RE: Enrichment Through Government Service

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I didn't watch the video but did look up Corbett and pathocracy. Found this "Conversation", which explains the top points of this idea.

It's interesting that in recent days I've thought about learned helplessness. At some point, you just stop resisting. Also, I have in the past studied the work of Thomas Szasz, who questions the legitimacy of traditional psychiatry.

The problem with the DSM is that it is essentially a political and normative document. And yet, the fate of millions hangs on its prescriptions.

What to do when objective reality is elusive--but isn't it always elusive?



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learned helplessness.

I was just thinking about this. I don't think it's learned, I think we have been conditioned. We outsource our finances, our childrens educations, our thinking,our healing, and our food. Who isn't helpless in at least one of these?

I am living proof of how this is used against dissedents. I was a medical dissident in 2021, when vaccine hesitancy made it to the DSM. There I was for any medical professional to see, crazy. A friend of mine recently asked me if I didn't think Trump was the worst president of all time. I said "We've survived worse than Trump." She asked, of course, who. I could unequivocally state that Biden was much worse in my opinion, because during his administration I was being deemed a domestic terrorist, an enemy of the people, a grandma killer, and I feared being shipped off to concentration camps set up for the likes of me.

objective reality is elusive

Less elusive when there is a corrupt central government. Quite possibly, all types of central governments tend to corrupt. Corbett gets to that toward the end, and very briefly.

We are all one law away from prison.

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