The change of culture through sports for humanity in a hypnotic state

Now the Big Think Tanks, that involve many professional people, rule around the change of culture and the ruling of culture over a hundred-year period that they had actually designed. We’re all tribal to an extent. That’s why we even bother to vote for a tribal leader. This is well understood. That’s why we are supplied with these leaders.

And because the average man was to become more disengaged from his own destiny as the expert class arose, it was decided that the rest would get their outlet mainly, gradually becoming helpless as males through sport. Therefore, they had to have a tribal team to identify with. They could cheer them on as they are winning. And in their personal lives, they were getting nowhere. They were getting disenfranchised in a sense as experts took over decision-making order in all kinds of fields. This was psychology at use, planned before they even implemented the sports.

When the radio came along, of course, they used that to the maximum. Sports for the men. Soaps, basically for the women. And then in came television as an alpha status—a hypnotic state. It took off. It really, really took off, and men became glued to the sports shows.

The Big Think Tanks have to do with always planning the future and how to create societies and even different cultures between within a hundred years, say, from this society to that society to the next society, how to implement it, again always through the youth culture which is easy to do if you have universal education. You know, they always mandate the same system, culturally taught to the youth.

Since the 1960s, once television really, really took off, sports used to only come out on Saturdays, and over a ten-year period they gradually came on every night of the week, until today we have even sport channels. Sports. Sports. Sports. And now you see guys who are sitting home who are basically parallels at work, their bosses. There’s parallels on the roads—there’s police, and traffic wardens, and cops watching them. They have no means to feel strong, and so they tend to watch sport as a substitute. They project themselves into a game which they never participate in.

But as long as their team wins, they feel something is happening in their life; it’s positive and it’s successful. It’s a very good substitute for many things, as far as the Elite are concerned.

© Alan Watt.

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