Words and their meaning matter. They help structure human consciousness and thought and are the basic units used to convey abstract concepts between human beings. One common PsyWar tactic is to distort and then weaponize politicized definitions of words intentionally. We have all seen this tactic deployed throughout the Covid crisis in a wide variety of ways. The redefinition of “vaccine” is one example. Another is the redefinition of the pejorative term “Anti-Vaxxer” to include any who disagree with policies involving mandated vaccine acceptance.
Current headlines support the hypothesis that center-right populist movements are rapidly disrupting current political alliances and consensus throughout the “Western” nation-states. But the language being used to resist these movements has been actively and intentionally distorted to advance the political interests of the current status quo.
Of course, the election of Republican Party candidate Donald Trump in the US is particularly notable, but this was foreshadowed by the rise of the Brothers of Italy party and the election of Georgia Meloni, the election of Argentine President Javier Milei (an Austrian school economist), the popularity of Marine Le Pen and the French National Rally group, the Alternative for Germany (AfD), Nigel Farage and the Reform party in the UK, Geert Wilders’ Dutch Party for Freedom, and Viktor Orbán’s Hungarian leadership (and impending EU Presidency). The list goes on and on, and the global momentum is undeniable.
The WEF-influenced totalitarian left-wing Trudeau government of Canada is teetering on collapse, the governments of France and Germany are currently in crisis mode, and the WEF-influenced left-wing UK government of Keir Starmer is circling the drain. Multiple political missteps have contributed to this momentum, including comprehensive O’Biden administration mismanagement, EU, UN, and WEF-promoted open border policies, Covid crisis lies and mismanagement, failing “Green Energy” policies, lockstep Western and EU support of the disastrous and escalating war in Ukraine that now threatens to go nuclear, declining standards of living, national indebtedness (that seems to have been the trigger in Canada), the hidden tax of inflation, the censorship-industrial complex, and a wide range of PsyWar campaigns against the politically inconvenient distribution of “mis- dis- and malinformation” as defined by current Western administrations and globalist alliances.
Malone, the author, comes to the conclusion that globalism is the end product of the government and think tanks here in the good ole US of A. It has been nurtured here since the end of WWII, when the US was the penultimate power in the world due to the aforesaid war and everyone else’s ruin. He also analyzes nationalism and how Trump applies it to the world situation. There are some startling conclusions to see here.