128

America Is a Prison Disguised as Paradise

John & Nisha Whitehead

If all that Americans want is security, they can go to prison. They’ll have enough to eat, a bed and a roof over their heads. But if an American wants to preserve his dignity and his equality as a human being, he must not bow his neck to any dictatorial government.”
President Dwight D. Eisenhower

The government wants us to bow down to its dictates. It wants us to buy into the fantasy that we are living the dream, when in fact, we are trapped in an endless nightmare of servitude and oppression.

Indeed, with every passing day, life in the American Police State increasingly resembles life in the dystopian television series The Prisoner.

First broadcast 55 years ago in the U.S., The Prisonerdescribed as “James Bond meets George Orwell filtered through Franz Kafka”—confronted societal themes that are still relevant today: the rise of a police state, the loss of freedom, round-the-clock surveillance, the corruption of government, totalitarianism, weaponization, group think, mass marketing, and the tendency of human beings to meekly accept their lot in life as prisoners in a prison of their own making.

Perhaps the best visual debate ever on individuality and freedom, The Prisoner centers around a British secret agent who abruptly resigns only to find himself imprisoned in a virtual prison disguised as a seaside paradise with parks and green fields, recreational activities and even a butler.

While luxurious, the Village’s inhabitants have no true freedom, they cannot leave the Village, they are under constant surveillance, all of their movements tracked by militarized drones, and stripped of their individuality so that they are identified only by numbers.

“I am not a number. I am a free man,” is the mantra chanted in each episode of The Prisoner, which was largely written and directed by Patrick McGoohan, who also played the title role of Number Six, the imprisoned government agent.

Throughout the series, Number Six is subjected to interrogation tactics, torture, hallucinogenic drugs, identity theft, mind control, dream manipulation, and various forms of social indoctrination and physical coercion in order to “persuade” him to comply, give up, give in and subjugate himself to the will of the powers-that-be.

Number Six refuses to comply.

In every episode, Number Six resists the Village’s indoctrination methods, struggles to maintain his own identity, and attempts to escape his captors. “I will not make any deals with you,” he pointedly remarks to Number Two, the Village administrator a.k.a. prison warden. “I’ve resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.”

Yet no matter how far Number Six manages to get in his efforts to escape, it’s never far enough.

Watched by surveillance cameras and other devices, Number Six’s attempts to escape are continuously thwarted by ominous white balloon-like spheres known as “rovers.”

Still, he refuses to give up.

“Unlike me,” he says to his fellow prisoners, “many of you have accepted the situation of your imprisonment, and will die here like rotten cabbages.”

Number Six’s escapes become a surreal exercise in futility, each episode an unfunny, unsettling Groundhog’s Day that builds to the same frustrating denouement: there is no escape.

As journalist Scott Thill concludes for Wired:

Rebellion always comes at a price. During the acclaimed run of The Prisoner, Number Six is tortured, battered and even body-snatched: In the episode ‘Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darling,’ his mind is transplanted to another man’s body. Number Six repeatedly escapes The Village only to be returned to it in the end, trapped like an animal, overcome by a restless energy he cannot expend, and betrayed by nearly everyone around him.”

The series is a chilling lesson about how difficult it is to gain one’s freedom in a society in which prison walls are disguised within the seemingly benevolent trappings of technological and scientific progress, national security and the need to guard against terrorists, pandemics, civil unrest, etc.

As Thill noted, The Prisoner was an allegory of the individual, aiming to find peace and freedom in a dystopia masquerading as a utopia.”

The Prisoner’s Village is also an apt allegory for the American Police State, which is rapidly transitioning into a full-fledged Surveillance State: it gives the illusion of freedom while functioning all the while like a prison: controlled, watchful, inflexible, punitive, deadly and inescapable.

The American Surveillance State, much like The Prisoner’s Village, is a metaphorical panopticon, a circular prison in which the inmates are monitored by a single watchman situated in a central tower. Because the inmates cannot see the watchman, they are unable to tell whether or not they are being watched at any given time and must proceed under the assumption that they are always being watched.

Eighteenth century social theorist Jeremy Bentham envisioned the panopticon prison to be a cheaper and more effective means of “obtaining power of mind over mind, in a quantity hitherto without example.”

Bentham’s panopticon, in which the prisoners are used as a source of cheap, menial labor, has become a model for the modern surveillance state in which the populace is constantly being watched, controlled and managed by the powers-that-be while funding its existence.

Nowhere to run and nowhere to hide: this is the mantra of the architects of the Surveillance State and their corporate collaborators.

Government eyes are watching you.

They see your every move: what you read, how much you spend, where you go, with whom you interact, when you wake up in the morning, what you’re watching on television and reading on the internet.

Every move you make is being monitored, mined for data, crunched, and tabulated in order to amass a profile of who you are, what makes you tick, and how best to control you when and if it becomes necessary to bring you in line.

When the government sees all and knows all and has an abundance of laws to render even the most seemingly upstanding citizen a criminal and lawbreaker, then the old adage that you’ve got nothing to worry about if you’ve got nothing to hide no longer applies.

Apart from the obvious dangers posed by a government that feels justified and empowered to spy on its people and use its ever-expanding arsenal of weapons and technology to monitor and control them, we’re approaching a time in which we will be forced to choose between bowing down in obedience to the dictates of the government—i.e., the law, or whatever a government official deems the law to be—and maintaining our individuality, integrity and independence.

When people talk about privacy, they mistakenly assume it protects only that which is hidden behind a wall or under one’s clothing. The courts have fostered this misunderstanding with their constantly shifting delineation of what constitutes an “expectation of privacy.” And technology has furthered muddied the waters.

However, privacy is so much more than what you do or say behind locked doors. It is a way of living one’s life firm in the belief that you are the master of your life, and barring any immediate danger to another person (which is far different from the carefully crafted threats to national security the government uses to justify its actions), it’s no one’s business what you read, what you say, where you go, whom you spend your time with, and how you spend your money.

Unfortunately, George Orwell’s 1984—where “you had to live—did live, from habit that became instinct—in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized”—has now become our reality.

We now find ourselves in the unenviable position of being monitored, managed, corralled and controlled by technologies that answer to government and corporate rulers.

Consider that on any given day, the average American going about his daily business will be monitored, surveilled, spied on and tracked in more than 20 different ways, by both government and corporate eyes and ears.

A byproduct of this new age in which we live, whether you’re walking through a store, driving your car, checking email, or talking to friends and family on the phone, you can be sure that some government agency is listening in and tracking your behavior.

This doesn’t even begin to touch on the corporate trackers that monitor your purchases, web browsing, Facebook posts and other activities taking place in the cyber sphere.

Stingray devices mounted on police cars to warrantlessly track cell phones, Doppler radar devices that can detect human breathing and movement within in a home, license plate readers that can record up to 1800 license plates per minutesidewalk and “public space” cameras coupled with facial recognition and behavior-sensing technology that lay the groundwork for police “pre-crime” programspolice body cameras that turn police officers into roving surveillance cameras, the internet of things: all of these technologies (and more) add up to a society in which there’s little room for indiscretions, imperfections, or acts of independence—especially not when the government can listen in on your phone calls, read your emails, monitor your driving habits, track your movements, scrutinize your purchases and peer through the walls of your home.

As French philosopher Michel Foucault concluded in his 1975 book Discipline and Punish, “Visibility is a trap.”

This is the electronic concentration camp—the panopticon prison—the Village—in which we are now caged.

It is a prison from which there will be no escape. Certainly not if the government and its corporate allies have anything to say about it.

As Glenn Greenwald notes:

“The way things are supposed to work is that we’re supposed to know virtually everything about what [government officials] do: that’s why they’re called public servants. They’re supposed to know virtually nothing about what we do: that’s why we’re called private individuals. This dynamic – the hallmark of a healthy and free society – has been radically reversed. Now, they know everything about what we do, and are constantly building systems to know more. Meanwhile, we know less and less about what they do, as they build walls of secrecy behind which they function. That’s the imbalance that needs to come to an end. No democracy can be healthy and functional if the most consequential acts of those who wield political power are completely unknown to those to whom they are supposed to be accountable.”

None of this will change, no matter which party controls Congress or the White House, because despite all of the work being done to help us buy into the fantasy that things will change if we just elect the right candidate, we’ll still be prisoners of the Village.

So how do you escape? For starters, resist the urge to conform to a group mind and the tyranny of mob-think as controlled by the Deep State.

Think for yourself. Be an individual.

As McGoohan commented in 1968, “At this moment individuals are being drained of their personalities and being brainwashed into slaves… As long as people feel something, that’s the great thing. It’s when they are walking around not thinking and not feeling, that’s tough. When you get a mob like that, you can turn them into the sort of gang that Hitler had.”

You want to be free? Remove the blindfold that blinds you to the Deep State’s con game, stop doping yourself with government propaganda, and break free of the political chokehold that has got you marching in lockstep with tyrants and dictators.

As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People and in its fictional counterpart The Erik Blair Diaries, until you come to terms with the fact that the government is the problem (no matter which party dominates), you’ll never stop being prisoners.

Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead is founder and president of The Rutherford Institute. His book Battlefield America: The War on the American People (SelectBooks, 2015) is available online at www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be contacted at [email protected]

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Threedawgs
Threedawgs
Mar 8, 2023 10:05 AM

Americans are getting the totalitarian oppression they allow, and worship, and deserve. At least the mass majority of them. I can’t wait till they start to blatantly euthanize them from their F.E.E.M.A.C Camp cells, or Dog Houses in Walmart parking lots.

TomUSA
TomUSA
Mar 7, 2023 3:13 PM

Freedom belongs to the Spirit. How much of it we have is proportional to the degree to which we have thus far become it; pure, perfect, eternal and Bliss itself.

We are the authors of our enslavement, likewise of our liberation which is obtained by seeking and surrendering to Truth. It is a decision we all can, should and really must now make.

niko
niko
Mar 5, 2023 7:01 AM

The world is not sliding, but galloping into a new transnational dystopia. This development has not been properly recognized outside of national security circles. It has been hidden by secrecy, complexity and scale. The internet, our greatest tool of emancipation, has been transformed into the most dangerous facilitator of totalitarianism we have ever seen. The internet is a threat to human civilization. These transformations have come about silently, because those who know what is going on work in the global surveillance industry and have no incentives to speak out. Left to its own trajectory, within a few years, global civilization will be a postmodern surveillance dystopia, from which escape for all but the most skilled individuals will be impossible. In fact, we may already be there. While many writers have considered what the internet means for global civilization, they are wrong. They are wrong because they do not have the… Read more »

Paul Vonharnish
Paul Vonharnish
Mar 5, 2023 3:01 PM
Reply to  niko

Excellent quote from Julian Assange. The internet could have been one of the greatest teaching tools in all educational history. Instead, the internet has become a morbid selfie. An incessant self-aggrandizing record of mass hypnosis and intellectual failure.

Threedawgs
Threedawgs
Mar 8, 2023 10:20 AM

Absolutly not. The internet is a neutral giant library-plus. It’s humanity’s use or mis-use of it that may or may not be the problem. In many many cases the internet has and is used to open people’s knowledge of the world system’s tyranny. Anybody blaming or denegrading a neutral brilliant effective tool such as the internet for the existing world tyranny is probably a provocateur.

Paul Vonharnish
Paul Vonharnish
Mar 8, 2023 12:40 PM
Reply to  Threedawgs

Hello Threedawgs: It is the reliance on the internet that has become the problem. It’s gotten to the point wherein, if a question is asked of someone, they immediately reach for their cell phone to get an answer. There’s no thought process involved, and almost no retention of information. This reliance is a known quantity to conglomerates such as Google and other search engine “assistants”…

It’s not the tool per se. It’s the laziness and gullibility of the users.

I once taught myself graduate level electronics engineering by utilizing technical libraries at engineering schools, and the (once available) public library system. Yes it was a lot of footwork… Libraries have become romper rooms for children, and contain almost no technical literature or reliable reference books whatsoever. This is by design.

The educational system has been obsoleted by the convenience of idiocy…

Threedawgs
Threedawgs
Mar 8, 2023 6:16 PM

Reliance on knowledge is not a negative concept. It’s much better to rely on researched criteria, with information and expert opinions and facts from all sides, like what one can obtain from the internet as a resdarch tool, to aid in better formulating one’s thoughts on a scenario, than rely on the false propaganda doled out by totalitarian entities and their mainstream media propaganda ministry that have goals of keeping people falsely ‘believing’ and led so as to control, oppress, impoverish, and murder them, and so the few can own, control everything and everybody.

Threedawgs
Threedawgs
Mar 8, 2023 10:14 AM
Reply to  niko

The internet is not a threat in any way shape or form. It is like saying a library is a threat to civilization. What is the most profound threat to civilization, if you can call humanity civilized, is the monolithic-Global-System that controls over 95% of the world’s governments, and uses these governments as it’s enforcement mechanism(s) to sustain, launch, and enforce it’s anti-humanity and human-devastation agendas. And the mass majority of the people that allow this tyranny on super-steroids.

Threedawgs
Threedawgs
Mar 8, 2023 10:23 AM
Reply to  niko

If you live under totalitarian tyranny–you’ve met the enemy, and you’re meeting it everyday and in everyway.

tonyopmoc
tonyopmoc
Mar 5, 2023 3:42 AM

My Dad was born in 1905 Yarm – Stockton-on-Tees. The evidence is very strong that we had a Sailing Boat – and when chucked us out of North Western France – cos we too gobby. Whilst French, we did not like the French any more

We were Protestants – we didn’t like the French any more cos they were trying to kill us. Some of my family and friends have suggested we we were Huguenots
All I know, down to how the wind blows – or I might have been born in the USA…

We had a boat load of Fresh French Fish

And our boat was now on the East Coast of North Yorkshire…

Poisson frais – Répéter Poisson frais du Yorkshire

comment image

We are English now

Jax
Jax
Mar 5, 2023 2:07 AM

america, like all countries, is a human farm. the people that own you farm humans. slavery will never end. the best slaves never even realize they are slaves. they live their whole life serving as a slave, they have children and raise them to be slaves too. do you know why farmers love raising chickens so much, because they basically police themselves. much like a modern american slave. you cannot vote you way out of this, you cannot protest your way our of this. all these articles accomplish nothing, like screaming into the sand. like shaking your fist at the sky. seek the Lord Jesus Christ, the only one who can free you from your chains.

Howard
Howard
Mar 5, 2023 4:41 PM
Reply to  Jax

“Render unto Caesar….” Surely the most ironic words ever spoken, ever recorded. Perhaps Jesus didn’t realize the day would come when Caesar sought to conquer people’s very souls, not just their bodies.

eman
eman
Mar 5, 2023 5:37 PM
Reply to  Jax

The nation state is a bounded territory, a crucible, if you will, “where-in” culture, history, language, race, economic activity, technology etc. are ground into the minds that make up the homogenous mass inside the crucible. There are ~256 different nation state .. in each the local Oligarchs homogenize the human minds caught in the crucible. The homogenation process is the same nearly everywhere, the resulting differences lay in the specification. The goal is to blend the minds of the crucible captured society into a “mental and socially homogenated state. So each society has a target social and mental state. ( result of the blending process ); the result is supposed to reflect in the product produced, the specifications given for each society. The idea is that humanity can be conquered by dividing it into hate groups. So the specification for each society in each nation state is different. Thus differentiation… Read more »

niko
niko
Mar 5, 2023 12:46 AM

In no small part by design, a crucial flaw of freedom, Amerikan style, has been its reduction to individualistic liberty of laissez-faire capitalism, liberal democracy of the (un)free market, in which the masses of us end up nothing more than atomized units of production for incorporation within collectivist norms of “inverted totalitarianism” (Sheldon Wolin), with (their) representative government running protection rackets for organized crimes against humanity. Historically, whatever we the people have enjoyed in terms of individual liberty has come at great cost of community-based political struggle approximating egalitarian class resistance to elite rule. In fact, the human condition of society as second nature means that our full self-actualization is reciprocal to justice for others. As covid coup demonstrated again, a central strategy of ruling ideology has been production of false binaries between individual and collective, individual liberty and public safety, eclipsing a cooperative rather than competitive ethic enabling “the… Read more »

Joe Van Steenbergen
Joe Van Steenbergen
Mar 5, 2023 12:22 AM

Let’s be clear; it’s not “government” that is trying to rule our lives. It is, rather, supra-national plutocratic corporations that now own and operate the ghost shells of illusory nation states. Soon that pretext will be done away with when the WHO takes over.

Howard
Howard
Mar 5, 2023 4:55 PM

Without nation states, the WHO and its global backers have no way to enforce their dictates. So nations will never be done away with.

There seems to be a prevailing attitude among people that only their own nation has a right to bash their brains in. (They’re rather set in their ways.)

kana
kana
Mar 4, 2023 11:36 PM

The so-called allies in corporate and political “spaces” are not socialists, not communists, nor anything like that, like many on the right believe them to be. They are the political disciples of the Wall St. titans of the early 20th century who funded the communist and left liberal organizations of that time. The new progressive identity based left of today is nothing more than tools of the upper-class corporate and political elites who are using them, confusing them, and ultimately abusing them. This can be seen most vividly in the attempt to prove their allyship to the black and brown “communities” by “reimagining” criminal justice and policing. In order to prove their allyship they have supported new anti-enforcement policies, new anti-bail policies, and new short-term sentencing policies. That along with the constant promotion of self-promoting ideologues and journalists who constantly claim that everything and everyone in America is anti-minority and… Read more »

turesankara
turesankara
Mar 4, 2023 11:30 PM

Emma Goldman:
The only difference is that you are hired slaves instead of black slaves.

Charles Bukowski:
Slavery was never abolished it was only extended to include all the colours.

Thoreau:
It is hard to have a Southern overseer. It is worse to have a Northern one. But worst of all when you are the slave driver of yourself.

Frederic Bastiat:
Slavery, protection, and monopoly, find defenders not only in those who profit by them, but in those who suffer by them.

Frederick Douglas:
Experience demonstrates that there may be a slavery of wages only a little less galling and crushing in its effects than chattel slavery, and that this slavery of wages must go down with the other.

Hemlockfen
Hemlockfen
Mar 4, 2023 5:47 PM

As a kid there was not much that I missed in the 60s. Weirdly, I have no memory of watching The Prisoner. Just finished watching Episode 1 (The Pilot?, I assume). Reminded me of the Twilight Zone TV show. Exceptional for that time period. The analogy with what is happening today fits. As a teen and young adult in the 70s I never once perceived any sort of dystopian movement that was threatening freedom. This show may have stirred me for a moment at that time but none of it would have been long lasting. A whole different ballgame today. The bullshit is so transparent. They are barely making an effort to conceal it and in many respects it is intentionally overt as though it is too late to stop it. And that scares me. The scariest part is that it has only taken a few decades to get from… Read more »

Joe
Joe
Mar 4, 2023 8:50 PM
Reply to  Hemlockfen

“As a teen and young adult in the 70s I never once perceived any sort of dystopian movement that was threatening freedom.”

You must have been slumbering then, because the world was already massively totalitarian at that time.

Hemlockfen
Hemlockfen
Mar 5, 2023 1:46 PM
Reply to  Joe

Never said it wasn’t a tumultuous time. There was still accountability. People committing crimes were punished. It was generally safe to move about most anywhere. In the daytime, anyway. Life was fun. Hard work was rewarded. Jobs were plentiful. People made life choices and found happiness no what they chose. They knew that whatever lot they fell into was their own doing. Family and friends were the center of life. Elders were respected. Stuff like that. The government bullshit wasn’t so deep that it superseded those basics. Now the government is trying to supplant the family. Maybe it was going on at some level then but it was barely noticeable because we were too busy living our lives. Today is it clear what they want. The elites have a goal and will do anything to achieve it and they are not keeping it a secret anymore. Back then they were… Read more »

Jos
Jos
Mar 5, 2023 9:44 PM
Reply to  Hemlockfen

Is it possible that the bullshit is more evident now because the people doing it are being brought down, very possibly by another group in the process of taking over? We aren’t usually supposed to see the strings being pulled, but this time it suits their purpose. It might be frying pan into the fire or, who knows, maybe there is a cavalry coming to help fight the cabal. I prefer that thought and in the end it might be better to believe in a good future because it may well be impossible to tell the difference for a long time to come.

Easton Mackay
Easton Mackay
Mar 5, 2023 2:48 PM
Reply to  Joe

Probably only very left leaning young people would have characterized those times as totalitarian and the ‘lived experience’ was not as oppressively totalitarian in those pre-internet, pre-politically correct, surveillance-free days as it is now.

Edwige
Edwige
Mar 4, 2023 4:59 PM

It always was – but enough of the inmates were in padded cells. Ripping the padding out from so many in so short a time is potentially the big mistake….

Paul Vonharnish
Paul Vonharnish
Mar 4, 2023 4:40 PM

The difference between Winston Smith (1984) Number Six (The Prisoner) and alternative persons who “claim” victim-hood as some kind of loyalty badge, is that they don’t own guns and are not trained in their proper use…

Where are all the security cameras manufactured? What corporate conglomerates distribute them? Where do their executive staff live? Where do our security state representatives and dreaded police come from? Where do they live?

Quit making yourselves propaganda targets and reverse the victim-hood

Kurt
Kurt
Mar 4, 2023 1:36 PM

There are dissenters: I don’t like the word dissenter. Or the concept of dissenting? Dissent? What does it imply? It implies that human beings are subject to a script imposed on them by “The people in the office where they run everything from” (Frank Zappa). And that those who diverge from the script are somehow aberrant. As if conforming to the script wasn’t the ultimate fucking aberration! Fuck dissenting. If you live your life the you way you want it simply because you’re yourself as opposed to being an underling to some fuckhead who designates himself as authority, you’re not dissenting. You simply have a life, as opposed to being a slave. There is nice line in one of the episodes of the New York Stories, the Life Lessons, where Lionel, a painter, says something like “you’re an artist because you have to do art, because you have no choice.”… Read more »

Levi Tate
Levi Tate
Mar 4, 2023 2:12 PM
Reply to  Kurt

“I don’t like the word dissenter.”

I have always described myself as “middle of the road” politically (oops, did I just step on one of your aversions?).

Then September 11th was foisted upon us
and the road changed. I didn’t change, the road has become unrecognizable.
Simply unrecognizable.

Now, in conversation, I am described as “radical”, or “Saddam supporter” or “Gaddafi supporter” or “Assad supporter” or “Putin supporter” or “Trump supporter” or “unpatriotic”
or “unscientific”.

I haven’t changed, the world moved beneath my feet.

Mr Y
Mr Y
Mar 4, 2023 4:54 PM
Reply to  Levi Tate

> I haven’t changed …

How do you know?

Levi Tate
Levi Tate
Mar 4, 2023 5:43 PM
Reply to  Mr Y

I ran a check sum algorithm

SeverelyRegarded
SeverelyRegarded
Mar 7, 2023 8:36 AM
Reply to  Kurt

Great clip, thanks for sharing

Koba
Koba
Mar 4, 2023 12:45 PM

Ever since the fake two year coughing incidents I’ve viewed all British homes and especially flats as mini prison cells. That we wilfully lock ourselves away in.

Howard
Howard
Mar 4, 2023 1:35 PM
Reply to  Koba

People have been locking themselves away in their flats for decades – from the moment they were told there were foreigners, or dark people, or some other scary set of humans, stalking their neighborhood.

By the time Covid came along, the lock up was second nature to them.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 5, 2023 7:05 AM
Reply to  Howard

If people do not fear the neighbourhood enough, the spooks can always rope in some suggestible youths to engage in street violence or looting. In US, this extends to mass shooting or attempted bombing.

Mucho
Mucho
Mar 4, 2023 12:10 PM

Massive story from Brendon O Connell allegedly involving Donald Trump, Russians and Israelis, the Kissinger network and a massive organised crime, drug dealing, fentanyl distributing, money laundering, corruption and crime network which has been uncovered in New Hampshire where they were running the airports, state police, DEA, FBI, and many key centres of power to ensure the smooth running of the operation. The guy who is whistleblowing on all of this – Mike Gill – opens the tape by stating that it is his belief that corruption is the most profitable industry in the US. This guy turned down $50 million which was offered to him (he has all paperwork to prove this – it was all done via contracts which he never signed but which were drawn up) to shut up about what he found out. It’s a tangled web, for sure. Spread the word. 177. Mike Gill, James… Read more »

Mucho
Mucho
Mar 4, 2023 4:16 PM
Reply to  Mucho

This article goes quite deep into this situation. This story is a snapshot of the way that crime cartels are running our countries, how they operate at the local level. You can be sure there are many New Hampshires all over the world.

Mucho
Mucho
Mar 4, 2023 4:18 PM
Reply to  Mucho

Joachim Hagopian, Mike Gill Turned Down $50 Million in Hush Money to Expose Criminal Cartel that Owns the World – James H. Fetzer (jameshfetzer.org) First few paragraphs: Ukraine is the International Deep State Cabal money launderer and that’s why in sheer desperation, the bloodline controllers are so willing to push humanity off the nuclear Armageddon cliff in order to protect themselves and their criminal interests from full public exposure and long overdue karmic punishment. The cabal’s criminal network obviously operates from the global top of the predatory food chain on down to the local state, county and municipal levels, which explains why the explosive scandal emerging out of the fifth smallest state in America – New Hampshire – is so telling and all-encompassing. Exposure of this diminutive northern drug cartel state bordering Quebec, Canada holds even more closer to home secrets than the Ukrainian “devil’s playground’s” rabbit holes. And because 2023 promises to be… Read more »

Mucho
Mucho
Mar 4, 2023 4:18 PM
Reply to  Mucho

As expected, the mainstream media portrays Mike Gill as an uncorked lunatic in his fight with “city hall,” but the death cult mafia establishment realized he was a threatening force to be reckoned with, attempting to murder him three times. The state of New Hampshire tied him up in courts with bogus lawsuits. Yet singlehandedly this undaunted warrior continued through his travails exposing the pervasively entrenched criminality atop our communities, states and nation, to the point that the system actually attempted to buy his silence with a $50 million hush fund offer in exchange for signing a legally binding nondisclosure agreement and future mafia protection. Mike Gill courageously brought all his exposed crimes to both the FBI, the DEA, DOJ and eventually even to the Trump camp in office. Mike painfully learned that organized crime is operating not only at the local state levels throughout our nation but at the national and… Read more »

Mucho
Mucho
Mar 4, 2023 4:42 PM
Reply to  Mucho

Click the link for the second half of the article as this ^^^ is not all of it.

paul
paul
Mar 4, 2023 6:09 PM
Reply to  Mucho

Hey, the Big Guy has to get his 10%.
And Hunter needs his coke and hookers.

Victor G.
Victor G.
Mar 4, 2023 9:01 AM

USAmericans deserve to be in prison in the hundreds of millions and maybe all of them.
They are either recidivist murderers or accessories to the crime(s). This criminal behavior has been going on non-stop for hundreds of years.

Joe
Joe
Mar 4, 2023 8:54 PM
Reply to  Victor G.

‘USAmericans’ live as slaves in a massively totalitarian system, just as does the rest of the global population. You are way off base.

Victor G.
Victor G.
Mar 5, 2023 8:40 AM
Reply to  Joe

The rest of the world’s population did not genocide 90% of the native inhabitants of their countries. Would you like to make that claim for the US of As?
Genocide is a crime, Joe, a very big crime. USAmericans deserve everything they have now and will receive in their dark future.
Luckily, whatever harms the US of As helps humanity.

Kurt
Kurt
Mar 4, 2023 8:43 AM

T

he answer is that we are our own wardens, of course.

Precisely. The prison is inside people’s heads, not outside around them. Sure, there is, figuratively speaking, the moat or barbed wire to catch the odd person who figures it out and manages to escape, and some even make it across, but it’s mostly in the fucking head.

Fuck, has nobody seen One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest …?

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 4, 2023 9:11 AM
Reply to  Kurt

Ken Kesey:

‘The job of the writer is to kiss no ass, no matter how big and holy and white and tempting and powerful.’

‘You can’t blame the President for the state of the country, it’s always the poets’ fault. You can’t expect politicians to come up with a vision, they don’t have it in them. Poets have to come up with the vision and they have to turn it on so it sparks and catches hold.’

‘It isn’t by getting out of the world that we become enlightened, but by getting into the world…by getting so tuned in that we can ride the waves of our existence and never get tossed because we become the
waves.‘

A wise man.

Kurt
Kurt
Mar 4, 2023 11:23 AM
Reply to  Johnny

Exactly.

That’s the task of the artist. To show people the way, to open up new avenues, to help them find the light. In an ongoing fashion.

The vast majority of today’s ‘artists’ are no such thing. They’re entertainers, makers of putrid kitsch, producers of garden gnomes wherewith they infest people’s heads, mercantile cocksuckers always willing to sell their soul, if they have one in the first place, for a few silver pieces.

ONE OF THE REASONS WHY THE WORLD IS FUCKED UP IS THE ABSENCE OF TRUE ART.

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 4, 2023 11:33 AM
Reply to  Kurt

I fear you are right Kurt.
There are dissenters:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=SAFv2NEE-_c

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=A-_HemCiFHs

But they are far and few between.

Kurt
Kurt
Mar 4, 2023 8:28 AM

I’m getting a bit tired of this incessant grumbling about how the government, the police, the TPTB’s, Fau-fucking-ci, Tru-fucking-do, Jabcin-fucking-da, all of them assholes are after us. They are, for sure. But the prison that matters is WITHIN PEOPLE’S HEADS. It’s the cage implanted in our minds by lifelong conditioning, (mis)eduction, stick-and-carrot coercion to conform, you name it. Despite the obvious tightening of the screws, there is still a lot of freedom. If you wanted to, you could live a life largely uninhibited by any government prison. But you choose not to. You choose to follow TPTB’s script for living your life, thus remaining within the cage they’ve built inside your head. I hate to tell you, but at the end of the day you have only yourself to blame. The cage door is wide open. In fact, there isn’t one. You just have to find the balls to step… Read more »

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 4, 2023 6:50 AM

Rumour has it that the some Mexican Folks are trying to raise enough money to finish the wall.
To keep the Gringos out.

Albert Anderson
Albert Anderson
Mar 4, 2023 5:00 AM

I admit, I hate Greenwald, ever since he took Pierre Omidyar’s money. When I think of controlled opposition, I think of him, the lefty Daily Kos darling to the righty Fox news tool, what a fake asshole. That’s the problem with the “alternative media”, it’s made up of humans. “This dynamic – the hallmark of a healthy and free society – has been radically reversed. Now, they know everything about what we do, and are constantly building systems to know more.” Just to say bullshit on that. Nothing has been “radically reversed”, that would assume we had a healthy and free society (or societies on this international blog), which we never have had relative to what I understand is understood at Off Guardian, i.e., the big picture. That’s controlled opposition bullshit right there. Like, things have changed, man! No things haven’t changed, it’s the same old shit, different day. Greenwald’s only… Read more »

Donnie
Donnie
Mar 4, 2023 12:55 PM

I’m sorry ,what’s exactly wrong with the “ Think for yourself. Be an individual.” ?

SeverelyRegarded
SeverelyRegarded
Mar 6, 2023 11:39 PM
Reply to  Donnie

Nothing wrong with that at all, in no way does it advocate for any illegal or prohibited actions. https://nltimes.nl/2023/03/06/hague-mayor-threatens-use-military-gear-keep-rival-climate-farmer-protests-check

STJOHNOFGRAFTON
STJOHNOFGRAFTON
Mar 4, 2023 4:52 AM

“I am not a number. I am a free man,” says Patrick McGoohan in “The Prisoner” TV series: https://youtu.be/WsVc5wuMHdI (first episode). For extra curricular entertainment eat an exotic, spicy seafood meal before bedtime to star in a re-run which amplifies your own paranoid repressions.

Clive Williams
Clive Williams
Mar 4, 2023 9:24 PM

Sorry, Its I am not a number I am free to the man. Be seeing you…
Xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx resigned.
Why
I am too., you are three..
You are Number SIX.
I am Number 2.
“I am Not”

A German
A German
Mar 4, 2023 4:47 AM

The only reason for the seemingly success of the robber barons is, that they were long ago successful in seducing the people and making them accomplices. Whatever crimes they perpetrated international, we ranted but never serously hindered and punished the mobsters. So they learnt, we agree, and often enough we profited.

Now it is the time to open ones eyes and to really regret. Insight and sincere regret is the only way to come free. And regret means: to understand and to recognize the own guilt. The understanding of the own accomplicity is the way to come free. To run away is never a solution.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 4, 2023 11:11 AM
Reply to  A German

The general approach of government serving trans-national wealth is
– Seduce the people using propaganda and baubles
– Trap them using debt and slowly increasing tyranny.

A German
A German
Mar 5, 2023 5:25 AM
Reply to  mgeo

It is hard to confess, but: nobody was forced to make debts, nobody was forced to take seemingly advantiges with seemingly no price, nobody was forced to be clever and do what every other did, just because the herd did it, nobody was forced to be clever and avoid disadvatages, nobody was forced to choose always the greatest comfort. Seduction bases on greed, and this is the art of nudging.

paul
paul
Mar 4, 2023 6:25 PM
Reply to  A German

The old style robber barons, Carnegie, Rockefeller, Ford, Vanderbilt, for all their faults, did at least produce things, and leave things behind them, despite all their undoubted s**tfuckery. Steel mills, oil refineries, car plants, railroads.

Today’s equivalent are just full blown spivs and shysters making billions from financial chicanery, or outright gangsterism, corruption and influence peddling, and contributing nothing whatsoever to society, People like Philip Green – take over Top Shop, Next etc., load it down with debt, pay yourself a “special dividend” of £1,500 million, , run the businesses into the ground and promptly bugger off. Or Abramovich, one day selling plastic toys on a market stall, next day the proud owner of half the oil wells in Russia – without previously having ever seen an oilfield.

The Nigerians are just rank amateurs when it comes to corruption.

A German
A German
Mar 5, 2023 5:32 AM
Reply to  paul

That is not true. Robber barons always played the game, to build monopoly to let society work for their wealth. They produce monopoly only with destroying competition, if Rockefeller or IMF or CCP. Sutton/Howe calls it the story of something for nothing. They ‘give’ patents, rights or work, but they themselves are completely useless.

Joe
Joe
Mar 4, 2023 9:01 PM
Reply to  A German

The populations of the world are not responsible for the crimes committed against them. Were the Jews and other dissidents responsible for being sent to concentration camps? The world has been turned into a global totalitarian prison which we are all currently existing inside of.

A German
A German
Mar 5, 2023 5:36 AM
Reply to  Joe

See my answer to mgeo. If you want to butcher animals, you have to beckon them first into the slaughterhouse.

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 4, 2023 4:37 AM

The surveillance state only confirms the paranoia of the ruling Psychos.
When chaos kicks in, as it always does in complex systems of any kind, shit will fly. Don’t forget to swerve, duck and weave.
The Psychos will sink into the sea of shit.
We are many. They are few.

Edith
Edith
Mar 4, 2023 4:12 AM

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=rBkxoKdSWww. Anyone know how real and extensive this is,…and how they run it with little power…. Story of digital Ukraine and how clever they are at tying everyone under survelliance

tonyopmoc
tonyopmoc
Mar 4, 2023 4:11 AM

We all want a bit of touch – its hard to explain – its a bit like a like – but sometimes you really do not want it, especially if its from a girl, who so far as you remember, you have never seen before in your life. She seems to know who I am. I have no idea who she is, and I am just trying to watch the band….a peck on the cheek is ok, but not a full kiss on the lips…what is a man supposed to do? I asked my wife, who tf is she? She didn’t have a clue either. I am not cutting my hair. I cannot sing nor play guitar.

Please leave me alone. I am not a musician.

Howard
Howard
Mar 4, 2023 3:19 AM

It’s so clear that humanity is following a certain, very definite trajectory. Yes, there are individual national/societal trajectories – the rise and fall of empires. But underneath it all there is a much larger trajectory.

Humanity is moving in a certain direction – the rise and fall of species, for want of a better wording.

Scream and holler and raise your fist all you want, you won’t change the obvious fact that nature gives, and nature eventually takes away what it gave – especially if its gifts are misused.

And wow! has humanity ever misused all it was given by nature!

ZenPriest
ZenPriest
Mar 4, 2023 7:34 AM
Reply to  Howard

If the entire world population dropped dead today, within a few years all that would be left is a load of bones and junk. I like to think the earth would just smirk.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 4, 2023 11:22 AM
Reply to  Howard

The planet/nature has proven to be quite invincible. If one type of environment is destroyed, it develops another. Considering us worthy of even being judged is more hubris. Assessed by essential conditions for survival, we are very vulnerable compared to many other species. So far, we are doing a good job of wrecking those very conditions.

ThinkTwice
ThinkTwice
Mar 4, 2023 3:06 AM

comment image

ThinkTwice
ThinkTwice
Mar 4, 2023 3:05 AM

VIROLIEGY
Exposing the lies of Germ Theory and virology using their own sources.

https://viroliegy.com/

ThinkTwice
ThinkTwice
Mar 4, 2023 3:04 AM

comment image

Pilgrim Shadow
Pilgrim Shadow
Mar 4, 2023 5:05 AM
Reply to  ThinkTwice

Maybe cuz Britain has never actually done Brexit. When you vote to leave, you LEAVE.

Seansaighdeor
Seansaighdeor
Mar 4, 2023 9:42 AM
Reply to  ThinkTwice

As 25% of the UK is still under EU rule any benefits will only come once we actually leave.

paul
paul
Mar 4, 2023 11:04 AM
Reply to  Seansaighdeor

In a couple of years at the outside the EU will be a corrupt, repressive, de industrialised, impoverished, irrelevant backwater, assuming it still exists at all, which is highly unlikely.

iggytog
iggytog
Mar 4, 2023 2:49 AM

The ATM machines run Microsoft software and transactions are mirrored in Japan. The value of the money is dependant on the stock exchange which may use Oracle or “special” software written by. “the west” The whole globe is tied to this system and it has its own momentum. The west can tinker with its workings but to change it radically it would have to be built from the ground up. The system is built to serve the already wealthy and by using esoteric language they have created a system that no one person understands in its entirety. The vast majority are dependent on this system as the only alternative is to live off grid. People are paid vast sums for knowing how to operate this special software whilst people doing dangerous vital jobs get paid minimum wage Other people are starving. I agree with what was said in this article,… Read more »

Martin Usher
Martin Usher
Mar 4, 2023 2:28 AM

This was a wonderful series, a landmark which I still treasure today. This theme has turned up in other stories, most notably “The Truman Show” but like all such stories it never quite answers the question “Who Watches the Watchers?”.

The answer is that we are our own wardens, of course. I think of control not as a panopticon but being exerted more like a conductor of an orchestra. Everyone’s trained appropriately for their role so the conductor doesn’t have to exert any discipline except in the rare case of someone who’s totally out of tune or time with the rest of the orchestra.

Placental_Mammal
Placental_Mammal
Mar 4, 2023 2:10 AM

Dystopias

At least real and fictional dystopias did not forcibly inject unknown frequently fatal substances into the populace prior to convid.

paul
paul
Mar 4, 2023 2:02 AM

The Village (Portmeiron) was quite a civilised and pleasant place compared to our current far worse dystopia, typified not just by rigid censorship, blanket surveillance, character assassination, media vilification, kangaroo court judicial persecution, brutal repression and outright torture and murder. I should think Julian Assange would be more than happy to exchange his Belmarsh hell hole for the rather more salubrious Village. As would any of the wretched unfortunates languishing in Gitmo concentration camp for 20 years facing medieval torture and murder on a daily basis without charge or trial, or any of its branch establishments in a dozen countries of the oh-so-liberal EU, or Rules Based British Diego Garcia. Or the Yellow Vests and Catalan Separatists and January 6th Protestors and Canadian Truckers. At least The Prisoner got to stroll around The Village in a nice blazer. He was not blinded or had his hands blown off by Macron’s… Read more »

Godfree Roberts
Godfree Roberts
Mar 4, 2023 1:12 AM

Your book, Battlefield America, makes it perfectly clear that Capitalist governments must necessarily mediate the exploitation of their peoples. That was so in Rome and remains so today.
We have suffered exploitive governments in many forms over millennia and might not even notice were it not for a rival system that is winning hearts and minds outside the West.
I refer to the fact that there are more prisoners, hungry children, drug addicts, poor, suicides, executions, and illiterate, homeless Americans than Chinese.

JoeC
JoeC
Mar 3, 2023 11:33 PM

Except from My Dinner with Andre ANDRÉ: . . . And when I met him at Findhorn he said to me, “Where are you from?” And I said, “New York.” And he said, “Ah, New York, yes, that’s a very interesting place. Do you know a lot of New Yorkers who keep talking about the fact that they want to leave, but never do?” And I said, “Oh, yes.” And he said, “Why do you think they don’t leave?” And I gave him different banal theories. And he said, “Oh, I don’t think it’s that way at all.” He said, “I think that New York is the new model for the new concentration camp, where the camp has been built by the inmates themselves, and the inmates are the guards, and they have this pride in this thing that they’ve built—they’ve built their own prison—and so they exist in a… Read more »

Placental_Mammal
Placental_Mammal
Mar 4, 2023 2:12 AM
Reply to  JoeC

There is no escape. The countryside is intensively cultivated and privately owned.

Bob the bum
Bob the bum
Mar 4, 2023 3:45 AM

The high seas: international waters? The sky: a vacuum balloon? Underground: abandoned mine shafts, cave systems? The middle of a desert: a camouflaged tent perhaps? Underwater: a DIY submarine? Thick forest: a camouflaged tree house? Antarctica: a russian doll style white tent?
Finding sustenance/nourishment and cheap internet will be challenging though.

Clive Williams
Clive Williams
Mar 3, 2023 11:26 PM

Predictably British article recognising Thousand fiftieth Monarchy. It will nevertheless interesting for both the circa Off (’67) drop kick and onto Atlantist Canadians & Americans, as to what they make of this Elder Offering.

tonyopmoc
tonyopmoc
Mar 4, 2023 1:13 AM
Reply to  Clive Williams

Clive Williams, Read the article and the credits (which is usually the author)

“Predictably British article recognising Thousand fiftieth Monarchy”

British? – We get blamed for Everything

“Born in 1946 in Tennessee, John W. Whitehead earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Arkansas in 1969 and a Juris Doctorate degree from the University of Arkansas School of Law in 1974. He served as an officer in the United States”

Clive Williams
Clive Williams
Mar 4, 2023 1:29 PM
Reply to  tonyopmoc

What’s your point?

Clive Williams
Clive Williams
Mar 5, 2023 12:51 AM
Reply to  tonyopmoc

Well? 🤡
Tonyopmoc
Ask the misses she’ll Tell you when your ‘Mother’ got the Vote you thick headed Oldham dummy. My Grandmother lived in Oldham. Furthermore, As an Artist I also appreciate the essence of the Article. You DONT I suggest you get an education, and stop behaving like an illiterate baffoon.
AND then, Try again to come with anything of either Historically or Artistically in our Global Society Today.
I have also travelled You obviously haven’t. ’74? Next time you find yourself in a blackout in your community..come back in with one eye closed, appreciating Light from a single Candle….dunce.
thx

May Hem
May Hem
Mar 3, 2023 10:11 PM

The so-called ‘4th industrial revolution’ will never happen.

Even as cheap energy becomes less available our appetite for energy expands. For example, the proposed 5G technology uses twice as much energy as 4G. Renewable technologies are dependent on fossil fuels for their manufacture, operation and maintenance. At present they provide only 6% of total global energy use.

As the small renewable energy sector expands (mainly due to government subsidies), energy costs are increasing.

Small and large business and industries are closing/contracting. Many people are reducing their discretionary spending in an effort to afford the ever more expensive essentials, so we will see even more business closing.

This article gives more details. It applies to the current European situation, but the same conditions apply world wide.

https://consciousnessofsheep.co.uk/2023/03/01/paradise-postponed/

tony_opmoc
tony_opmoc
Mar 3, 2023 10:33 PM
Reply to  May Hem

May Hem, The world is in a bit of a mess at the moment, but only if you have a connection to the internet. The world is a big place, and still a large percentage of people do not even have running water, let alone electricity. The most surprising thing I found, more in very rural India, than North Africa, is that the people, who had possibly never seen even a TV screen, providing it rained and the harvest was going well, and they weren’t about to starve to death,…. They seemed really happy, and would invite my wife and I into their homes, and share everything they had with us. We weren’t part of any aid agency or anything, and half the time, I had no idea where we were going. She would say, I have got a really cheap deal…Its cheaper than the price of the air tickets and we… Read more »

May Hem
May Hem
Mar 3, 2023 10:41 PM
Reply to  tony_opmoc

What about the 4th industrial revolution?

tonyopmoc
tonyopmoc
Mar 4, 2023 12:25 AM
Reply to  May Hem

Well, my son runs a small isp, and his costs mainly the cost of energy, have massively increased..he has been running at a loss..so he gave his customers fair warning. “My energy costs have increased by over 20%..” So I find a load of servers in my hall….I ask “what are you doing with them?” “I’ve got a better deal” Next morning they are in a different data centre.. Meanwhile, again not subsidised by anyone, though I did buy some fire extinguishers, he has got another project on the go, with the very latest technology… He has a sailing boat, as another interest, that does not involve travelling into London, trying to avoid the ULEZ charge £12.50 a day – he dosen’t make that much = well so far as I know – doing the school run… The idea is using Solar Power – obviously on a small scale prototype… Read more »

Clive Williams
Clive Williams
Mar 5, 2023 2:39 AM
Reply to  tonyopmoc

Very comforting, You’re obviously redirectional questioning the factual existence of 10 not 5 or 2.
10G. Is the minimalist goal.s. global Web.
Personally I wouldn’t know?, other than you’re not living as any present tense reasoning individual at any time since at least 2008., in any society other than your own family investing in [digital] technology. pre 2008.
Which is the increasing scientific availability you see as a messaging necessity.

Pilgrim Shadow
Pilgrim Shadow
Mar 4, 2023 12:51 AM
Reply to  May Hem

I think he agrees with you. The people who are happiest with the least are the wealthiest.

Placental_Mammal
Placental_Mammal
Mar 4, 2023 3:41 AM
Reply to  May Hem

Insanity ? The whole human experience could justifiably be considered insanity. Agriculture and the breeding of domestic animals offered hope of more security to our ancestors. The resulting prosperity lead to progress in navigation and metal extraction and textiles and so on. Those not in favour of the new advances were made offers they couldn’t refuse by the compliant majority. When seafaring reached the neccessary level of sophistication the previously inaccessible continents could be settled, it’s natives wiped out and the land exploited for intensive agriculture and mining. The new sources of precious metals enabled bankster controlled Europe to colonise the world including the civilizations that gave them the number system, algebra, gunpowder, paper and a lot more. Ruthless exploitation fattened the West. The loot based industrial revolution led to industry, new products and massive pressure on the environment. The avalanche of new products and their promise of utopia hypnotised… Read more »

Pilgrim Shadow
Pilgrim Shadow
Mar 4, 2023 5:00 AM

Some demur, but there are simply too many people, and not enough meaningful, purposeful work for many of them.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 4, 2023 11:39 AM

resulting prosperity lead to progress in navigation.. metal extraction and textiles

In other words, parasites gained power and extorted the masses for their demented schemes.

Bob the bum
Bob the bum
Mar 4, 2023 5:56 AM
Reply to  May Hem

They are pushing electrification without doing the sums. Funny how the media can always find an expert except when it comes to calculating joules or megawatt-hours. They also never differentiate between energy needs vs. energy wants. We all want and are used to cheap energy but without it most of our lifestyles will have to change. Without changing the political/economic paradigm of cannot-question-ownwership-rights-ever the future is one where the rich get the right to use/waste energy. When a car drives by it will be a rich person going somewhere. As with money, really it ought to be about rationing amongst equals.

paul
paul
Mar 4, 2023 11:25 AM
Reply to  May Hem

One of these daft windmills requires 500 tons of high grade steel, 20 tons of aluminium and a ton of copper, quantities of other non ferrous metals and rare earth. The sails are carbon fibre/ plastic/ oil based, wear out rapidly and cannot be recycled.

And mining to produce them is the dirtiest and most energy intensive industry on the planet.

In the whole of human history, around 800-1,000 million tons of copper has been extracted.

If everyone went over to electric cars, the same amount again would have to be produced over 30 years.

There is no shortage of reliable energy – fossil fuels. The only reason for rising prices and mumbo jumbo about peak oil is that this sector has been deliberately starved of investment as a matter of policy in line with the Great Global Warming Hoax to keep Little Greta happy.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 4, 2023 11:32 AM
Reply to  May Hem

As 5G zaps ever more people, even the dullards wil put two and two together. Guess what will happen to all those antennae on every street.

tony_opmoc
tony_opmoc
Mar 3, 2023 9:57 PM

I loved “The Prisoner” when I was a kid – (We have visited Portmerion – about 30 years ago) It is just the same now. A couple of years ago, I got ill, and I was slowly recovering at home after 2 hours on an antibiotic drip (I had to wear a mask for 4 hours) , but they never even offered me the jab – nor stuck anything up my nose – they were in fact highly professional – because there was hardly anyone else there in A&E. Most people were too frightened to go there – so they had me to play with – all for free……blood tests – the lot.. At home, I watched “THE PRISONER” no coffee no alcohol no cigarettes, only paracetemol, and ibuprofen – of which we nearly ran out. I won’t bore you about the pain and the mess, but at least the… Read more »

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 3, 2023 9:31 PM

Another angle on The Prisoner’s prophetic power – and one which McGoohan probably never even thought of – is how, through “reality” shows like “Big Brother”, many would actually want to undergo total surveillance and fancy themselves stars in their own show – whilst in fact submitting to others. Vanity can be a powerful Trojan Horse factor in acclimatising a population into the acceptance of spy cameras.

Paul Prichard
Paul Prichard
Mar 3, 2023 9:31 PM

Your alternative update on #COVID19 for 2023-03-01. Pfizer notes miscarriages, recategorizes them ‘recovered’ or ‘resolved’. 30% display Serious heart issues (blog, gab, tweet).

Junious Ricardo Stanton
Junious Ricardo Stanton
Mar 3, 2023 9:04 PM

‘The greatest weapon in the arsenal of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed” Steven Biko
We are prisoners in an advanced technologically dystopian society ruled by psychopaths hellbent to altering humanity and nature itself. But it is still not too late, their push towards full blown transhumanism, created chimeras, hybrids and mutants is not complete. An altered natural order has not yet been fully accomplished.
Time is of the essence. We have to stop pretending not to see or know what is happening to us and around us! We have to cancel the notion “resistance is futile” forever or we will end up being enslaved and dehumanized like no generation before us; and consigned to a living hell that will seem benign, secure and supportive but which will leave us shells of our former selves.

May Hem
May Hem
Mar 3, 2023 10:22 PM

It ain’t going to happen junious. Possibly patchy attempts will be made, but if you read my post above, you’ll see why the rising costs of cheap energy and resources will continue to force the closure of many small and large businesses.

Their proposed digital prison needs a constant, affordable supply of electricity. Otherwise all the digital ‘devices’ are dead.

Even if power is rashioned by the parasites to the non-elites, it will make little difference.

Speedwellian
Speedwellian
Mar 3, 2023 11:45 PM
Reply to  May Hem

What if they depopulate and just focus on the modern west?

Geoff P
Geoff P
Mar 4, 2023 12:08 AM
Reply to  May Hem

What if we have been lied to and electricity is free for them and infinite.
It just costs us.
hmmmmm mmmm.

ZenPriest
ZenPriest
Mar 4, 2023 7:48 AM
Reply to  Geoff P

Exactly. Energy cannot be created or destroyed. Time for humans to wake up.

Junious Ricardo Stanton
Junious Ricardo Stanton
Mar 4, 2023 12:25 AM
Reply to  May Hem

Isn’t that all part of their controlled demolition? The plutocrats want to restrict cheap energy collection/creation/distribution this coupled with their induced societal collapse and debt based financial system implosion will “demand” a drastic “solution”: their Great Reset (New World Order) complete with transhumanism which they call biodigital convergence/human augmentation, expanded surveillance, monitoring and control (reward and punishment system) on a global level. They will power their technological gulag! Get used to brownouts and blackouts long lines for us but not for them or their surveillance grid! So of course they will destroy small businesses and only keep those they own and control through acquisitions, mergers, take overs and partnerships, which leaves very little for us peons, serfs and tax slaves. They will pacify the masses using Universal Basic Income aka Guaranteed Basic Income (part of the digital surveillance reward/punishment system) drugs, distractions and mind control. We can see it playing… Read more »

semaj
semaj
Mar 3, 2023 8:35 PM

The Prisoner is the best TV series ever. Watched the original and now every repeat airing that there has ever been and learn or realise something new every time, brilliant. Also many people do not realise it was actually a sequel to McGoohan’s other persona in Danger Man, the agent that retired and then found himself in The Village.

Edwige
Edwige
Mar 3, 2023 11:30 PM
Reply to  semaj

It’s a layered work – there is the layer about a technocratic dictatorship but there’s a layer beyond that that is pure Gnosticism. No.6 is man trapped by his physicality in a cruel world of bizarre and unwanted rules presided over by the demiurge No.2 while No.1 is often discussed but never seen.

It’s also loaded with more Freemasonic symbolism than anything else I’ve seen. There are more checkerboards than at the World Draughts’ Championship.

Clive Williams
Clive Williams
Mar 4, 2023 12:33 AM
Reply to  semaj

At the time the Village was merely as a Continental backdrop for British black & white television. It’s a common error by post 1968 American reformist tv opinions. The date 1967 is important as is 20th Century historically 1968.
The main overhaul point these European popular tv series are incorporated into Globle Media Projections personal views are as unimportant as the receivable Countries.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 4, 2023 11:55 AM
Reply to  semaj

A similar film – maybe for TV – was Seconds. The hero (Burt Reynolds) has had enough of routine life, and wants to drop out. After paying an organisation and taking up an ananymous life of leisure, he tires of that too. He asks the management for a change. The top man explains that they oblige due to business constraints. They execute him.

semaj
semaj
Mar 4, 2023 7:39 PM
Reply to  mgeo

The final episode showed that ultimately non compliance wins which is what I have advocated many times over all the bollocks of the last 3 years but people just will not stand together hence the others are still in ‘the village’.

Bob the Hod
Bob the Hod
Mar 3, 2023 8:23 PM

The solutions offered here are pretty weak. Not even a word about ditching your smartphone and turning your computer off more often and getting you information from books, using cash whenever possible, shopping locally wherever possible.

Speedwellian
Speedwellian
Mar 3, 2023 11:47 PM
Reply to  Bob the Hod

Growing a garden is where the real revolution is at.

Placental_Mammal
Placental_Mammal
Mar 4, 2023 3:49 AM
Reply to  Speedwellian

Greater Sydney has lost at least 50% of it’s front and backyard gardens over the last eight years as well as many little parks and reserves. Bird, insect and reptile populations have plummetted.

Speedwellian
Speedwellian
Mar 4, 2023 9:43 AM

I can’t save the ‘world’, but I can feed my family and friends and have a good time doing it. We can live on almost nothing. When the nonsense came I trimmed all the fat, just essentials, life was better, less driving, less spending etc. Also adapting, we have many beans…eat beans, we have many eggs and zucchini…make a bake. Who and what are you giving your energy too? Them or you?

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 4, 2023 12:00 PM
Reply to  Speedwellian

The local council can be persuaded to ban that. Like solar panels and wells, it already is in parts of US, as John Whitehead pointed out earlier.

Speedwellian
Speedwellian
Mar 4, 2023 9:11 PM
Reply to  mgeo

Sure, with the stroke of a pen they can say anything, but can they enforce it? They can’t do too much damage or there will be push back. That is why the propaganda is so important, it’s to brainwash people into policing themselves and each other, like with the sniffle thing, I had people screaming at me, calling the police, it’s like the people and the T.V. had become one? But out here the law does not really matter, it’s your neighbors you have to get along with.

Albert Anderson
Albert Anderson
Mar 4, 2023 1:51 AM
Reply to  Bob the Hod

How is that going to stop the psychopaths bent on world domination and control and get justice for their crimes?

ZenPriest
ZenPriest
Mar 4, 2023 8:03 AM

I have nothing but contempt for your attitude. You will do NOTHING because you don’t perceive it’ll change the world. Your attitude takes us all to hell. Lose your ego and do what is RIGHT. You have no idea what effect a million tiny ripples can have on an ocean.

Clive Williams
Clive Williams
Mar 4, 2023 2:12 AM
Reply to  Bob the Hod

Course not stum, smart is money. We see there’s bit of confusion here, taking incredible peoples ingenuity for granted. Inventions no phone smarts in 1967. Smart suited money (cira) is No.2 formerly No. 6 to No. One.. A Realist.
Age of Reason 1967-74, The Prisoner ’67 was Himself infactically Then No.2.
A British Single Person is Two, Mother & Father.
Go ahead then turn off, piss scared in 1967. Safe you are still a piss scared individual in 23.
Bloody amazing! Your waiting for a command from TangTing!

ZenPriest
ZenPriest
Mar 4, 2023 8:05 AM
Reply to  Bob the Hod

Smart phone addicts lamenting the enslavement of civilisation is the height of comedy and irony.

Annie
Annie
Mar 3, 2023 7:18 PM

Stop thinking posh people that have everything are more than you.You make the world go round they are just talk.

ZenPriest
ZenPriest
Mar 4, 2023 8:08 AM
Reply to  Annie

I would love to see the rich covered in their own excrement cos they looked down their noses at the guys from the drainage company.
The rich mostly made their money by abusing, degrading and stealing from others. THEY are the real scum of the earth.

dude
dude
Mar 3, 2023 7:16 PM

“The Prisoner was an allegory of the individual, aiming to find peace and freedom in a dystopia masquerading as a utopia.”

Our world doesn’t even try to masquerade as utopia. It looks and smells like hell.

Rob
Rob
Mar 3, 2023 9:26 PM
Reply to  dude

And that’s why they fucked up… To get the people complaint for a long time, you gotta butter them up . 1984 was the prequel, Orwell was writing it about his time and experiences.
But they couldn’t even bring brave New World because pharma has already been infiltrated by parasites feeding on the big parasite… Lol
If only they have invented soma..

John Pretty
John Pretty
Mar 3, 2023 9:47 PM
Reply to  Rob

Who is “they”?

Jonathan K X
Jonathan K X
Mar 4, 2023 12:30 AM
Reply to  John Pretty

The Hierarchy Enslaving You

-Ryan Cristián from TLAV

Victor G.
Victor G.
Mar 4, 2023 9:17 AM
Reply to  John Pretty

Maybe you’ve already read this one? If not, you should find it interesting …

https://tabublog.com/2017/07/11/the-holy-grail-of-who-they-are-that-rule-over-us-all/

SeverelyRegarded
SeverelyRegarded
Mar 7, 2023 10:21 AM
Reply to  John Pretty

QUE!?