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  1. www.stopthecrime.net
  2.  
  3. This document is the doctrine adopted by the Policy Committee
  4. of the Bilderburg Group during its first known meeting in 1954.
  5. The following document, dated May 1979, was found on July 7, 1986,
  6. in an IBM copier that had been purchased at a surplus sale.
  7. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  8. http://www.lawfulpath.com/ref/sw4qw/index.shtml - preface
  9. http://www.lawfulpath.com/ref/sw4qw/
  10. The following document is taken from two sources. The first, was acquired on a website
  11. (of which I can't remember the address) listing as its source the book titled Behold A Pale
  12. Horse by William Cooper; Light Technology Publishing, 1991. The second source is a
  13. crudely copied booklet, which does not contain a copyright notice, or a publisher's name.
  14. With the exception of the Forward, the Preface, the main thing that was missing from the
  15. first source was the illustrations. As we began comparing the two, we realized that the
  16. illustrations, and the accompanying text (also missing from the first) made up a
  17. significant part of the document. This has now been restored by The Lawful Path, and so
  18. far as I know, is the only internet copy available complete with the illustrations.
  19. We have no first-hand knowledge that this document is genuine, however many of the
  20. concepts contained herein are certainly reasonable, important, and bear strong
  21. consideration.
  22. If anyone has additional knowledge about the source of this document; has better copies
  23. of the illustrations than the ones posted here; has any missing pieces to this document, or
  24. has any comments which can improve upon the quality of this document, we will
  25. appreciate your comments.
  26. The Lawful Path http://www.lawfulpath.com/
  27. Additional information includes confirmation that this policy was adopted by the
  28. International "Elites" at the first Bilderberg Meeting in 1954.
  29. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  30. Page 2
  31. Forward
  32. This manuscript was delivered to our offices by an unknown person. We did not steal the
  33. document, nor are we involved with any theft from the United States Government, and
  34. we did not get the document by way of any dishonest methods. We feel that we are not
  35. endangering the "National Security" by reproducing this document, quite the contrary; it
  36. has been authenticated and we feel that we are not only within our rights to publish it, but
  37. morally bound to do so.
  38. Regarding the training manual, you may have detected that we had to block out the
  39. marginal notes made by the selectee at the C.I.A. Training Center, but I can assure you
  40. that the manual is authentic, and was printed for the purpose of introducing the selectee to
  41. the conspiracy. It has been authenticated by four different technical writers for Military
  42. Intelligence, one just recently retired who wants very much to have this manual
  43. distributed throughout the world, and one who is still employed as an Electronics
  44. Engineer by the Federal Government, and has access to the entire series of Training
  45. Manuals. One was stationed in Hawaii, and held the highest security clearance in the
  46. Naval Intelligence, and another who is now teaching at a university, and has been
  47. working with the Central Intelligence Agency for a number of years, and wants out
  48. before the axe falls on the conspirators.
  49. We believed that the entire world should know about this plan, so we distributed
  50. internationally one-hundred of these manuscripts, to ask individuals at top level positions
  51. their opinions. The consensus opinion was to distribute this to as many people as who
  52. wanted it, to the end that they would not only understand that "War" had been declared
  53. against them, but would be able to properly identify the true enemy to Humanity.
  54. Delamer Duverus
  55. Preface
  56. Conspiracy theories are nothing new to history. Plots to "kill Caesar" and overthrow
  57. Rome abounded, for instance. However, it is seldom that concrete clues to such plots
  58. come to light, and are generally known.
  59. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars, An Introduction Programming Manual was uncovered
  60. quite by accident on July 7, 1986 when an employee of Boeing Aircraft Co. purchased a
  61. surplus IBM copier for scrap parts at a sale, and discovered inside details of a plan,
  62. hatched in the embryonic days of the "Cold War" which called for control of the masses
  63. through manipulation of industry, peoples' pastimes, education and political leanings. It
  64. called for a quiet revolution, putting brother against brother, and diverting the public's
  65. attention from what is really going on.
  66. The document you are about to read is real. It is reprinted in its virgin form, with
  67. diagrams, as a touch of reality.
  68. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  69. Page 3
  70. Table of Contents
  71. * Forward 2
  72. * Preface 2
  73. * Security 4
  74. * Historical Introduction 4
  75. * Political Introduction 6
  76. * Energy 6
  77. * Descriptive Introduction of the Silent Weapon 7
  78. * Theoretical Introduction 8
  79. * General Energy Concepts 8
  80. * Mr. Rothschild's Energy Discovery 9
  81. * Apparent Capital as "Paper" Inductor 10
  82. * Breakthrough 10
  83. * Application in Economics 10
  84. * The Economic Model 11
  85. * Industrial Diagrams 12
  86. * Three Industrial Classes 14
  87. * Aggregation 14
  88. * The E-model 14
  89. * Economic Inductance 15
  90. * Inductive Factors to Consider 15
  91. * Translation 15
  92. * Time Flow Relationships and Self-destructive Oscillations 16
  93. * Industry Equivalent Circuits 18
  94. * Stages of Schematic Simplification 20
  95. * Generalization 21
  96. * Final Bill of Goods 21
  97. * The Technical Coefficients 22
  98. * Types of Admittances 22
  99. * The Household Industry 23
  100. * Household Models 24
  101. * Economic Shock Testing 25
  102. * Introduction to the Theory of Shock Testing 26
  103. * Example of Shock Testing 26
  104. * Introduction to Economic Amplifiers 30
  105. * Short List of Inputs 31
  106. * Short List of Outputs 34
  107. * Table of Strategies 35
  108. * Diversion, the Primary Strategy 36
  109. * Diversion Summary 37
  110. * Consent, the Primary Victory 37
  111. * Amplification Energy Sources 37
  112. * Logistics 38
  113. * The Artificial Womb 39
  114. * The Political Structure of a Nation - Dependency 39
  115. * Action/Offense 39
  116. * Responsibility 39
  117. * Summary 40
  118. * System Analysis 40
  119. * The Draft 41
  120. * Enforcement 42
  121. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  122. Page 4
  123. TOP SECRET
  124. Silent weapons for quiet wars
  125. Operations Research Technical Manual
  126. TW-SW7905.1
  127.  
  128. Welcome Aboard
  129. This publication marks the 25th anniversary of the Third World War, called the "Quiet
  130. War", being conducted using subjective biological warfare, fought with "silent weapons".
  131. This book contains an introductory description of this war, its strategies, and its
  132. weaponry.
  133. May 1979 #74-1120
  134. Security
  135. It is patently impossible to discuss social engineering or the automation of a society, i.e.,
  136. the engineering of social automation systems (silent weapons) on a national or worldwide
  137. scale without implying extensive objectives of social control and destruction of human
  138. life, i.e., slavery and genocide.
  139. This manual is in itself an analog declaration of intent. Such a writing must be secured
  140. from public scrutiny. Otherwise, it might be recognized as a technically formal
  141. declaration of domestic war. Furthermore, whenever any person or group of persons in a
  142. position of great power and without full knowledge and consent of the public, uses such
  143. knowledge and methodologies for economic conquest - it must be understood that a state
  144. of domestic warfare exists between said person or group of persons and the public.
  145. The solution of today's problems requires an approach which is ruthlessly candid, with no
  146. agonizing over religious, moral or cultural values.
  147. You have qualified for this project because of your ability to look at human society with
  148. cold objectivity, and yet analyze and discuss your observations and conclusions with
  149. others of similar intellectual capacity without the loss of discretion or humility. Such
  150. virtues are exercised in your own best interest. Do not deviate from them.
  151. Historical Introduction
  152. Silent weapon technology has evolved from Operations Research (O.R.), a strategic and
  153. tactical methodology developed under the Military Management in England during
  154. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  155. Page 5
  156. World War II. The original purpose of Operations Research was to study the strategic and
  157. tactical problems of air and land defense with the objective of effective use of limited
  158. military resources against foreign enemies (i.e., logistics).
  159. It was soon recognized by those in positions of power that the same methods might be
  160. useful for totally controlling a society. But better tools were necessary.
  161. Social engineering (the analysis and automation of a society) requires the correlation of
  162. great amounts of constantly changing economic information (data), so a high-speed
  163. computerized data-processing system was necessary which could race ahead of the
  164. society and predict when society would arrive for capitulation.
  165. Relay computers were to slow, but the electronic computer, invented in 1946 by J.
  166. Presper Eckert and John W. Mauchly, filled the bill.
  167. The next breakthrough was the development of the simplex method of linear
  168. programming in 1947 by the mathematician George B. Dantzig.
  169.  
  170. Then in 1948, the transistor, invented by J. Bardeen, W.H. Brattain, and W. Shockley,
  171. promised great expansion of the computer field by reducing space and power
  172. requirements.
  173. With these three inventions under their direction, those in positions of power strongly
  174. suspected that it was possible for them to control the whole world with the push of a
  175. button.
  176. Immediately, the Rockefeller Foundation got in on the ground floor by making a fouryear
  177. grant to Harvard College, funding the Harvard Economic Research Project for the
  178. study of the structure of the American Economy.i
  179. One year later, in 1949, The United
  180. States Air Force joined in.
  181. In 1952 the grant period terminated, and a high-level meeting of the Elite was held to
  182. determine the next phase of social operations research. The Harvard project had been
  183. very fruitful, as is borne out by the publication of some of its results in 1953 suggesting
  184. the feasibility of economic (social) engineering.
  185. Engineered in the last half of the decade of the 1940's, the new Quiet War machine stood,
  186. so to speak, in sparkling gold-plated hardware on the showroom floor by 1954.
  187. With the creation of the maser in 1954, the promise of unlocking unlimited sources of
  188. fusion atomic energy from the heavy hydrogen in sea water and the consequent
  189. availability of unlimited social power was a possibility only decades away.
  190. The combination was irresistible.
  191. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  192. Page 6
  193. The Quiet War was quietly declared by the International Elite at a meeting held in 1954.
  194. Although the silent weapons system was nearly exposed 13 years later, the evolution of
  195. the new weapon-system has never suffered any major setbacks.
  196. This volume marks the 25th anniversary of the beginning of the Quiet War. Already this
  197. domestic war has had many victories on many fronts throughout the world.
  198. Political Introduction
  199. In 1954 it was well recognized by those in positions of authority that it was only a matter
  200. of time, only a few decades, before the general public would be able to grasp and upset
  201. the cradle of power, for the very elements of the new silent-weapon technology were as
  202. accessible for a public utopia as they were for providing a private utopia.
  203. The issue of primary concern that of dominance, revolved around the subject of the
  204. energy sciences.
  205. Energy
  206. Energy is recognized as the key to all activity on earth. Natural science is the study of the
  207. sources and control of natural energy, and social science, theoretically expressed as
  208. economics, is the study of the sources and control of social energy. Both are bookkeeping
  209. systems: mathematics. Therefore, mathematics is the primary energy science. And the
  210. bookkeeper can be king if the public can be kept ignorant of the methodology of the
  211. bookkeeping.
  212. All science is merely a means to an end. The means is knowledge. The end is control.
  213. Beyond this remains only one issue: Who will be the beneficiary?
  214. In 1954 this was the issue of primary concern. Although the so-called "moral issues"
  215. were raised, in view of the law of natural selection [1
  216. ] it was agreed that a nation or world
  217. of people who will not use their intelligence are no better than animals who do not have
  218. intelligence. Such people are beasts of burden and steaks on the table by choice and
  219. consent.
  220. Consequently, in the interest of future world order, peace, and tranquility, it was decided
  221. to privately wage a quiet war against the American public with an ultimate objective of
  222. permanently shifting the natural and social energy (wealth) of the undisciplined and
  223. irresponsible many into the hands of the self-disciplined, responsible, and worthy few.
  224. In order to implement this objective, it was necessary to create, secure, and apply new
  225. weapons which, as it turned out, were a class of weapons so subtle and sophisticated in
  226. their principle of operation and public appearance as to earn for themselves the name
  227. "silent weapons".
  228.  
  229. [
  230. 1
  231. This concept was never more than a questionable theory of elitist Charles Darwin]
  232. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  233. Page 7
  234. In conclusion, the objective of economic research, as conducted by the magnates of
  235. capital (banking) and the industries of commodities (goods) and services, is the
  236. establishment of an economy which is totally predictable and manipulatable.
  237. In order to achieve a totally predictable economy, the low-class elements of society must
  238. be brought under total control, i.e., must be housebroken, trained, and assigned a yoke
  239. and long-term social duties from a very early age, before they have an opportunity to
  240. question the propriety of the matter. In order to achieve such conformity, the lower-class
  241. family unit must be disintegrated by a process of increasing preoccupation of the parents
  242. and the establishment of government-operated day-care centers for the occupationally
  243. orphaned children.
  244. The quality of education given to the lower class must be of the poorest sort, so that the
  245. moat of ignorance isolating the inferior class from the superior class is and remains
  246. incomprehensible to the inferior class. With such an initial handicap, even bright lower
  247. class individuals have little if any hope of extricating themselves from their assigned lot
  248. in life. This form of slavery is essential to maintain some measure of social order, peace,
  249. and tranquility for the ruling upper class.
  250.  
  251.  
  252. Descriptive Introduction of the Silent Weapon
  253. Everything that is expected from an ordinary weapon is expected from a silent weapon by
  254. its creators, but only in its own manner of functioning.
  255. It shoots situations, instead of bullets; propelled by data processing, instead of chemical
  256. reaction (explosion); originating from bits of data, instead of grains of gunpowder; from a
  257. computer, instead of a gun; operated by a computer programmer, instead of a marksman;
  258. under the orders of a banking magnate, instead of a military general.
  259. It makes no obvious explosive noises, causes no obvious physical or mental injuries, and
  260. does not obviously interfere with anyone's daily social life.
  261. Yet it makes an unmistakable "noise," causes unmistakable physical and mental damage,
  262. and unmistakably interferes with the daily social life, i.e., unmistakable to a trained
  263. observer, one who knows what to look for.
  264. The public cannot comprehend this weapon, and therefore cannot believe that they are
  265. being attacked and subdued by a weapon.
  266. The public might instinctively feel that something is wrong, but that is because of the
  267. technical nature of the silent weapon, they cannot express their feeling in a rational way,
  268. or handle the problem with intelligence. Therefore, they do not know how to cry for help,
  269. and do not know how to associate with others to defend themselves against it.
  270. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  271. Page 8
  272. When a silent weapon is applied gradually, the public adjusts/adapts to its presence and
  273. learns to tolerate its encroachment on their lives until the pressure (psychological via
  274. economic) becomes too great and they crack up.
  275. Therefore, the silent weapon is a type of biological warfare. It attacks the vitality,
  276. options, and mobility of the individuals of a society by knowing, understanding,
  277. manipulating, and attacking their sources of natural and social energy, and their physical,
  278. mental, and emotional strengths and weaknesses.
  279.  
  280. Theoretical Introduction
  281. Give me control over a nation's currency, and I care not who makes its laws.
  282. -- Mayer Amshel Rothschild (1743-1812)
  283. Today's silent weapons technology is an outgrowth of a simple idea discovered,
  284. succinctly expressed, and effectively applied by the quoted Mr. Mayer Amschel
  285. Rothschild. Mr. Rothschild discovered the missing passive component of economic
  286. theory known as economic inductance. He, of course, did not think of his discovery in
  287. these 20th-century terms, and, to be sure, mathematical analysis had to wait for the
  288. Second Industrial Revolution, the rise of the theory of mechanics and electronics, and
  289. finally, the invention of the electronic computer before it could be effectively applied in
  290. the control of the world economy.
  291. General Energy Concepts
  292. In the study of energy systems, there always appears three elementary concepts. These
  293. are potential energy, kinetic energy, and energy dissipation. And corresponding to these
  294. concepts, there are three idealized, essentially pure physical counterparts called passive
  295. components.
  296. (1) In the science of physical mechanics, the phenomenon of potential energy is
  297. associated with a physical property called elasticity or stiffness, and can be represented
  298. by a stretched spring. In electronic science, potential energy is stored in a capacitor
  299. instead of a spring. This property is called capacitance instead of elasticity or stiffness.
  300. (2) In the science of physical mechanics, the phenomenon of kinetic energy is
  301. associated with a physical property called inertia or mass, and can be represented by a
  302. mass or a flywheel in motion.
  303. In electronic science, kinetic energy is stored in an inductor (in a magnetic field)
  304. instead of a mass. This property is called inductance instead of inertia.
  305. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  306. Page 9
  307. (3) In the science of physical mechanics, the phenomenon of energy dissipation is
  308. associated with a physical property called friction or resistance, and can be represented
  309. by a dashpot or other device which converts energy into heat. In electronic science,
  310. dissipation of energy is performed by an element called either a resistor or a conductor,
  311. the term "resistor" being the one generally used to describe a more ideal device (e.g.,
  312. wire) employed to convey electronic energy efficie ntly from one location to another. The
  313. property of a resistance or conductor is measured as either resistance or conductance
  314. reciprocals.
  315. In economics these three energy concepts are associated with:
  316. 1. Economic Capacitance - Capital (money, stock/inventory, investments in buildings
  317. and durables, etc.)
  318. 2. Economic Conductance - Goods (production flow coefficients)
  319. 3. Economic Inductance - Services (the influence of the population of industry on
  320. output)
  321. All of the mathematical theory developed in the study of one energy system (e.g.,
  322. mechanics, electronics, etc.) can be immediately applied in the study of any other energy
  323. system (e.g., economics).
  324. Mr. Rothschild's Energy Discovery
  325. What Mr. Rothschild had discovered was the basic principle of power, influence, and
  326. control over people as applied to economics. That principle is "when you assume the
  327. appearance of power, people soon give it to you."
  328. Mr. Rothschild had discovered that currency or deposit loan accounts had the required
  329. appearance of power that could be used to induce people (inductance, with people
  330. corresponding to a magnetic field) into surrendering their real wealth in exchange for a
  331. promise of greater wealth (instead of real compensation). They would put up real
  332. collateral in exchange for a loan of promissory notes. Mr. Rothschild found that he could
  333. issue more notes than he had backing for, so long as he had someone's stock of gold as a
  334. persuader to show his customers.
  335. Mr. Rothschild loaned his promissory notes to individuals and to governments. These
  336. would create overconfidence. Then he would make money scarce, tighten control of the
  337. system, and collect the collateral through the obligation of contracts. The cycle was then
  338. repeated. These pressures could be used to ignite a war. Then he would control the
  339. availability of currency to determine who would win the war. That government which
  340. agreed to give him control of its economic system got his support.
  341. Collection of debts was guaranteed by economic aid to the enemy of the debtor. The
  342. profit derived from this economic methodology made Mr. Rothschild all the more able to
  343. expand his wealth. He found that the public greed would allow currency to be printed by
  344. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  345. Page 10
  346. government order beyond the limits (inflation) of backing in precious metal or the
  347. production of goods and services.
  348.  
  349. Apparent Capital as "Paper" Inductor
  350. In this structure, credit, presented as a pure element called "currency," has the appearance
  351. of capital, but is in effect negative capital. Hence, it has the appearance of service, but is
  352. in fact, indebtedness or debt. It is therefore an economic inductance instead of an
  353. economic capacitance, and if balanced in no other way, will be balanced by the negation
  354. of population (war, genocide). The total goods and services represent real capital called
  355. the gross national product, and currency may be printed up to this level and still represent
  356. economic capacitance; but currency printed beyond this level is subtractive, represents
  357. the introduction of economic inductance, and constitutes notes of indebtedness.
  358. War is therefore the balancing of the system by killing the true creditors (the public
  359. which we have taught to exchange true value for inflated currency) and falling back on
  360. whatever is left of the resources of nature and regeneration of those resources.
  361. Mr. Rothschild had discovered that currency gave him the power to rearrange the
  362. economic structure to his own advantage, to shift economic inductance to those economic
  363. positions, which would encourage the greatest economic instability and oscillation.
  364. The final key to economic control had to wait until there was sufficient data and highspeed
  365. computing equipment to keep close watch on the economic oscillations created by
  366. price shocking and excess paper energy credits - paper inductance/inflation .
  367. Breakthrough
  368. The aviation field provided the greatest evolution in economic engineering by way of the
  369. mathematical theory of shock testing. In this process, a projectile is fired from an
  370. airframe on the ground and the impulse of the recoil is monitored by vibration
  371. transducers connected to the airframe and wired to chart recorders.
  372. By studying the echoes or reflections of the recoil impulse in the airframe, it is possible
  373. to discover critical vibrations in the structure of the airframe which either vibrations of
  374. the engine or aeolian vibrations of the wings, or a combination of the two, might
  375. reinforce resulting in a resonant self-destruction of the airframe in flight as an aircraft.
  376. From the standpoint of engineering, this means that the strengths and weaknesses of the
  377. structure of the airframe in terms of vibrational energy can be discovered and
  378. manipulated.
  379.  
  380. Application in Economics
  381. To use this method of airframe shock testing in economic engineering, the prices of
  382. commodities are shocked, and the public consumer reaction is monitored. The resulting
  383. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  384. Page 11
  385. echoes of the economic shock are interpreted theoretically by computers and the psychoeconomic
  386. structure of the economy is thus discovered. It is by this process that partial
  387. differential and difference matrices are discovered that define the family household and
  388. make possible its evaluation as an economic industry (dissipative consumer structure).
  389. Then the response of the household to future shocks can be predicted and manipulated,
  390. and society becomes a well-regulated animal with its reins under the control of a
  391. sophisticated computer-regulated social energy bookkeeping system.
  392. Eventually every individual element of the structure comes under computer control
  393. through a knowledge of personal preferences, such knowledge guaranteed by computer
  394. association of consumer preferences (universal product code, UPC; zebra-striped pricing
  395. codes on packages) with identified consumers (identified via association with the use of a
  396. credit card and later a permanent "tattooed" body number invisible under normal ambient
  397. illumination).
  398.  
  399. Summary
  400. Economics is only a social extension of a natural energy system. It, also, has its three
  401. passive components. Because of the distribution of wealth and the lack of communication
  402. and lack of data, this field has been the last energy field for which a knowledge of these
  403. three passive components has been developed.
  404. Since energy is the key to all activity on the face of the earth, it follows that in order to
  405. attain a monopoly of energy, raw materials, goods, and services and to establish a world
  406. system of slave labor, it is necessary to have a first strike capability in the field of
  407. economics. In order to maintain our position, it is necessary that we have absolute first
  408. knowledge of the science of control over all economic factors and the first experience at
  409. engineering the world economy.
  410. In order to achieve such sovereignty, we must at least achieve this one end: that the
  411. public will not make either the logical or mathematical connection between economics
  412. and the other energy sciences or learn to apply such knowledge.
  413. This is becoming increasingly difficult to control because more and more businesses are
  414. making demands upon their computer programmers to create and apply mathematical
  415. models for the management of those businesses.
  416. It is only a matter of time before the new breed of private programmer/economists will
  417. catch on to the far-reaching implications of the work begun at Harvard in 1948. The
  418. speed with which they can communicate their warning to the public will largely depend
  419. upon how effective we have been at controlling the media, subverting education, and
  420. keeping the public distracted with matters of no real importance.
  421.  
  422. The Economic Model
  423. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  424. Page 12
  425. Economics, as a social energy science has as a first objective the description of the
  426. complex way in which any given unit of resources is used to satisfy some economic want.
  427. (Leontief Matrix). This first objective, when it is extended to get the most product from
  428. the least or limited resources, comprises that objective of general military and industrial
  429. logistics known as Operations Research. (See simplex method of linear programming.)
  430. The Harvard Economic Research Project (1948-) was an extension of World War II
  431. Operations Research. Its purpose was to discover the science of controlling an economy:
  432. at first the American economy, and then the world economy. It was felt that with
  433. sufficient mathematical foundation and data, it would be nearly as easy to predict and
  434. control the trend of an economy as to predict and control the trajectory of a projectile.
  435. Such has proven to be the case. Moreover, the economy has been transformed into a
  436. guided missile on target.
  437. The immediate aim of the Harvard project was to discover the economic structure, what
  438. forces change that structure, how the behavior of the structure can be predicted, and how
  439. it can be manipulated. What was needed was a well-organized knowledge of the
  440. mathematical structures and interrelationships of investment, production, distribution,
  441. and consumption.
  442. To make a short story of it all, it was discovered that an economy obeyed the same laws
  443. as electricity and that all of the mathematical theory and practical and computer knowhow
  444. developed for the electronic field could be directly applied in the study of
  445. economics. This discovery was not openly declared, and its more subtle implications
  446. were and are kept a closely guarded secret, for example that in an economic model,
  447. human life is measured in dollars, and that the electric spark generated when opening a
  448. switch connected to an active inductor is mathematically analogous to the initiation of
  449. war.
  450. The greatest hurdle which theoretical economists faced was the accurate description of
  451. the household as an industry. This is a challenge because consumer purchases are a
  452. matter of choice which in turn is influenced by income, price, and other economic
  453. factors.
  454. This hurdle was cleared in an indirect and statistically approximate way by an application
  455. of shock testing to determine the current characteristics, called current technical
  456. coefficients, of a household industry
  457. Finally, because problems in theoretical electronics can be translated very easily into
  458. problems of theoretical electronics, and the solution translated back again, it follows that
  459. only a book of language translation and concept definition needed to be written for
  460. economics. The remainder could be gotten from standard works on mathematics and
  461. electronics. This makes the publication of books on advanced economics unnecessary,
  462. and greatly simplifies project security.
  463. Industrial Diagrams
  464. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  465. Page 13
  466. An ideal industry is defined as a device which receives value from other industries in
  467. several forms and converts them into one specific product for sales and distribution to
  468. other industries. It has several inputs and one output. What the public normally thinks of
  469. as one industry is really an industrial complex, where several industries under one roof
  470. produce one or more products.
  471. A pure (single output) industry can be represented oversimply by a circuit block as
  472. follows:
  473. The flow of product from industry #1 (supply) to industry #2 (demand) is denoted by
  474. 112. The total flow out of industry "K" is denoted by Ik (sales, etc.).
  475. A three industry network can be diagrammed as follows:
  476. A node is a symbol of collection and distribution of flow. Node #3 receives from industry
  477. #3 and distributes to industries #1 and #3. If industry #3 manufactures chairs, then a flow
  478. from industry #3 back to industry #3 simply indicates that industry #3 is using part of its
  479. own output product, for example, as office furniture. Therefore the flow may be
  480. summarized by the equations:
  481. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  482. Page 14
  483. Three Industrial Classes
  484. Industries fall into three categories or classes by type of output:
  485. Class #1 - Capital (resources)
  486. Class #2 - Goods (commodities or use - dissipative)
  487. Class #3 - Services (action of population
  488. Class #1 industries exist at three levels:
  489. (1) Nature - sources of energy and raw materials.
  490. (2) Government - printing of currency equal to the gross national product (GNP), and
  491. extension of currency in excess of GNP.
  492. (3) Banking - loaning of money for interest, and extension (inflation/counterfeiting) of
  493. economic value through the deposit loan accounts.
  494. Class #2 industries exist as producers of tangible or consumer (dissipated) products. This
  495. sort of activity is usually recognized and labeled by the public as "industry."
  496. Class #3 industries are those which have service rather than a tangible product as their
  497. output. These industries are called (1) households, and (2) governments. Their output is
  498. human activity of a mechanical sort, and their basis is population.
  499.  
  500. Aggregation
  501. The whole economic system can be represented by a three-industry model if one allows
  502. the names of the outputs to be (1) capital, (2) goods, and (3) services. The problem with
  503. this representation is that it would not show the influence, say, the textile industry on the
  504. ferrous metal industry. This is because both the textile industry and the ferrous metal
  505. industry would be contained within a single classification called the "goods industry" and
  506. by this process of combining or aggregating these two industries under one system block
  507. they would lose their economic individuality.
  508.  
  509. The E-Model
  510. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  511. Page 15
  512. A national economy consists of simultaneous flows of production, distribution,
  513. consumption, and investment. If all of these elements including labor and human
  514. functions are assigned a numerical value in like units of measure, say, 1939 dollars, then t
  515. his flow can be further represented by a current flow in an electronic circuit, and its
  516. behavior can be predicted and manipulated with useful precision.
  517. The three ideal passive energy components of electronics, the capacitor, the resistor, and
  518. the inductor correspond to the three ideal passive energy components of economics called
  519. the pure industries of capital, goods, and services, respectively:
  520. ∗ Economic capacitance represents the storage of capital in one form or another.
  521. ∗ Economic conductance represents the level of conductance of materials for the
  522. production of goods.
  523. ∗ Economic inductance represents the inertia of economic value in motion. This is a
  524. population phenomenon known as services.
  525. Economic Inductance
  526. An electrical inductor (e.g., a coil or wire) has an electric current as its primary
  527. phenomenon and a magnetic field as its secondary phenomenon (inertia). Corresponding
  528. to this, an economic inductor has a flow of economic value as its primary phenome non
  529. and a population field as its secondary field phenomenon of inertia. When the flow of
  530. economic value (e.g., money) diminishes, the human population field collapses in order
  531. to keep the economic value (money) flowing (extreme case - war).
  532. This public inertia is a result of consumer buying habits, expected standard of living, etc.,
  533. and is generally a phenomenon of self-preservation.
  534. Inductive Factors to Consider
  535. (1) Population
  536. (2) Magnitude of the economic activities of the government
  537. (3) The method of financing these government activities (See Peter-Paul Principle -
  538. inflation of the currency.)
  539. Translation
  540. (a few examples will be given)
  541. • Charge: Coulombs Dollars (1939)
  542. • Flow/Current: Amperes (coulombs/ second) Dollars of flow per year
  543. • Motivating Force: Volts; Dollars (output) demand
  544. • Conductance: Amperes per volt; Dollars of flow per year per dollar demand
  545. • Capacitance: Coulombs per volt: Dollars of production inventory/ stocks per
  546. dollar demand
  547. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  548. Page 16
  549. Time Flow Relationships and Self-Destructive Oscillations
  550. An ideal industry may be symbolized electronically in various ways. The simplest way is
  551. to represent a demand by a voltage and a supply by a current. When this is done, the
  552. relationship between the two becomes what is called an admittance, which can result
  553. from three economic factors: (1) foresight flow, (2) present flow, and (3) hindsight flow.
  554. 1. Foresight flow is the result of that property of living entities to cause energy (food) to
  555. be stored for a period of low energy (e.g., a winter season). It consists of demands made
  556. upon an economic system for that period of low energy (winter season).
  557. In a production industry it takes several forms, one of which is known as production
  558. stock or inventory. In electronic symbology this specific industry demand (a pure capital
  559. industry) is represented by capacitance and the stock or resource is represented by a
  560. stored charge. Satisfaction of an industry demand suffers a lag because of the loading
  561. effect of inventory priorities.
  562. 2. Present flow ideally involves no delays. It is, so to speak, input today for output
  563. today, a "hand to mouth" flow. In electronic symbology, this specific industry demand (a
  564. pure us industry) is represented by a conductance which is then a simple economic valve
  565. (a dissipative element).
  566. 3. Hindsight flow is known as habit or inertia. In electronics this phenomenon is the
  567. characteristic of an inductor (economic analog = a pure service industry) in which a
  568. current flow (economic analog = flow of money) creates a magnetic field (economic
  569. analog = active human population) which, if the current (money flow) begins to diminish,
  570. collapse (war) to maintain the current (flow of money - energy).
  571. Other large alternatives to war as economic inductors or economic flywheels are an openended
  572. social welfare program, or an enormous (but fruitful) open-ended space program.
  573. The problem with stabilizing the economic system is that there is too much demand on
  574. account of (1) too much greed and (2) too much population.
  575. This creates excessive economic inductance which can only be balanced with economic
  576. capacitance (true resources or value - e.g., in goods or services).
  577. The social welfare program is nothing more than an open-ended credit balance system
  578. which creates a false capital industry to give nonproductive people a roof over their heads
  579. and food in their stomachs. This can be useful, however, because the recipients become
  580. state property in return for the "gift," a standing army for the elite. For he who pays the
  581. piper picks the tune.
  582. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  583. Page 17
  584. Those who get hooked on the economic drug must go to the elite for a fix. In this, the
  585. method of introducing large amounts of stabilizing capacitance is by borrowing on the
  586. future "credit" of the world. This is a fourth law of motion - onset, and consists of
  587. performing an action and leaving the system before the reflected reaction returns to the
  588. point of action - a delayed reaction.
  589. The means of surviving the reaction is by changing the system before the reaction can
  590. return. By this means, politicians become more popular in their own time and the public
  591. pays later. In fact, the measure of such a politician is the delay time.
  592. The same thing is achieved by a government by printing money beyond the limit of the
  593. gross national product, and economic process called inflation. This puts a large quantity
  594. of money into the hands of the public and maintains a balance against their greed, creates
  595. a false self-confidence in them and, for awhile, stays the wolf from the door.
  596. They must eventually resort to war to balance the account, because war ultimately is
  597. merely the act of destroying the creditor, and the politicians are the publicly hired hit men
  598. that justify the act to keep the responsibility and blood off the public conscience. (See
  599. section on consent factors and social-economic structuring.)
  600. If the people really cared about their fellow man, they would control their appetites
  601. (greed, procreation, etc.) so that they would not have to operate on a credit or welfare
  602. social system which steals from the worker to satisfy the bum.
  603. Since most of the general public will not exercise restraint, there are only two alternatives
  604. to reduce the economic inductance of the system.
  605. 1. Let the populace bludgeon each other to death in war, which will only result in a
  606. total destruction of the living earth.
  607. 2. Take control of the world by the use of economic "silent weapons" in a form of
  608. "quiet warfare" and reduce the economic inductance of the world to a safe level by
  609. a process of benevolent slavery and genocide.
  610. The latter option has been taken as the obviously better option. At this point it should be
  611. crystal clear to the reader why absolute secrecy about the silent weapons is necessary.
  612. The general public refuses to improve its own mentality and its faith in its fellow man. It
  613. has become a herd of proliferating barbarians, and, so to speak, a blight upon the face of
  614. the earth.
  615. They do not care enough about economic science to learn why they have not been able to
  616. avoid war despite religious morality, and their religious or self-gratifying refusal to deal
  617. with earthly problems renders the solution of the earthly problem unreachable to them.
  618. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  619. Page 18
  620. It is left to those few who are truly willing to think and survive as the fittest to survive, to
  621. solve the problem for themselves as the few who really care. Otherwise, exposure of the
  622. silent weapon would destroy our only hope of preserving the seed of the future true
  623. humanity.
  624. Industry Equivalent Circuits
  625. The industry 'Q' can be given a block symbol as follows:
  626. Terminals #1 through #m are connected directly to the outputs of industries #1 and #m,
  627. respectively.
  628. The equivalent circuit of industry 'Q' is given as follows:
  629. Characteristics:
  630. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  631. Page 19
  632. All inputs are at zero volts.
  633. A - Amplifier - causes output current IQ to be represented by a voltage EQ. Amplifier
  634. delivers sufficient current at EQ to drive all loads Y10 through YmQ and sink all currents
  635. i1Q through imQ.
  636. The unit transconductance amplifier AQ is constructed as follows:
  637. * Arrow denotes the direction of the flow of capital, goods, and services. The total
  638. demand is given as EQ, where EQ=IQ.
  639. The coupling network YPQ symbolizes the demand which industry Q makes on industry
  640. P. the connective admittance YPQ is called the 'technical coefficient' of the industry Q
  641. stating the demand of industry Q, called the industry of use, for the output in capital,
  642. goods, or services of industry P called the industry of origin.
  643. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  644. Page 20
  645. The flow of commodities from industry P to industry Q is given by iPQ evaluated by the
  646. formula:
  647. iPQ = YPQ* EQ.
  648. When the admittance YPQ is a simple conductance, this formula takes on the common
  649. appearance of Ohm's Law,
  650. iPQ = gPQ* IQ.
  651. The interconnection of a three industry system can be diagrammed as follows. The blocks
  652. of the industry diagram can be opened up revealing the technical coefficients, and a much
  653. simpler format. The equations of flow are given as follows:
  654. Stages of Schematic Simplification
  655. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  656. Page 21
  657. Generalization
  658. All of this may now be summarized.
  659. Let Ij represent the output of industry j, and
  660. * ijk, the amount of the product of industry j absorbed annually by industry k, and
  661. * ijo, the amount of the same product j made available for 'outside' use. Then
  662. Substituting the technical coefficiences, yjk
  663. which is the general equation of every admittance in the industry circuit.
  664. Final Bill of Goods
  665. is called the final bill of goods or the bill of final demand, and is zero when the system
  666. can be closed by the evaluation of the technical coefficients of the 'non-productive'
  667. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  668. Page 22
  669. industries, government and households. Households may be regarded as a productive
  670. industry with labor as its output product.
  671. The Technical Coefficients
  672. The quantities yjk are called the technical coefficients of the industrial system. They are
  673. admittances and can consist of any combination of three passive parameters,
  674. conductance, capacitance, and inductance. Diodes are used to make the flow
  675. unidirectional and point against the flow.
  676. * gjk = economic conductance, absorption coefficient
  677. * yjk = economic capacitance, capital coefficient
  678. * Ljk = economic inductance, human activity coefficient
  679. Types of Admittances
  680. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  681. Page 23
  682. The Household Industry
  683.  
  684. The industries of finance (banking), manufacturing, and government, real counterparts of
  685. the pure industries of capital, goods, and services, are easily defined because they are
  686. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  687. Page 24
  688. generally logically structured. Because of this their processes can be described
  689. mathematically and their technical coefficients can be easily deduced. This, however, is
  690. not the case with the service industry known as the household industry.
  691.  
  692. Household Models
  693. When the industry flow diagram is represented by a 2-block system of households on the
  694. right and all other industries on the left, the following results:
  695. The arrows from left to right labeled A, B, C, etc., denote flow of economic value from
  696. the industries in the left hand block to the industry in the right hand block called
  697. 'households'. These may be thought of as the monthly consumer flows of the following
  698. commodities. A - alcoholic beverages, B - beef, C - coffee, . . . . , U - unknown, etc. . .
  699. The problem which a theoretical economist faces is that the consumer preferences of any
  700. household is not easily predictable and the technical coefficients of any one household
  701. tend to be a nonlinear, very complex, and variable function of income, prices, etc.
  702. Computer information derived from the use of the universal product code in conjuction
  703. with credit-card purchase as an individual household identifier could change this state of
  704. affairs, but the U.P.C. method is not yet available on a national or even a significant
  705. regional scale. To compensate for this data deficiency, an alternate indirect approach of
  706. analysis has been adopted known as economic shock testing. This method, widely used in
  707. the aircraft manufacturing industry, develops an aggregate statistical sort of data.
  708. Applied to economics, this means that all of the households in one region or in the
  709. whole nation are studied as a group or class rather than individually, and the mass
  710. behavior rather than the individual behavior is used to discover useful estimates of
  711. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  712. Page 25
  713. the technical coefficients governing the economic structure of the hypothetical singlehousehold
  714. industry...
  715. Notice in the industry flow diagram that the values for the flows A, B, C, etc. are
  716. accessible to measurement in terms of selling prices and total sales of commodities.
  717. One method of evaluating the technical coefficients of the household industry depends
  718. upon shocking the prices of a commodity and noting the changes in the sales of all of the
  719. commodities.
  720.  
  721. Economic Shock Testing
  722. In recent times, the application of Operations Research to the study of the public
  723. economy has been obvious for anyone who understands the principles of shock testing.
  724. In the shock testing of an aircraft airframe, the recoil impulse of firing a gun mounted on
  725. that airframe causes shock waves in that structure which tell aviation engineers the
  726. conditions under which some parts of the airplane or the whole airplane or its wings will
  727. start to vibrate or flutter like a guitar string, a flute reed, or a tuning fork, and disintegrate
  728. or fall apart in flight.
  729. Economic engineers achieve the same result in studying the behavior of the economy and
  730. the consumer public by carefully selecting a staple commodity such as beef, coffee,
  731. gasoline, or sugar, and then causing a sudden change or shock in its price or availability,
  732. thus kicking everybody's budget and buying habits out of shape.
  733. They then observe the shock waves which result by monitoring the changes in
  734. advertising, prices, and sales of that and other commodities.
  735. The objective of such studies is to acquire the know-how to set the public economy into a
  736. predictable state of motion or change, even a controlled self-destructive state of motion
  737. which will convince the public that certain "expert" people should take control of the
  738. money system and reestablish security (rather than liberty and justice) for all. When the
  739. subject citizens are rendered unable to control their financial affairs, they, of course,
  740. become totally enslaved, a source of cheap labor.
  741. Not only the prices of commodities, but also the availability of labor can be used as
  742. the means of shock testing. Labor strikes deliver excellent tests shocks to an economy,
  743. especially in the critical service areas of trucking (transportation), communication,
  744. public utilities (energy, water, garbage collection), etc.
  745. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  746. Page 26
  747. By shock testing, it is found that there is a direct relationship between the availability of
  748. money flowing in an economy and the real psychological outlook and response of masses
  749. of people dependent upon that availability.
  750. For example, there is a measurable quantitative relationship between the price of gasoline
  751. and the probability that a person would experience a headache, feel a need to watch a
  752. violent movie, smoke a cigarette, or go to a tavern for a mug of beer.
  753. It is most interesting that, by observing and measuring the economic models by which the
  754. public tries to run from their problems and escape from reality, and by applying the
  755. mathematical theory of Operations Research, it is possible to program computers to
  756. predict the most probable combination of created events (shocks) which will bring about
  757. a complete control and subjugation of the public through a subversion of the public
  758. economy (by shaking the plum tree).
  759. Introduction to the Theory of Economic Shock Testing
  760. Let the prices and total sales of commodities be given and symbolized as follows:
  761. Commodities Price Function Total Sales
  762. alcoholic beverages A fA
  763. beef B fB
  764. coffee C fC
  765. gasoline G fG
  766. sugar S fS
  767. tobacco T fT
  768. unknown balance U fU
  769. Let us assume a simple economic model in which the total number of important (staple)
  770. commodities are represented as beef, gasoline, and an aggregate of all other staple
  771. commodities which we will call the hypothetical miscellaneous staple commodity 'M'
  772. (e.g., M is an aggregate of C, S, T, U, etc.).
  773. Example of Shock Testing
  774. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  775. Page 27
  776. Assume that the total sales, P, of petroleum products can be described by the linear
  777. function of the quantities B, G, and M, which are functions of the prices of those
  778. respective commodities.
  779. P = aPG B + aPG G + aPM M
  780. Then where B, G, and M are functions of the prices of beef, gasoline, and miscellaneous,
  781. respectively, and aPB, aPG, and aPM are constant coefficients defining the amount by
  782. which each of the functions B, G, and M affect the sales, P, of petroleum products. We
  783. are assuming that B, G, and M are variables independent of each other.
  784. If the availability or price of gasoline is suddenly changed, then G must be replaced by G
  785. + Δ G. This causes a change in the petroleum sales from P to P + Δ P. Also we will
  786. assume that B and M remain constant when G changes to G + Δ G.
  787. (P + Δ P) = aPB B + aPG (G + Δ G) + aPM M.
  788. Expanding upon this expression, we get
  789. P + Δ P = aPB B + aPG G + aPG Δ G + aPM M
  790. and subtracting the original value of P we get for the change in P
  791. Change in P = Δ P = aPG Δ G
  792. Dividing by Δ G we get
  793. aPG = Δ P / Δ G .
  794. This is a rate of change in P due only to an isolated change in G, G.
  795. In general, ajk is the partial rate of change in the sales effect j due to a change in the
  796. causal price function of commodity k. If the interval of time were infinitesimal, this
  797. expression would be reduced to the definition of the total differential of a function, P.
  798. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  799. Page 28
  800. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  801. Page 29
  802. When the price of gasoline is shocked, all of the coefficients with round G (2G) in the
  803. denominator are evaluated at the same time. If B, G, and M were independent, and
  804. sufficient for description of the economy, then three shock tests would be necessary to
  805. evaluate the system.
  806. There are other factors which may be represented the same way.
  807. For example, the tendency of a docile sub-nation to withdraw under economic pressure
  808. may be given by
  809. where G is the price of gasoline, WP is the dollars spent per unit time (referenced to say
  810. 1939) for war production during 'peace' time, etc. These quantities are presented to a
  811. computer in matrix format as follows:
  812. and
  813. X1 = G Y1 = P - KP
  814. X2 = B Y2 = F - KF
  815. X3 = etc. Y3 = etc.
  816. Finally, inverting this matrix, i.e., solving for the Xk terms of the Yj, we get, say,
  817. [bkj] [Yj ] = [Xk]
  818. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  819. Page 30
  820. This is the result into which we substitute to get that set of conditions of prices of
  821. commodities, bad news on TV, etc., which will deliver a collapse of public morale ripe
  822. for take over.
  823. Once the economic price and sales coefficients ajk and bkj are determined, they may be
  824. translated into the technical supply and demand coefficients gjk, Cjk, and 1/Ljk.
  825. Shock testing of a given commodity is then repeated to get the time rate of change of
  826. these technical coefficients.
  827. Introduction to Economic Amplifiers
  828.  
  829. Economic amplifiers are the active components of economic engineering. The basic
  830. characteristic of any amplifier (mechanical, electrical, or economic) is that it receives an
  831. input control signal and delivers energy from an independent energy source to a specified
  832. output terminal in a predictable relationship to that input control signal.
  833. The simplest form of an economic amplifier is a device called advertising.
  834. If a person is spoken to by a T.V. advertiser as if he were a twelve-year-old, then, due to
  835. suggestibility, he will, with a certain probability, respond or react to that suggestion with
  836. the uncritical response of a twelve-year-old and will reach in to his economic reservoir
  837. and deliver its energy to buy that product on impulse when he passes it in the store.
  838. An economic amplifier may have several inputs and output. Its response might be
  839. instantaneous or delayed. Its circuit symbol might be a rotary switch if its options are
  840. exclusive, qualitative, "go" or "no-go", or it might have its parametric input/ output
  841. relationships specified by a matrix with internal energy sources represented.
  842. Whatever its form might be, its purpose is to govern the flow of energy from a source to
  843. an output sink in direct relationship to an input control signal. For this reason, it is called
  844. an active circuit element or component.
  845. Economic Amplifiers fall into classes called strategies, and, in comparison with
  846. electronic amplifiers, the specific internal functions of an economic amplifier are called
  847. logistical instead of electrical.
  848. Therefore, economic amplifiers not only deliver power gain but also, in effect, are used to
  849. cause changes in the economic circuitry.
  850. In the design of an economic amplifier we must have some idea of at least five functions,
  851. which are:
  852. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  853. Page 31
  854. (1) the available input signals,
  855. (2) the desired output-control objectives,
  856. (3) the strategic objective,
  857. (4) the available economic power sources,
  858. (5) the logistical options.
  859. The process of defining and evaluating these factors and incorporating the economic
  860. amplifier into an economic system has been popularly called game theory.
  861. The design of an economic amplifier begins with a specification of the power level of the
  862. output, which can range from personal to national. The second condition is accuracy of
  863. response, i.e., how accurately the output action is a function of the input commands. High
  864. gain combined with strong feedback helps to deliver the required precision.
  865. Most of the error will be in the input data signal. Personal input data tends to be
  866. specified, while national input data tends to be statistical.
  867. Short List of Inputs
  868. Questions to be answered:
  869. * what
  870. * where
  871. * why
  872. * when
  873. * how
  874. * who
  875. General sources of information:
  876. * telephone taps
  877. * analysis of garbage
  878. * surveillance
  879. * behavior of children in school
  880. Standard of living by:
  881. * food
  882. * shelter
  883. * clothing
  884. * transportation
  885. Social contacts:
  886. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  887. Page 32
  888. * telephone - itemized record of calls
  889. * family - marriage certificates, birth certificates, etc.
  890. * friends, associates, etc.
  891. * memberships in organizations
  892. * political affiliation
  893. The Personal Paper Trail
  894. Personal buying habits, i.e., personal consumer preferences:
  895. * checking accounts
  896. * credit-card purchases
  897. * "tagged" credit-card purchases - the credit-card purchase of products bearing the
  898. U.P.C. (Universal Product Code)
  899. Assets:
  900. * checking accounts
  901. * savings accounts
  902. * real estate
  903. * business
  904. * automobile, etc.
  905. * safety deposit at bank
  906. * stock market
  907. Liabilities:
  908. * creditors
  909. * enemies (see - legal)
  910. * loans
  911. Government sources (ploys)*:
  912. * Welfare
  913. * Social Security
  914. * U.S.D.A. surplus food
  915. * doles
  916. * grants
  917. * subsidies
  918. * Principle of this ploy -- the citizen will almost always make the collection of
  919. information easy if he can operate on the "free sandwich principle" of "eat now, and pay
  920. later."
  921. Government sources (via intimidation):
  922. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  923. Page 33
  924. * Internal Revenue Service
  925. * OSHA
  926. * Census
  927. * etc.
  928. Other government sources -- surveillance of U.S. mail.
  929.  
  930. Habit Patterns -- Programming
  931. Strengths and weaknesses:
  932. * activities (sports, hobbies, etc.)
  933. * see "legal" (fear, anger, etc. -- crime record)
  934. * hospital records (drug sensitivities, reaction to pain, etc.)
  935. * psychiatric records (fears, angers, disgusts, adaptability, reactions to stimuli,
  936. violence,
  937. suggestibility or hypnosis, pain, pleasure, love, and sex)
  938. Methods of coping -- of adaptability -- behavior:
  939. * consumption of alcohol
  940. * consumption of drugs
  941. * entertainment
  942. * religious factors influencing behavior
  943. * other methods of escaping from reality
  944. Payment modus operandi (MO) -- pay on time, etc.:
  945. * payment of telephone bills
  946. * energy purchases
  947. * water purchases
  948. * repayment of loans
  949. * house payments
  950. * automobile payments
  951. * payments on credit cards
  952. Political sensitivity:
  953. * beliefs
  954. * contacts
  955. * position
  956. * strengths/weaknesses
  957. * projects/activities
  958. Legal inputs -- behavioral control (Excuses for investigation, search, arrest, or
  959. employment of force to modify behavior)
  960. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  961. Page 34
  962. * court records
  963. * police records -- NCIC
  964. * driving record
  965. * reports made to police
  966. * insurance information
  967. * anti-establishment acquaintances
  968. National Input Information
  969. Business sources (via I.R.S., etc):
  970. * prices of commodities
  971. * sales
  972. * investments in
  973. o stocks/inventory
  974. o production tools and machinery
  975. o buildings and improvements
  976. o the stock market
  977. Banks and credit bureaus:
  978. * credit information
  979. * payment information
  980. Miscellaneous sources:
  981. * polls and surveys
  982. * publications
  983. * telephone records
  984. * energy and utility purchases
  985. Short List of Outputs
  986. Outputs -- create controlled situations -- manipulation of the economy, hence society --
  987. control by control of compensation and income.
  988. Sequence:
  989. 1. allocates opportunities
  990. 2. destroys opportunities
  991. 3. controls the economic environment
  992. 4. controls the availability of raw materials
  993. 5. controls capital.
  994. 6. controls bank rates
  995. 7. controls the inflation of the currency
  996. 8. controls the possession of property
  997. 9. controls industrial capacity
  998. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  999. Page 35
  1000. 10. controls manufacturing
  1001. 11. controls the availability of goods (commodities).
  1002. 12. controls the prices of commodities.
  1003. 13. controls services, the labor force, etc.
  1004. 14. controls payments to government officials.
  1005. 15. controls the legal functions.
  1006. 16. controls the personal data files -- uncorrectable by the party slandered.
  1007. 17. controls advertising.
  1008. 18. controls media contact.
  1009. 19. controls material available for T.V. viewing
  1010. 20. disengages attention from real issues.
  1011. 21. engages emotions.
  1012. 22. creates disorder, chaos, and insanity.
  1013. 23. controls design of more probing tax forms.
  1014. 24. controls surveillance.
  1015. 25. controls the storage of information.
  1016. 26. develops psychological analyses and profiles of individuals.
  1017. 27. controls legal functions [repeat of 15]
  1018. 28. controls sociological factors.
  1019. 29. controls health options.
  1020. 30. preys on weakness.
  1021. 31. cripples strengths.
  1022. 32. leaches wealth and substance.
  1023. Table of Strategies
  1024.  
  1025. Do This To Get This
  1026. Keep the public ignorant Less public organization
  1027. Maintain access to control point for
  1028. feedback
  1029. Required reaction to outputs (prices, sales)
  1030. Create preoccupation Lower defense
  1031. Attack the family unit Control of the education of the young
  1032. Give less cash and more credit and doles More self-indulgence and more data
  1033. Attack the privacy of the church Destroy faith in this sort of government
  1034. Social conformity Computer programming simplicity
  1035. Minimize the tax protest Maximum economic data, minimum
  1036. enforcement problems
  1037. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1038. Page 36
  1039. Stabilize the consent Simplicity coefficients
  1040. Tighten control of variables Simpler computer input data - greater
  1041. predictability
  1042. Establish boundary conditions Problem simplicity/solutions of differential
  1043. and difference equations
  1044. Proper timing Less data shift and blurring
  1045. Maximize control Minimum resistance to control
  1046. Collapse of currency Destroy the faith of the American people in
  1047. each other
  1048. Diversion, the Primary Strategy
  1049. Experience has prevent that the simplest method of securing a silent weapon and gaining
  1050. control of the public is to keep the public undisciplined and ignorant of the basic system
  1051. principles on the one hand, while keeping them confused, disorganized, and distracted
  1052. with matters of no real importance on the other hand.
  1053. This is achieved by:
  1054. * disengaging their minds; sabotaging their mental activities; providing a low-quality
  1055. program of public education in mathematics, logic, systems design and economics;
  1056. and discouraging technical creativity.
  1057. * engaging their emotions, increasing their self-indulgence and their indulgence in
  1058. emotional and physical activities, by:
  1059. ο unrelenting emotional affrontations and attacks (mental and emotional rape) by
  1060. way of constant barrage of sex, violence, and wars in the media - especially the
  1061. T.V. and the newspapers.
  1062. ο giving them what they desire - in excess - "junk food for thought" - and
  1063. depriving them of what they really need.
  1064. * rewriting history and law and subjecting the public to the deviant creation, thus being
  1065. able to shift their thinking from personal needs to highly fabricated outside priorities.
  1066. These preclude their interest in and discovery of the silent weapons of social automation
  1067. technology.
  1068. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1069. Page 37
  1070. The general rule is that there is a profit in confusion; the more confusion, the more profit.
  1071. Therefore, the best approach is to create problems and then offer solutions.
  1072. Diversion Summary
  1073. Media: Keep the adult public attention diverted away from the real social issues, and
  1074. captivated by matters of no real importance.
  1075. Schools: Keep the young public ignorant of real mathematics, real economics, real law,
  1076. and real history.
  1077. Entertainment: Keep the public entertainment below a sixth-grade level.
  1078. Work: Keep the public busy, busy, busy, with no time to think; back on the farm with the
  1079. other animals.
  1080. Consent, the Primary Victory
  1081. A silent weapon system operates upon data obtained from a docile public by legal (but
  1082. not always lawful) force. Much information is made available to silent weapon systems
  1083. programmers through the Internal Revenue Service. (See Studies in the Structure of the
  1084. American Economy for an I.R.S. source list.)
  1085. This information consists of the enforced delivery of well-organized data contained in
  1086. federal and state tax forms, collected, assembled, and submitted by slave labor provided
  1087. by taxpayers and employers.
  1088. Furthermore, the number of such forms submitted to the I.R.S. is a useful indicator of
  1089. public consent, an important factor in strategic decision making. Other data sources are
  1090. given in the Short List of Inputs.
  1091. Consent Coefficients - numerical feedback indicating victory status. Psychological basis:
  1092. When the government is able to collect tax and seize private property without just
  1093. compensation, it is an indication that the public is ripe for surrender and is consenting to
  1094. enslavement and legal encroachment. A good and easily quantified indicator of harvest
  1095. time is the number of public citizens who pay income tax despite an obvious lack of
  1096. reciprocal or honest service from the government.
  1097. Amplification Energy Sources
  1098. The next step in the process of designing an economic amplifier is discovering the energy
  1099. sources. The energy sources which support any primitive economic system are, of course,
  1100. a supply of raw materials, and the consent of the people to labor and consequently
  1101. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1102. Page 38
  1103. assume a certain rank, position, level, or class in the social structure, i.e., to provide labor
  1104. at various levels in the pecking order.
  1105. Each class, in guaranteeing its own level of income, controls the class immediately below
  1106. it, hence preserves the class structure. This provides stability and security, but also
  1107. government from the top.
  1108. As time goes on and communication and education improve, the lower-class elements of
  1109. the social labor structure become knowledgeable and envious of the good things that the
  1110. upper-class members have. They also begin to attain a knowledge of energy systems and
  1111. the ability to enforce their rise through the class structure.
  1112. This threatens the sovereignty of the elite.
  1113. If this rise of the lower classes can be postponed long enough, the elite can achieve
  1114. energy dominance, and labor by consent no longer will hold a position of an essential
  1115. energy source.
  1116. Until such energy dominance is absolutely established, the consent of people to labor and
  1117. let others handle their affairs must be taken into consideration, since failure to do so
  1118. could cause the people to interfere in the final transfer of energy sources to the control of
  1119. the elite.
  1120. It is essential to recognize that at this time, public consent is still an essential key to the
  1121. release of energy in the process of economic amplification.
  1122. Therefore, consent as an energy release mechanism will now be considered.
  1123. Logistics
  1124. The successful application of a strategy requires a careful study of inputs, outputs, the
  1125. strategy connecting the inputs and the outputs, and the available energy sources to fuel
  1126. the strategy. This study is called logistics.
  1127. A logistical problem is studied at the elementary level first, and then levels of greater
  1128. complexity are studied as a synthesis of elementary factors.
  1129. This means that a given system is analyzed, i.e., broken down into its subsystems, and
  1130. these in turn are analyzed, until by this process, one arrives at the logistical "atom," the
  1131. individual.
  1132. This is where the process of synthesis properly begins, at the time of birth of the
  1133. individual.
  1134. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1135. Page 39
  1136. The Artificial Womb
  1137. From the time a person leaves its mother's womb, its every effort is directed towards
  1138. building, maintaining, and withdrawing into artificial wombs, various sorts of substitute
  1139. protective devices or shells.
  1140. The objective of these artificial wombs is to provide a stable environment for both stable
  1141. and unstable activity; to provide a shelter for the evolutionary processes of growth and
  1142. maturity - i.e., survival; to provide security for freedom and to provide defensive
  1143. protection for offensive activity.
  1144. This is equally true of both the general public and the elite. However, there is a definite
  1145. difference in the way each of these classes go about the solution of problems.
  1146. The Political Structure of a Nation - Dependency
  1147. The primary reason why the individual citizens of a country create a political structure is
  1148. a subconscious wish or desire to perpetuate their own dependency relationship of
  1149. childhood. Simply put, they want a human god to eliminate all risk from their life, pat
  1150. them on the head, kiss their bruises, put a chicken on every dinner table, clothe their
  1151. bodies, tuck them into bed at night, and tell them that everything will be alright when
  1152. they wake up in the morning.
  1153. This public demand is incredible, so the human god, the politician, meets incredibility
  1154. with incredibility by promising the world and delivering nothing. So who is the bigger
  1155. liar? the public? or the "godfather"?
  1156. This public behavior is surrender born of fear, laziness, and expediency. It is the basis of
  1157. the welfare state as a strategic weapon, useful against a disgusting public.
  1158. Action/Offense
  1159. Most people want to be able to subdue and/or kill other human beings which disturb their
  1160. daily lives, but they do not want to have to cope with the moral and religious issues
  1161. which such an overt act on their part might raise. Therefore, they assign the dirty work to
  1162. others (including their own children) so as to keep the blood off their hands. They rave
  1163. about the humane treatment of animals and then sit down to a delicious hamburger from a
  1164. whitewashed slaughterhouse down the street and out of sight. But even more hypocritical,
  1165. they pay taxes to finance a professional association of hit men collectively called
  1166. politicians, and then complain about corruption in government.
  1167. Responsibility
  1168. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1169. Page 40
  1170. Again, most people want to be free to do the things (to explore, etc.) but they are afraid to
  1171. fail.
  1172. The fear of failure is manifested in irresponsibility, and especially in delegating those
  1173. personal responsibilities to others where success is uncertain or carries possible or created
  1174. liabilities (law), which the person is not prepared to accept. They want authority (root
  1175. word - "author"), but they will not accept responsibility or liability. So they hire
  1176. politicians to face reality for them.
  1177. Summary
  1178. The people hire the politicians so that the people can:
  1179. (1) obtain security without managing it.
  1180. (2) obtain action without thinking about it.
  1181. (3) inflict theft, injury, and death upon others without having to contemplate either life
  1182. or death.
  1183. (4) avoid responsibility for their own intentions.
  1184. (5) obtain the benefits of reality and science without exerting themselves in the
  1185. discipline of facing or learning either of these things.
  1186. They give the politicians the power to create and manage a war machine:
  1187. (1) provide for the survival of the nation/womb.
  1188. (2) prevent encroachment of anything upon the nation/womb.
  1189. (3) destroy the enemy who threatens the nation/womb.
  1190. (4) destroy those citizens of their own country who do not conform for the sake of
  1191. stability of the nation/womb.
  1192. Politicians hold many quasi-military jobs, the lowest being the police which are soldiers,
  1193. the attorneys and C.P.A.s next who are spies and saboteurs (licensed), and the judges who
  1194. shout orders and run the closed union military shop for whatever the market will bear.
  1195. The generals are industrialists. The "presidential" level of commander-in-chief is shared
  1196. by the international bankers.
  1197. The people know that they have created this farce and financed it with their own taxes
  1198. (consent), but they would rather knuckle under than be the hypocrite.
  1199. Thus, a nation becomes divided into two very distinct parts, a docile sub-nation [great
  1200. silent majority] and a political sub-nation. The political sub-nation remains attached to
  1201. the docile sub-nation, tolerates it, and leaches its substance until it grows strong enough
  1202. to detach itself and then devour its parent.
  1203. System Analysis
  1204. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1205. Page 41
  1206. In order to make meaningful computerized economic decisions about war, the primary
  1207. economic flywheel, it is necessary to assign concrete logistical values to each element of
  1208. the war structure - personnel and material alike.
  1209. This process begins with a clear and candid description of the subsystems of such a
  1210. structure.
  1211. The Draft (As military service)
  1212. Few efforts of human behavior modification are more remarkable or more effective than
  1213. that of the socio-military institution known as the draft. A primary purpose of a draft or
  1214. other such institution is to instill, by intimidation, in the young males of a society the
  1215. uncritical conviction that the government is omnipotent. He is soon taught that a prayer is
  1216. slow to reverse what a bullet can do in an instant. Thus, a man trained in a religious
  1217. environment for eighteen years of his life can, by this instrument of the government, be
  1218. broken down, be purged of his fantasies and delusions in a matter of mere months. Once
  1219. that conviction is instilled, all else becomes easy to instill.
  1220. Even more interesting is the process by which a young man's parents, who purportedly
  1221. love him, can be induced to send him off to war to his death. Although the scope of this
  1222. work will not allow this matter to be expanded in full detail, nevertheless, a coarse
  1223. overview will be possible and can serve to reveal those factors which must be included in
  1224. some numerical form in a computer analysis of social and war systems.
  1225. We begin with a tentative definition of the draft.
  1226. The draft (selective service, etc.) is an institution of compulsory collective sacrifice
  1227. and slavery, devised by the middle-aged and elderly for the purpose of pressing the
  1228. young into doing the public dirty work. It further serves to make the youth as guilty
  1229. as the elders, thus making criticism of the elders by the youth less likely
  1230. (Generational Stabilizer). It is marketed and sold to the public under the label of
  1231. "patriotic = national" service.
  1232. Once a candid economic definition of the draft is achieved, that definition is used to
  1233. outline the boundaries of a structure called a Human Value System, which in turn is
  1234. translated into the terms of game theory. The value of such a slave laborer is given in a
  1235. Table of Human Values, a table broken down into categories by intellect, experience,
  1236. post-service job demand, etc.
  1237. Some of these categories are ordinary and can be tentatively evaluated in terms of the
  1238. value of certain jobs for which a known fee exists. Some jobs are harder to value because
  1239. they are unique to the demands of social subversion, for an extreme example: the value of
  1240. a mother's instruction to her daughter, causing that daughter to put certain behavioral
  1241. demands upon a future husband ten or fifteen years hence; thus, by suppressing his
  1242. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1243. Page 42
  1244. resistance to a perversion of a government, making it easier for a banking cartel to buy
  1245. the State of New York in, say, twenty years.
  1246. Such a problem leans heavily upon the observations and data of wartime espionage and
  1247. many types of psychological testing. But crude mathematical models (algorithms, etc.)
  1248. can be devised, if not to predict, at least to predeterminate these events with maximum
  1249. certainty. What does not exist by natural cooperation is thus enhanced by calculated
  1250. compulsion. Human beings are machines, levers which may be grasped and turned, and
  1251. there is little real difference between automating a society and automating a shoe factory.
  1252. These derived values are variable. (It is necessary to use a current Table of Human
  1253. Values for computer analysis.) These values are given in true measure rather than U.S.
  1254. dollars, since the latter is unstable, being presently inflated beyond the production of
  1255. national goods and services so as to give the economy a false kinetic energy ("paper"
  1256. inductance).
  1257. The silver value is stable, it being possible to buy the same amount with a gram of silver
  1258. today as it could be bought in 1920. Human value measured in silver units changes
  1259. slightly due to changes in production technology.
  1260.  
  1261. Enforcement
  1262. Factor I
  1263. As in every social system approach, stability is achieved only by
  1264. understanding and accounting for human nature (action/reaction patterns).
  1265. A failure to do so can be, and usually is, disastrous.
  1266. As in other human social schemes, one form or another of intimidation (or
  1267. incentive) is essential to the success of the draft. Physical principles of
  1268. action and reaction must be applied to both internal and external
  1269. subsystems.
  1270. To secure the draft, individual brainwashing/programming and both the
  1271. family unit and the peer group must be engaged and brought under
  1272. control.
  1273. Factor II - Father
  1274. The man of the household must be housebroken to ensure that junior will
  1275. grow up with the right social training and attitudes. The advertising media,
  1276. etc., are engaged to see to it that father-to-be is pussy-whipped before or
  1277. by the time he is married. He is taught that he either conforms to the social
  1278. notch cut out for him or his sex life will be hobbled and his tender
  1279. companionship will be zero. He is made to see that women demand
  1280. security more than logical, principled, or honorable behavior.
  1281. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1282. Page 43
  1283. By the time his son must go to war, father (with jelly for a backbone) will
  1284. slam a gun into junior's hand before father will risk the censure of his
  1285. peers, or make a hypocrite of himself by crossing the investment he has in
  1286. his own personal opinion or self-esteem. Junior will go to war or father
  1287. will be embarrassed. So junior will go to war, the true purpose not
  1288. withstanding.
  1289. Factor III - Mother
  1290. The female element of human society is ruled by emotion first and logic
  1291. second. In the battle between logic and imagination, imagination always
  1292. wins, fantasy prevails, maternal instinct dominates so that the child comes
  1293. first and the future comes second. A woman with a newborn baby is too
  1294. starry-eyed to see a wealthy man's cannon fodder or a cheap source of
  1295. slave labor. A woman must, however, be conditioned to accept the
  1296. transition to "reality" when it comes, or sooner.
  1297. As the transition becomes more difficult to manage, the family unit must
  1298. be carefully disintegrated, and state-controlled public education and stateoperated
  1299. child-care centers must be become more common and legally
  1300. enforced so as to begin the detachment of the child from the mother and
  1301. father at an earlier age. Inoculation of behavioral drugs [Ritalin] can speed
  1302. the transition for the child (mandatory). Caution: A woman's impulsive
  1303. anger can override her fear. An irate woman's power must never be
  1304. underestimated, and her power over a pussy-whipped husband must
  1305. likewise never be underestimated. It got women the vote in 1920.
  1306. Factor IV - Junior
  1307. The emotional pressure for self-preservation during the time of war and
  1308. the self-serving attitude of the common herd that have an option to avoid
  1309. the battlefield - if junior can be persuaded to go - is all of the pressure
  1310. finally necessary to propel Johnny off to war. Their quiet blackmailings of
  1311. him are the threats: "No sacrifice, no friends; no glory, no girlfriends."
  1312. Factor V - Sister
  1313. And what about junior's sister? She is given all the good things of life by
  1314. her father, and taught to expect the same from her future husband
  1315. regardless of the price.
  1316. Factor VI - Cattle
  1317. Those who will not use their brains are no better off than those who have
  1318. no brains, and so this mindless school of jelly-fish, father, mother, son,
  1319. and daughter, become useful beasts of burden or trainers of the same.
  1320. This concludes what is available of this document
  1321.  
  1322. i
  1323. "Studies in the Structure of Américan Economy" (1953), by Wassily Leontief (Director
  1324. of the Harvard Economic Research Project), International Science Press Inc., White
  1325. Plains, New York.
  1326. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
  1327. Page 44
  1328.  
  1329. OTHER RESOURCES THAT EXPOSE THE IMPLEMENTATION OF
  1330. THE "SILENT WEAPONS" ASSAULT
  1331. • Behold a Pale Horse by William Cooper, former US Naval Intelligence Officer
  1332. • Studies in the Structure of Américan Economy (1953), by Wassily Leontief
  1333. (director of the Harvard Economic Research Project), International Science Press
  1334. Inc., White Plains, New York.
  1335. • Diplomacy by Deception; Chapter 6 - Tavistock and Operations Research by John
  1336. Coleman, former MI 5 agent
  1337. • The True Story of the Bilderberg Group, by Daniel Estulin
  1338. • The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America, by Charlotte Iserbyte
  1339. • Soldiers of Reason and the Rise of the American Empire, by Alex Abella
  1340. • BBC Documentary, The Trap, by Adam Curtis
  1341. • Full Spectrum Dominance, by William Engdahl
  1342. • The Synagogue of Satin, by Andrew Hitchcock
  1343. • The Illuminati, The Cult That Hijacked the World, by Henry Makow, PhD.
  1344. • The Great American Adventure - Secrets of America, by Judge Dale; available for
  1345. free at www.anticorruptionsociety.com
  1346. • We are the "Enemies of the State";
  1347. http://anticorruptionsociety.com/2011/02/25/we-are-the-enemies-of-the-state/
  1348. More information can be found at:
  1349. www.StopTheCrime.net
  1350. www.AntiCorruptionSociety.com
  1351. "For we are opposed around the world by a monolithic and ruthless conspiracy that
  1352. relies on covert means for expanding its sphere of influence - on infiltration instead of
  1353. invasion, on subversion instead of elections, on intimidation instead of free choice, on
  1354. guerrillas by night instead of armies by day. It is a system that has conscripted vast
  1355. human and material resources into the building of a tightly knit, highly efficient machine
  1356. that combines military, diplomatic, intelligence, economic, scientific and political
  1357. operations."
  1358. John F. Kennedy
  1359. "The individual is handicapped, by coming face-to-face, with a conspiracy so monstrous,
  1360. he cannot believe it exists. The American mind, simply has not come to a realization of
  1361. the evil, which has been introduced into our midst . . . It rejects even the assumption that
  1362. human creatures could espouse a philosophy, which must ultimately destroy all that is
  1363. good and decent."
  1364. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, 1956
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