Brian Williams, Scott Pelley, and Diane Sawyer: the three stooges
by Jon Rappoport
April 26, 2013
www.nomorefakenews.com
I think, at the very least, YouTube
should censor them. Well, wait a minute. Not censor, but put up a notice
on all their videos:
“It’s come to our attention that
these three characters are as annoying as a bad case of fleas. Caution:
watch and listen at your own risk.”
The three stooges. Three schmucks in the fountain. Send in the clowns, don’t bother, they’re here.
If people are beginning to get the idea I’m waging a war against against elite media, they’re right.
At the same time, I’m fascinated. How
do these anchors do it? How do they lie so consistently, and with such
aplomb, day in and day out, without going up in a puff of smoke and
vanishing?
The Big Three anchors are a miracle,
in the sense that they need a whole construction company to build the
walls that permanently separate them from the truth…so they can sit in a
television studio in New York and believe they’re in the wheelhouse of
Real News.
When you see the Big Three are
discussing their own footage, but you find visual clues as big as the
moon that their analysis is 180 degrees away from actual fact—as has
been happening from Aurora to Sandy Hook to Boston—and the Stooges just
sit there and drone on…well, that’s a CSI or a Law&Order you just
can’t get if you pay the best scriptwriters in the world to come up with
it.
“The bomb was a pressure cooker.”
Right, and the Twin Towers went down because two planes flew into them.
Because the Web has been alive and
humming, media coverage of every major catastrophe since 9/11 has been
rejected by extraordinary numbers of people.
The elite network anchors have been trying to hold the fort, but they’re failing.
Their long-running stage play is closing down.
Despite their traditional skills and technological backup, they’re coming across like cartoon hacks.
These days, it’s better to be a
marginally believable doofus like Diane Sawyer, who chooses to affect a
persona based on depression, than to be the eternal boy wonder, Brian
Williams. Williams, the smoothest of the smooth, comes across like the
biggest liar, because he’s the most dedicated of the lot when it comes
to defending the indefensible.
And Scott Pelley is Scott Pelley, the
hospital doctor you’d least like to show up at your bedside. He might
tell you you need an amputation just because he’s having a bad day.
“Who do we need for the most important anchor’s job in the world?”
“How about Pelley? He’s utterly
convinced the lies we feed into the propaganda machine are the last
word.. He’s sold. He couldn’t look outside the box if we drilled holes
in it and let him see a mountain of gold bars and 50,000 naked
bureaucrats running down Broadway at high fucking noon.”
The Big Three strut their stuff on the
evening news, executing well-oiled, high-priced transitions from one
completely false/basically deceptive story to another completely
false/basically deceptive story.
Recall the often-quoted George Burns
pearl? “In acting, sincerity is everything. If you can fake that, you’ve
got it made.” But suppose the sincerity isn’t faked? Then, the schmuck
becomes king.
My late friend and colleague,
hypnotherapist Jack True, described the television-news audience: “Mind
control is accepting what you know to be false. You do it because you
think the only other alternative is a vacuum: you either buy the news or
you’re left with nothing.”
Continue Reading at.. https://jonrappoport.wordpress.com/2013/04/27/brian-williams-scott-pelley-and-diane-sawyer-the-three-stooges/