then, it would lay the groundwork for what came in the following decades.

Social conditioning has actually been going on since the end of the first world war in 1918.
That was the war that abolished 4 monarchies and 4 empires, (Russia, Germany, Austria and the Ottomans), and gave women the right to vote in many different countries, even among those who won the war such as the USA and the UK in the early 1920s.
 
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One of the more obvious tactics of the enemy to bring about the destruction of the West is using humor to reduce men to bumbling idiots. This has slowly and methodically been introduced into our society via commercials, TV shows, and movies.
In the age of mass media, humor, mockery, sarcasm and irony have been weaponized as corrosive agents to melt the bonds of traditional society. One of the earliest examples is Monty Python, who focused their laugh attacks on the Church in The Life of Brian (1979), which was explained in on air discussion with a Church of England Bishop, John Cleese and Michael Palin. Go to about 18 min. when the Bishop begins to explain. Enjoy the completely dishonest and delusional claims by Cleese and Palin that the film is neither about religion nor about Jesus (around the 33-34 min mark). 🤡🌎



Much of the conditioning in the UK was later followed in the USA, for example All in the Family was a copy of the British show Till Death Do Us Part, and the inane laughter that Americans and other Anglos exhibit constantly in their personal interactions was normalized by recorded laugh tracks into TV and probably reached its peak in the USA in the mid 1970's with Saturday Night Live where, instead of laugh tracks, they used a live audience of people barking like seals when instructed by illuminated signs out of view of the camera in order to cue the at home audience to also laugh at the insipid skits that made mockery of any important traditions in society, or politicians who appealed to those traditions.

For example, the absurdly arrogant actor known as Chevy Chase admitted later in interviews that their mockery was only against the right and never the left.



Later TV series like Friends normalized sarcasm, modeling completely obnoxious manners of speech as normal. Billions of viewing hours of this content, along with other factors, has had an effect on society so that masculine attitudes, which are not constantly full of emotional appeals, but tend to be more sober and direct, have become socially unacceptable and will get you on human resource's hit list if you are working around women, which means almost everywhere.

The origins for nearly all of this type of entertainment in the mass media era are Jewish, who are accustomed to life in a household dominated by the oppressive and over-emotional control of the matriarch, so that inane and absurd comc relief is a welcome respite from the devouring mother archetype they must rationalize through idiotic content like The Three Stooges, Woody Allen films, the late Rob Reiner's movies, Milton Burle, Borat, etc., which appears childish to non-Jews who have not been conditioned to consume and imitate it.

I'm not saying those Jews are not without some talent or did not produce any good content whatsoever, but that it was mostly harmful because it subtley, but sometimes overtly, initiated its audience into a demonic mindset of constant laughter and expectation to mockery.
 
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So many movies and TV shows I grew up watching as a kid had an absent father. I think it started in the late 70s and early 80s. For example, the original Freaky Friday movie from 1976 has both a mother and father (as does the book it is based on), but the latter has been a casualty of subsequent remakes. About a decade later movies like E.T. and The Karate Kid ditched dad. By the 90s, even animated movies like Toy Story and The Iron Giant were doing it (interestingly, Japanese animation like the Studio Ghibli films more often than not keeps both parents around).
 
I would say The Simpsons is a pretty good example as well of what RLoS described - though yes, I did (and still) think it was a pretty funny show. Reverend Lovejoy (the pastor of the church the Simpsons attended) was a consistent punching bag but when the show revealed Krusty's the Clown origin as the son of a rabbi, it was presented with some sense of solemnity as opposed to just being the butt of a joke.. There was some jokes about Judaism/Jews but there wasn't the same sort of mockery and irreverence.

In the last few years I've gone and watched a few older movies like Ben Hur and I noticed that media back then just didn't have the constant one-liners and zingers and overall silliness that we'll see in the typical Marvel slop movie.
 
I would say The Simpsons is a pretty good example as well of what RLoS described - though yes, I did (and still) think it was a pretty funny show. Reverend Lovejoy (the pastor of the church the Simpsons attended) was a consistent punching bag but when the show revealed Krusty's the Clown origin as the son of a rabbi, it was presented with some sense of solemnity as opposed to just being the butt of a joke.. There was some jokes about Judaism/Jews but there wasn't the same sort of mockery and irreverence.

In the last few years I've gone and watched a few older movies like Ben Hur and I noticed that media back then just didn't have the constant one-liners and zingers and overall silliness that we'll see in the typical Marvel slop movie.


When I was a little kid long before I understood anything about jews whenever I saw those krusty episodes glorifying him being a jew I still thought to myself "what is this crap". Not even anything about the jews as again I didn't understand that stuff yet, just the concept that this show that turns everything into a smart joke entirely stops all of that when it comes to this one thing.....it was nauseating. I wonder if others felt that way when they were kids, mind you my parents weren't indoctrinated and brainwashed with any jew special victim love to pass down to me like others so maybe I saw it differently due to that even if I didn't fully understand it.
 
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I didn't really pick up on those things since when I was a little kid I had never met a Jew at that time. When I got to high school I started meeting a lot of Jews and that's where I really picked up the double standards they had. They would mock and make light of so many aspects of American culture but don't you dare say anything about Jews. I also picked up on how much they promoted progressive liberal ideals for everyone but then within their own group they ended up acting like the stereotypical hick Americans that they would mock.
 
I didn't really pick up on those things since when I was a little kid I had never met a Jew at that time. When I got to high school I started meeting a lot of Jews and that's where I really picked up the double standards they had. They would mock and make light of so many aspects of American culture but don't you dare say anything about Jews. I also picked up on how much they promoted progressive liberal ideals for everyone but then within their own group they ended up acting like the stereotypical hick Americans that they would mock.


Funny I've very unfortunately seen the opposite from people that grew up around Jews. Myself I grew up in catholic leave it to beaver small suburbia, didn't grow up with any Jews only had experience with them later in life when I was old enough to explore. I have a younger relative who grew up in a more affluent area which is a bit of a Jew haven and he always fights me on the Jew stuff because he was friends with them, probably the last holdout I know that still has his head buried in the sand. Mind you he's about 15 years younger than me and has lived a very easy life, which is also probably his biggest contributing flaw as he's a pretty sharp and good kid otherwise he just never toughened up as he never had any hardship.
 
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