Member Login Contact (800) 490-4495

Mobile Satellite Dish


Will You Find This Information With Your Mobile Satellite Dish?


A mobile satellite dish can help you keep plugged in to the information age while travelling, but even with one you will not likely hear about this information very often.

In the book, “Educating For The New World Order,” the author, Bev Eakman points out repeatedly the necessity of the educators to preserve the illusion that there is: “Lay, or community, participation in the decision making process, while in fact lay citizens are being squeezed out.”

It is interesting, and extremely important to Americans, both as parents and as citizens, to clearly understand just how the squeezing out process takes place.

It is a well-defined, if not well-perceived, process known as the Alinsky Method (which was derived from a procedure named The Delphi Technique).

This method of manipulating people is based on the fact that people in groups tend to share a common knowledge base and display certain identifiable characteristics known as “group dynamics”.

In this process, one or more people known as Change Agents or Facilitators appear to be acting as organizers, allowing each person in the group to express their concerns about some program or policy under consideration.

While this process is going on, people are urged to make lists or form into task forces.

The Facilitator carefully notes which members of the group are leaders, which are loud-mouths and which may be easily swayed to different viewpoints.

At a certain point, the previously friendly Change Agent begins to act as devil’s advocate, becoming an agitator.

The process involves playing one part of the group against another – the divide and conquer technique.



Turn Off Your Mobile Satellite Dish and Learn this

Anyone who is not clearly in accord with the Facilitator’s agenda is made to appear ridiculous, inarticulate, ignorant or dogmatic.

The idea is to make these members of the group angry thus escalating tensions. The end object being to shut opposition voices out of the group.

The targets of such manipulation rarely, if ever, realize how they are being manipulated.

If they do suspect, they generally have no idea how to defeat the process.

This method is being used at all levels of government to force meetings toward PRESET conclusions. There are three steps to defeating this process.

They are simple to learn, if not always easy to put into practice since the Facilitators are well trained in agitation techniques.

Always be charming, pleasant and courteous. Smile. Speak in a normal voice to avoid seeming to be belligerent or aggressive.

Be sure to stay focused. Write your question or statement down in advance to help you stay on track.


Don’t be Distracted by Your Mobile Satellite Dish

These Change Agents are trained to twist the conversation around to make the questioner appear foolish or belligerent or aggressive, the idea being to put the questioner on the defensive.

As mentioned in Rule 1, always be charming, pleasant and courteous.

Often an attempt will be made to change the subject, digress or distort your intent.

Always bring them back to the question you asked! If they distort your question into what amounts to an accusation of them, simply state clearly and precisely: “That is not what I stated. What I asked was…” (repeat your original question).

Do not be distracted or angered by their efforts to make you look bad. Be persistent.

When the Facilitator realizes that putting you on the defensive is not going to work, quite often he, or she, will go into some long drawn out discussion of some unrelated or only vaguely related subject.

Such a discussion may drag on for a number of minutes. The intent being to have the crowd become bored and forget what the original question was.

Let them run on, then very calmly, quietly but with determination drag them back to the subject by saying: “But you didn’t answer my question. My question was…”

Now, even without your mobile satellite dish, you will be able to counteract the manipulative Delphi Technique when you encounter it.





Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>