I have often thought of this and I have concluded it is an unknowable answer. However it really comes down to how much credit do we really give the
NWO?
Are they completely in control of herding us like sheep as you suggest and all of this is part of their plan? Ron Paul, Tea Party, possible
revolution, crashing economy, etc.
Or is the population truly reacting out of free will? Are our reactions are legit and based with out guidance?
I find it to be somewhere in the middle. It seems our overlords have an increasingly insatiable appetite for micro-management. However my experience
is that micro-management eventually leads to a revolution by those who are free-minded in any situation.
That being said, I once heard a CIA operative say that all information put out and controlled by the CIA for any given operation is at minimum 75
percent disinformation and that it is VERY controlled.
If they micro-manage the release of information as they intend with our lives, then this leads me to question nearly all of the content that is on
this site and it's context.
Imagine if 75 percent of all the whistle blowers were dis-informants either knowingly or unknowingly? This is would include topics, from NWO to
aliens.
Truth is truly subjective and speculative and has become quite irrelevant. We must deal with facts.
The facts are something will give eventually between the working class and the elite. I also find that while the elite hold the advantage in many
ways as long their enforcers stay true to them.
However this does not change the fact that the outcome of the scenario planned by TPTB is NOT predetermined.
The other fact here is, whether revolution is planned by them or not, I find it to be quite irrelevant. The fact is if thugs with guns come to round
up my neighbors, friends, or family in public view so that we know it is happening to put them or myself in concentration camps, I will revolt by all
means in my power whether I stand alone or not.
There are things worse than death.
edit on 14-9-2010 by Anonymous Avatar because: grammatical errors