
	by Anthony Wile
	March 17, 2012
	
	from
	
	TheDailyBell Website
	
	 
	
	
	
	We track dominant social themes here at the Daily Bell, and the spectacular 
	implosion of the "Stop 
	Kony 2012" campaign is a further example of how these memes are 
	disintegrating under the pressure of what we call the Internet Reformation.
	
	We commented on this in this past week, in "Kony 
	2012 Debunking Shows How Far Alternative Media Has Come":
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	But we wrote that article before the spectacular 
	implosion of the "artistic creator" of the video, who apparently had a 
	nervous breakdown due to the reception of the video and was sent to a 
	psychiatric facility.
	
	I am not one to rejoice at this sort of thing. In fact, it is a personal and 
	familial tragedy for the person involved, obviously. On the other hand, the 
	video itself was fairly despicable, in my view, and obviously and evidently 
	the intention was to create a power elite meme.
	
	This is not idle speculation. Alternative media reports may have firmly 
	fixed the producers of 
	
	the video, "Invisible Children," within the larger 
	framework of the State Department and its infamous AYM sponsorship.
	
	The "youth movements" that the power elite has assiduously cultivated over 
	the past decade or more are responsible for destabilizing numerous countries 
	around the world now.
	
	The Invisible Children non-profit seems to me to be firmly entrenched within 
	this Intel paradigm. No doubt, if their funding stream is analyzed closely 
	it will emerge that various strands of support lead back to elite 
	foundations and personalities.
	
	What was the meme? It was to create a groundswell of support for a kind of 
	neo-colonialist attack on Africa. Some of what is intended has been clearly 
	elucidated now by alternative media and some has not.
	
	The alternative media, as we have pointed out previously, has been superb in 
	rising up to denounce the video and the intentions behind it. Alex Jones led 
	the charge with a hundred - maybe a thousand - websites and blog-sites all 
	focusing on the true disinformation inherent in the "Invisible Children" 
	effort.
	
	Many facets of what the video was intended to do have been analyzed by now. 
	But let me try to sum up in a few sentences:
	
	The video may be part of a larger power elite plan to take 
	control of the 
	Middle East and Africa more directly. In the Middle East and upper Africa, 
	as we've reported many times, the power elite has destroyed a number of 
	secular regimes (Egypt, Tunisia and Libya) on their way to installing what 
	seems to be a region-wide Caliphate.
	
	The idea seems to be to create a wider war on terror by building a 
	Muslim-oriented Caliphate using the Trojan Horse of 
	
	the Muslim Brotherhood, 
	which is apparently CIA connected at the very top. 
	
	 
	
	
	
	The Kony video is 
	obviously aimed at providing a wider justification for more African military 
	involvement by the West.
	
	All the above actions are CONTROL oriented. There are other reasons, as 
	well, having to do with gold, with the world's next reserve currency and, of 
	course, natural resources. Some of these we've pointed out in the past. But 
	the larger issue is the one-world government that elites are continuing to 
	pursue.
	
	The moves in the Middle East and Africa and even the Kony video itself needs 
	to be looked at within that context. And seen in that context, I think we 
	can come to certain conclusions.
	
	The main conclusion we can come to is that the elites' dominant social 
	themes are really in a kind of free fall now. The elites RELY on these 
	dominant social themes to organize society and instill belief systems that 
	allow for the gradual implementation of what has been called a New World 
	Order.
	
	The idea of a consolidated global government run by the current elite - and 
	at the top it is apparently composed of dynastic banking families - ought to 
	be scary to anyone. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. A 
	one-world government cannot be anything other than tyrannical.
	
	But these dominant social themes, having worked so well in 20th century and 
	even earlier, have certainly been undermined by the availability of 'Net 
	information. One by one, they are toppling, or at least losing credibility. 
	I'd like to think we've contributed to this trend.
	
	Whether it's 
	
	global warming, the so-called "war on terror" or various 
	scarcity memes having to do 
	with food, 
	water and 
	
	oil, people are a lot less 
	likely to take what they read and hear from the mainstream media at face 
	value anymore. There are too many other outlets via the Internet.
	
	This is why the powers-that-be have tried to crack down on Internet 
	information via such ploys as copyright enforcement. It's exactly the same 
	tactic that was used after the Gutenberg Press began to change the way 
	people thought about the Way the World Worked.
	
	As we've often pointed out, this is a big problem for the power elite. 
	Lacking the ability to propagandize the masses, the elites have turned to 
	more brutal techniques. They are trying to accomplish via the brute force of 
	law and regulation what they cannot accomplish via the propagation of memes.
	
	Even worse, the elites have increasingly turned toward and encouraged, in my 
	mind, economic disintegration. The idea is to make people so miserable and 
	insecure via "austerity" and various wars that we will simply cry out for 
	"order" at any cost. At that point, world government will start to become a 
	reality.
	
	But wait just a minute. As far as I'm concerned, however, "Kony 2012" and 
	the pushback it has received mark a kind of watershed moment for the 
	Internet. There have been several I recall.
	
	One was when Dan Rather was fired after the Internet exposed the phony 
	documents he was trying to use to attack then US President 
	George Bush. I 
	have no admiration for Bush, who was a deliberate war-monger, but Rather was 
	rightfully caught.
	
	Another watershed moment, in my view, was the "ClimateGate" exposure of 
	emails that showed fairly convincingly that global warming was a contrived 
	hoax. The "movement" has never recovered from this setback.
	
	And another, very recent, watershed moment has been the unraveling of 
	
	the 
	case against Dr. Andrew Wakefield who first identified a potential link 
	between autism and the MMR vaccine. One of Dr. Wakefield's colleagues just 
	had disbarment from the British medical establishment reversed.
	
	But the rapid and seemingly complete collapse of the Kony gambit must rank 
	as the most astonishing yet in my view. The anger of seemingly the entire 
	alternative media community is palpable and the "nervous breakdown" of the 
	man who made the video when see in this light is perhaps no accident. 
	They're under enormous pressure.
	
	The elites will continue to do what they do. They've been doing it for 
	thousands of years apparently, and the exposure of their thematic mechanisms 
	won't stop them from trying to achieve their goals.
	
	But above all the elites seek justification for what they do, and the 
	Internet regularly strips these self-serving and manufactured justifications 
	away from them.
	
	This leaves the brutality of planned depressions, manufactured wars and 
	unjust laws supported by crony favoritism. How long they can manufacture 
	consent via fear rather than conviction remains to be seen.
	
	There is a reason that the elites counted on the dissemination of their 
	
	memes in the 20th century. There are a lot fewer of them than us.
	
	Maybe at some point, as the Internet Reformation rolls onward, the top tier 
	of elites - the powerful banking families themselves - will see fit to take 
	a step backward. This won't be something done within a vacuum, of course. 
	
	
	 
	
	They will have to be convinced it is in their own self-interest to keep a 
	lower profile.
	
	It could happen, in my view. Perhaps it already is.