Proof of Mass Mind Control Through Controlled Opposition: Destruction of the Reform Party
Cults, Mind Control, and Plandemonium, Part 5
Other Plandemonium Tales can be found here at the Campfire.wiki. Find more discussion at the RTE Locals community. The Grand Unity Theory (Psyop) will be updated to reflect the contents of this article.
Much of the information in this article comes directly from Roger Stone via the documentary Get Me Roger Stone.
Readers of Whitney Webb are no doubt familiar with the disquieting relationship between Roy Cohn and Donald Trump. But fewer people are aware of the mentoring relationship between Cohn and "political consultant" Roger Stone, the latter of whom seems to have been careful not to take too many pictures with his sibling mentee Trump over the years—even though it was Stone who nudged Trump into running for the office of POTUS…during the 2000 election.
Trump ran for president before 2016?
That's how the memory hole works. He even attacked his opposition as a Hitler loving white nationalist.
Really?
Really.
If that's news to you, let's take a walk down memory lane to set the stage for an interesting discussion…
The Rise of the Reform Party
The most successful third party political initiative in modern U.S. history began in 1992 when Texas billionaire Ross Perot ran for president, quit, then jumped back into the race. Three years later the Reform Party was organized in part to get behind another run, though Perot's challenges never quite lifted from Spoiler status to Contender after he dropped out during his first run.
It is important to understand how Perot talked numbers successfully to a substantial segment of the American electorate. He warned the nation that exploding government debt would make life hard on young Americans.
For whatever flaws Perot might have had, my fifteen-year-old self loved seeing him challenge the Uniparty at the core of the problems that have since only grown. Could Perot have drained the swamp? We will never know. Dirty tricks derailed Perot. He was reportedly sent blackmail material from the Bush camp that would have wounded his family. Even after being branded a quitter, he managed to convince almost 20 million Americans to vote for him.
Incumbent POTUS George H.W. Bush, a leader who strangely felt almost no real heat from the days when his father, Prescott Bush, helped bank Hitler's Nazi Party (via Harriman Bank), blamed Perot (probably rightly) for his failure to serve a second term in office.
The Reform Party did begin to establish some major successes, most notably when Jesse Ventura won Minnesota's gubernatorial election. Neither the GOP nor the DNC were amused with the new party that might have captured America's attention with more and more interesting personalities getting involved. The CIA probably wasn't either. But it was Roger Stone who put a plan into action.
The Destruction of the Reform Party
Around the time of the 2000 election, Republicans were worried that another Democrat could defeat another Bush with a mere 40-something percent of the vote. That's when Roger Stone played one of the most devilish games of 4D chess in political history. It began when he convinced paleoconservative (that's CIA-code for "boring as they come") Pat Buchanan to run for POTUS under the Reform Party banner.
Call it a pawn push.
Stone's next move wreaked havoc all over the political chess board. He convinced Trump to contest Buchanan's path to the Reform Party nomination for the presidential election. Oddly, this almost never gets discussed anywhere in the media. Most people I talk to don't seem to know Trump ever got involved in presidential politics prior to 2016. Even Stone himself sort of glides past the details while bragging about the…Dubya.
Trump was ruthless in labeling Buchanan in ways that sent Reform Party voters into a self-consuming frenzy. When you have significant influence, calling somebody a "Hitler lover" and a "loser" with a deadly serious straight face is devastating—devilishly so when the result is the election of Hitler's banker's grandson.
Savage!
In the general election, Buchanan managed to muster barely over 2% of Perot's vote total, and the Reform Party saw conservative supporters bail out, themselves pissed off over having "helped" elect the David Rockefeller protégé Bill Clinton to two terms. Ralph Nader managed to spend enough money systematically funneled out of the pockets of poor college students to finish third ahead of the Reform Party candidate.
How the Magic Trick Works
Roger Stone proudly calls himself an agent provocateur. In this case, the Machiavellian political consultant acted as the handler for a pawn and a chaos agent. He inserted them into a population of good faith resisters of the status quo political equilibrium (or Uniparty…or whatever you might want to call it).
Buchanan, according to the American Mandarin notion of political correctness, had a large surface area of attack. There is no need to argue how much of that was an illusion. We all know the history of the Bush family's collaboration with literal Nazis. But with respect to the mind of the typical American Mandarin, fitting the Bush dynasty to actual history is harder than fitting Buchanan to network news pop culture.
Insert a combative iconoclast, and you have a match between a pit bull and a bird dog, with Reform Party faithful divided over who to root for. It was no contest. It was a bloody mess. And both dogs were the Reform Party.
When you control both parties in the divide and conquer process, you win. The Reform Party controlled neither. The Uniparty had the Reform Party out-resourced in many ways. It was just a matter of time before they hatched a plan to eliminate any threat to their monopoly.
Now the Stakes are Higher
There are some lessons in this historical tale. And the stakes are ever higher now. So, take a deep breath and ask yourself: do you believe in Chaos Agents?
Do you think that the Medical Freedom Movement (MFM) is important enough to attract some?
Who chose the most influential agents in the MFM? What are their goals?
Wow! This has such an interesting correspondence to my piece on Buchanan's book: https://thirdparadigm.substack.com/p/corbett-unz-and-wwii-the-unnecessary. I can definitely see why he would have been an easy target of flamethrowing pundits like Trump. But that it ushered in the exact person who fit the label? That's too ironic.
in this article, I learned that I'm approximately two years older than you. We were all glued to Perot in those days! That was a fun time. :) And who could forget Nader, who was himself Unsafe at Any Speed?
I distinctly remember Pat Buchanan but not Trump's demonization of him as a Nazi. I remembered because in my parents' social circle, Buchanan was the favored choice among social conservatives earlier on in the 2000 campaign. And you're exactly right, they all shuffled themselves toward Dubya to prevent Gore from getting elected.
I remember Trump flirting with politics before, but not him talking about Buchanan in this way. But now that I see that video, it feels rehearsed in a similar way to how Trump smeared Gary Johnson in 2016.
Trump's current silly schtick has always seemed "off" to me as not coincident with his former polished appearance and smooth ways prior to 2014 or so. Trump always did fun ads, but he became excessively clownish in 2016 and flipped like a switch. Because who can also forget about him saying what a great job Hillary would do as president? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QK03Ckor-VI
We are supposed to believe that Donald "Father of the Beautiful Vaccine" Trump thought Hillary would make an awesome president, and then only suddenly turned on the establishment in 2014-2015? He also "saw the light" and had a "come to Jesus moment" on gun control and abortion almost overnight in 2016? Trump had intellectual and moral growth? Laf. Even more unbelievable, we're supposed to believe it happened suddenly one day in his 70s?
This made no sense at all to me in 2016. But people have short memories.
Will the real Donald Trump please stand up? Haha! And there's another great video clip of a sit-down interview of Trump that I can't find on YT at the moment that was widely available in 2016 -- NOT the YouTube clip above -- where he said again what a great job Hillary would do as president. It's possible that second interview has been effectively scrubbed from YouTube by now.
I became interested in evolutionarily informed approaches to health in the 2007 melamine pet food scare, and then "food freedom" and "medical freedom" soon thereafter.
With the notable exception of RFK Jr, no one in that space had heard of the various boomer gurus who have now launched themselves into notoriety as "medical freedom" advocates in 2020.