posted ago by monkey_ona_ball ago by monkey_ona_ball +14 / -5

The World Economic Forum or it, through its partners, I forget which, openly admit to employing an army of over 100,000 "information warriors" across the world. These roles focus on spreading narratives on online spaces like forums and social media. The main ploy, and they say this straight up, is having their shills pose as "moderate conspiracy theorists". Think, Alex Jones tier stuff. They'll post conspiracy theories, but they won't be too far reaching, on the other hand, they'll attack those who do post the far reaching stuff, attempting to use sleight of hand to "debunk" (usually disguised as debate-in-thread) the hardcore stuff, or otherwise rail against it and those who post it. This is done by pasting pre-made snippets, usually edited, or by simply using projection, on behalf of the system, to call the far reaching stuff "psyops" or similar. Basically, they aim to steer discourse in a way that does not threaten the very core of the system (namely, the mythologies, or trueisms it operates under). For instance, these shills may post things attacking elements of the system which have been redlined as "fair game", like things to do with Epstein, the coronavirus scam, or election rigging. While these are all fair points, they will never post things about say, nuclear weapons being fake, or the moon landing being a hoax, instead, they'll go into attack mode on any threads suggesting these things. A common tactic is to get these agents into mod positions, so that they can simply strike off posts about various topics they are told to shut down. In extreme examples, usually in niche forums or groups (though this is not the general practice), they may even go along with conspiracy narratives surrounding topics as extreme, in the general eyes of the system, as muh six quadrillion, but will go against suppositions such as "all of history is a lie". You can generally recognize them as being overly active in whatever online spaces they're assigned to (going beyond what could be expected of someone who say, has a job—beyond shilling on the net), posting little original content (that would require some degree of effort beyond copy pasting, or posting memes out of a folder), and generally accepting the basic premise of reality the system offers up, while maybe showing disagreement on the frills of that narrative. This is in fact the overall purpose of these agents. The system knows that people don't buy all their shit, they just don't want people questioning every single last bit of their shit, including the core narratives the system is built on. Of course, they use keyword filtering software to pounce, as soon as possible, on the possible threats they are employed to fight, so saying some things will summon them, like an Agent Smith onto Neo. If you want to learn more, at least for now, Yandex this shit, I'm not making it up, and Yandex is at least more or less uncensored, again, at least for now.