The Psychology of Conspiracy Denial Paul Joseph Watson www.infowars.com Thursday, August 5, 2010 Wired Magazine writer Jonah Lehrer claims his critics are engaging in "cognitive dissonance," by expressing concern about experimental vaccines, which in fact is the perfect description for Lehrer's own behavior. Wired Magazine writer Jonah Lehrer attempts to offset the overwhelmingly critical response to his attack on Alex Jones by characterizing skepticism of authority in the context of vaccines and mass medication as a psychological dysfunction, despite the fact that the history of government-funded medical research in the United States is replete with examples of scientific abuse against unwitting victims. Lehrer fires another salvo in the controversy surrounding brain-altering vaccines that eliminate stress and induce artificial states of "focused calm" by portraying those who are concerned about the potential abuse of such treatments as paranoid cult members who believe in space aliens coming to rescue them from an imminent apocalypse. Unable to properly address Alex Jones' video journal about the dangers of mind-altering vaccines point by point, Lehrer resorts instead to retelling a completely unrelated story from the 1950′s about a woman in Minneapolis who thought a giant spaceship would rescue her from the end of the world. Eat like a king, stock up at eFoodsDirect today! According to Lehrer, people who are concerned about fluoridated drinking water and the New World ...
Tags: wired, magazine, jonah, lehrer, cognitive, dissonance, experimental, vaccines, rockefeller, bilderberg, group, eugenics, scienfific, abuse, lithium, neurotoxin, sodium, fluoride, john, holdren, alex, jones, endgame
No comments:
Post a Comment