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Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars



"The following document, dated May 1979, was found on July 7, 1986, in an
IBM copie that had !een puchased at a suplus sale""
## "Behold a $ale %ose", Milton &illiam 'oope, pg (6
Milton &illiam 'oope, a fome )a*al Intelligence +ffice with the
'ommande in 'hief of the $acific ,leet, and a (8 le*el a!o*e tope secet
cleaance, ead the same epot in )a*al Intelligence Ma-oity Twel*e file, it
was listed as compiled !y the Bilde!ege .oup"
########################################################################
TO SECRET
Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
An intro!u"tor# pro$ra%%in$ %anual
Operations Resear"&
Te"&ni"al 'anual
T'(SW)*+,-.
WE/CO'E ABOARD
This pu!lication ma/s the 01th anni*esay of the Thid &old &a, called the
"2uiet &a," !eing conducted using su!-ecti*e !iological wafae, fought with
"silent weapons""
This !oo/ contains an intoductoy desciption of this wa, its stategies, and its
weapony"
May 1979 374#1105
SEC0RIT1
It is patently impossi!le to discuss social engineeing o the automation of a
society, i"e", the engineeing of social automation systems 6silent weapons7 on a
national o woldwide scale without implying e8tensi*e o!-ecti*es of social
contol and destuction of human life, i"e", sla*ey and genocide"
This manual is in itself an analog declaation of intent" 9uch a witing must !e
secued fom pu!lic scutiny" +thewise, it might !e ecogni:ed as a technically
fomal declaation of domestic wa" ,uthemoe, whene*e any peson o
goup of pesons in a position of geat powe and without full /nowledge and
consent of the pu!lic, uses such /nowledge and methodology fo economic
con;uest ## it must !e undestood that a state of domestic wafae e8ists
!etween said peson o goup of pesons and the pu!lic"
The solution of today<s po!lems e;uies an appoach which is uthlessly
candid, with no agoni:ing o*e eligious, moal o cultual *alues"
=ou ha*e ;ualified fo this po-ect !ecause of you a!ility to loo/ at human
society with cold o!-ecti*ity, and yet analy:e and discuss you o!se*ations and
conclusions with othes of simila intellectual capacity without a loss of
discetion o humility" 9uch *itues ae e8ecised in you own !est inteest" >o
not de*iate fom them"
%I9T+?I'@A I)T?+>B'TI+)
9ilent weapon technology has e*ol*ed fom +peations ?eseach 6+"?"7, a
stategic and tactical methodology de*eloped unde the militay management
CDisenhoweE in Dngland duing &old &a II" The oiginal pupose of
+peations ?eseach was to study the stategic and tactical po!lems of ai and
land defense with the o!-ecti*e of effecti*e use of limited militay esouces
against foeign enemies 6i"e", logistics7"
It was soon ecogni:ed !y those in positions of powe that the same methods
might !e useful fo totally contolling a society" But !ette tools wee
necessay"
9ocial engineeing 6the analysis and automation of a society7 e;uies the
coelation of geat amounts of constantly changing economic infomation
6data7, so a high#speed computei:ed data#pocessing system was necessay
which could ace ahead of the society and pedict when society would ai*e
fo capitulation"
?elay computes wee too slow, !ut the electonic compute, in*ented in 1946
!y J" $espe Dc/et and John &" Mauchly, filled the !ill"
The ne8t !ea/though was the de*elopment of the simple8 method of linea
pogamming in 1947 !y the mathematician .eoge B" >ant:ig"
Then in 1948, the tansisto, in*ented !y J" Badeen, &" %" Battain, and &"
9hoc/ley, pomised geat e8pansion of the compute field !y educing space
and powe e;uiements"
&ith these thee in*entions unde thei diection, those in positions of powe
stongly suspected that it was possi!le fo them to contol the whole wold with
the push of a !utton"
Immediately, the ?oc/efelle ,oundation got in on the gound floo !y ma/ing
a fou#yea gant to %a*ad 'ollege, funding the %a*ad Dconomic ?eseach
$o-ect fo the study of the stuctue of the @meican economy" +ne yea late,
in 1949, the Bnited 9tates @i ,oce -oined in"
In 1910 the oiginal gant peiod teminated, and a high#le*el meeting of the
elite was held to detemine the ne8t phase of social opeations eseach" The
%a*ad po-ect had !een *ey fuitful, as is !one out !y the pu!lication of
some of its esults in 191( suggesting the feasi!ility of economic 6social7
engineeing" 69tudies in the 9tuctue of the @meican Dconomy ## copyight
191( !y &asily Aeontief, Intenational 9ciences $ess Inc", &hite $lains, )ew
=o/"7
Dngineeed in the last half of the decade of the 1945s, the new 2uiet &a
machine stood, so to spea/, in spa/ling gold#plated hadwae on the showoom
floo !y 1914"
&ith the ceation of the mase in 1914, the pomise of unloc/ing unlimited
souces of fusion atomic enegy fom the hea*y hydogen in sea wate and the
conse;uent a*aila!ility of unlimited social powe was a possi!ility only
decades away"
The com!ination was iesisti!le"
The 2uiet &a was ;uietly declaed !y the Intenational Dlite at a meeting held
in 1914"
@lthough the silent weapons system was nealy e8posed 1( yeas late, the
e*olution of the new weapon#system has ne*e suffeed any ma-o set!ac/s"
This *olume ma/s the 01th anni*esay of the !eginning of the 2uiet &a"
@leady this domestic wa has had many *ictoies on many fonts thoughout
the wold"
$+AITI'@A I)T?+>B'TI+)
In 1914 it was well ecogni:ed !y those in positions of authoity that it was
only a matte of time, only a few decades, !efoe the geneal pu!lic would !e
a!le to gasp and upset the cadle of powe, fo the *ey elements of the new
silent#weapon technology wee as accessi!le fo a pu!lic utopia as they wee
fo po*iding a pi*ate utopia"
The issue of pimay concen, that of dominance, e*ol*ed aound the su!-ect
of the enegy sciences"
D)D?.=
Dnegy is ecogni:ed as the /ey to all acti*ity on eath" )atual science is the
study of the souces and contol of natual enegy, and social science,
theoetically e8pessed as economics, is the study of the souces and contol of
social enegy" Both ae !oo//eeping systemsF mathematics" Theefoe,
mathematics is the pimay enegy science" @nd the !oo//eepe can !e /ing if
the pu!lic can !e /ept ignoant of the methodology of the !oo//eeping"
@ll science is meely a means to an end" The means is /nowledge" The end is
contol" Beyond this emains only one issueF &ho will !e the !eneficiayG
In 1914 this was the issue of pimay concen" @lthough the so#called "moal
issues" wee aised, in *iew of the law of natual selection it was ageed that a
nation o wold of people who will not use thei intelligence ae no !ette than
animals who do not ha*e intelligence" 9uch people ae !easts of !uden and
stea/s on the ta!le !y choice and consent"
'onse;uently, in the inteest of futue wold ode, peace, and tan;uility, it
was decided to pi*ately wage a ;uiet wa against the @meican pu!lic with an
ultimate o!-ecti*e of pemanently shifting the natual and social enegy
6wealth7 of the undisciplined and iesponsi!le many into the hands of the self#
disciplined, esponsi!le, and wothy few"
In ode to implement this o!-ecti*e, it was necessay to ceate, secue, and
apply new weapons which, as it tuned out, wee a class of weapons so su!tle
and sophisticated in thei pinciple of opeation and pu!lic appeaance as to
ean fo themsel*es the name "silent weapons""
In conclusion, the o!-ecti*e of economic eseach, as conducted !y the
magnates of capital 6!an/ing7 and the industies of commodities 6goods7 and
se*ices, is the esta!lishment of an economy which is totally pedicta!le and
manipulata!le"
In ode to achie*e a totally pedicta!le economy, the low#class elements of the
society must !e !ought unde total contol, i"e", must !e house!o/en, tained,
and assigned a yo/e and long#tem social duties fom a *ey ealy age, !efoe
they ha*e an oppotunity to ;uestion the popiety of the matte" In ode to
achie*e such confomity, the lowe#class family unit must !e disintegated !y a
pocess of inceasing peoccupation of the paents and the esta!lishment of
go*enment#opeated day#cae centes fo the occupationally ophaned
childen"
The ;uality of education gi*en to the lowe class must !e of the pooest sot, so
that the moat of ignoance isolating the infeio class fom the supeio class is
and emains incompehensi!le to the infeio class" &ith such an initial
handicap, e*en !ight lowe class indi*iduals ha*e little if any hope of
e8ticating themsel*es fom thei assigned lot in life" This fom of sla*ey is
essential to maintaining some measue of social ode, peace, and tan;uility
fo the uling uppe class"
>D9'?I$TIHD I)T?+>B'TI+) +, T%D 9IAD)T &D@$+)
D*eything that is e8pected fom an odinay weapon is e8pected fom a silent
weapon !y its ceatos, !ut only in its own manne of functioning"
It shoots situations, instead of !ulletsI popelled !y data pocessing, instead of a
chemical eaction 6e8plosion7I oiginating fom !its of data, instead of gains of
gunpowdeI fom a compute, instead of a gunI opeated !y a compute
pogamme, instead of a ma/smanI unde the odes of a !an/ing magnate,
instead of a militay geneal"
It ma/es no o!*ious e8plosi*e noises, causes no o!*ious physical o mental
in-uies, and does not o!*iously intefee with anyone<s daily social life"
=et it ma/es an unmista/a!le "noise," causes unmista/a!le physical and mental
damage, and unmista/a!ly intefees with daily social life, i"e", unmista/a!le to
a tained o!se*e, one who /nows what to loo/ fo"
The pu!lic cannot compehend this weapon, and theefoe cannot !elie*e that
they ae !eing attac/ed and su!dued !y a weapon"
The pu!lic might instincti*ely feel that something is wong, !ut !ecause of the
technical natue of the silent weapon, they cannot e8pess thei feeling in a
ational way, o handle the po!lem with intelligence" Theefoe, they do not
/now how to cy fo help, and do not /now how to associate with othes to
defend themsel*es against it"
&hen a silent weapon is applied gadually, the pu!lic ad-usts J adapts to its
pesence and leans to toleate its encoachment on thei li*es until the pessue
6psychological *ia economic7 !ecomes too geat and they cac/ up"
Theefoe, the silent weapon is a type of !iological wafae" It attac/s the
*itality, options, and mo!ility of the indi*iduals of a society !y /nowing,
undestanding, manipulating, and attac/ing thei souces of natual and social
enegy, and thei physical, mental, and emotional stengths and wea/nesses"
T%D+?DTI'@A I)T?+>B'TI+)
".i*e me contol o*e a nation<s cuency,
and I cae not who ma/es its laws""
Maye @mschel ?othschild
6174( # 18107
Today<s silent weapons technology is an outgowth of a simple idea disco*eed,
succinctly e8pessed, and effecti*ely applied !y the ;uoted M" Maye @mschel
?othschild" M" ?othschild disco*eed the missing passi*e component of
economic theoy /nown as economic inductance" %e, of couse, did not thin/
of his disco*ey in these 05th#centuy tems, and, to !e sue, mathematical
analysis had to wait fo the 9econd Industial ?e*olution, the ise of the theoy
of mechanics and electonics, and finally, the in*ention of the electonic
compute !efoe it could !e effecti*ely applied in the contol of the wold
economy"
.D)D?@A D)D?.= '+)'D$T9
In the study of enegy systems, thee always appea thee elementay concepts"
These ae potential enegy, /inetic enegy, and enegy dissipation" @nd
coesponding to these concepts, thee ae thee ideali:ed, essentially pue
physical countepats called passi*e components"
617 In the science of physical mechanics, the phenomenon of potential enegy is
associated with a physical popety called elasticity o stiffness, and can !e
epesented !y a stetched sping"
In electonic science, potential enegy is stoed in a capacito instead of a
sping" This popety is called capacitance instead of elasticity o stiffness"
607 In the science of physical mechanics, the phenomenon of /inetic enegy is
associated with a physical popety called inetia o mass, and can !e
epesented !y a mass o a flywheel in motion"
In electonic science, /inetic enegy is stoed in an inducto 6in a magnetic
field7 instead of a mass" This popety is called inductance instead of inetia"
6(7 In the science of physical mechanics, the phenomenon of enegy dissipation
is associated with a physical popety called fiction o esistance, and can !e
epesented !y a dashpot o othe de*ice which con*ets system enegy into
heat"
In electonic science, dissipation of enegy is pefomed !y an element called
eithe a esisto o a conducto, the tem "esisto" !eing the one geneally used
to e8pess the concept of fiction, and the tem "conducto" !eing geneally
used to desci!e a moe ideal de*ice 6e"g", wie7 employed to con*ey electonic
enegy efficiently fom one location to anothe" The popety of a esistance o
conducto is measued as eithe esistance o conductance ecipocals"
In economics these thee enegy concepts ae associated withF
Dconomic 'apacitance ## 'apital 6money, stoc/Jin*entoy, in*estments in
!uildings and dua!les, etc"7
Dconomic 'onductance ## .oods 6poduction flow coefficients7
Dconomic Inductance ## 9e*ices 6the influence of the population of industy on
output7
@ll of the mathematical theoy de*eloped in the study of one enegy system
6e"g", mechanics, electonics, etc"7 can !e immediately applied in the study of
any othe enegy system 6e"g", economics7"
M?" ?+T%9'%IA><9 D)D?.= >I9'+HD?=
&hat M" ?othschild had disco*eed was the !asic pinciple of powe,
influence, and contol o*e people as applied to economics" That pinciple is
"when you assume the appeaance of powe, people soon gi*e it to you""
M" ?othschild had disco*eed that cuency o deposit loan accounts had the
e;uied appeaance of powe that could !e used to induce people 6inductance,
with people coesponding to a magnetic field7 into suendeing thei eal
wealth in e8change fo a pomise of geate wealth 6instead of eal
compensation7" They would put up eal collateal in e8change fo a loan of
pomissoy notes" M" ?othschild found that he could issue moe notes than he
had !ac/ing fo, so long as he had someone<s stoc/ of gold as a pesuade to
show to his customes"
M" ?othschild loaned his pomissoy notes to indi*iduals and to go*enments"
These would ceate o*econfidence" Then he would ma/e money scace,
tighten contol of the system, and collect the collateal though the o!ligation of
contacts" The cycle was then epeated" These pessues could !e used to ignite
a wa" Then he would contol the a*aila!ility of cuency to detemine who
would win the wa" That go*enment which ageed to gi*e him contol of its
economic system got his suppot"
'ollection of de!ts was guaanteed !y economic aid to the enemy of the de!to"
The pofit dei*ed fom this economic methodology made M" ?othschild all
the moe a!le to e8tend his wealth" %e found that the pu!lic geed would allow
cuency to !e pinted !y go*enment ode !eyond the limits 6inflation7 of
!ac/ing in pecious metal o the poduction of goods and se*ices 6goss
national poduct, .)$7"
@$$@?D)T '@$IT@A @9 "$@$D?" I)>B'T+?
In this stuctue, cedit, pesented as a pue element called "cuency," has the
appeaance of capital, !ut is, in fact, negati*e capital" %ence, it has the
appeaance of se*ice, !ut is, in fact, inde!tedness o de!t" It is theefoe an
economic inductance instead of an economic capacitance, and if !alanced in no
othe way, will !e !alanced in no othe way, will !e !alanced !y the negation
of population 6wa, genocide7" The total goods and se*ices epesent eal
capital called the goss national poduct, and cuency may !e pinted up to this
le*el and still epesent economic capacitanceI !ut cuency pinted !eyond this
le*el is su!tacti*e, epesents the intoduction of economic inductance, and
constitutes notes of inde!tedness"
&a is theefoe the !alancing of the system !y /illing the tue ceditos 6the
pu!lic which we ha*e taught to e8change tue *alue fo inflated cuency7 and
falling !ac/ on whate*e is left of the esouces of natue and egeneation of
those esouces"
M" ?othschild had disco*eed that cuency ga*e him the powe to eaange
the economic stuctue to his own ad*antage, to shift economic inductance to
those economic positions which would encouage the geatest economic
insta!ility and oscillation"
The final /ey to economic contol had to wait until thee was sufficient data
and high#speed computing e;uipment to /eep close watch on the economic
oscillations ceated !y pice shoc/ing and e8cess pape enegy cedits ## pape
inductanceJinflation"
B?D@KT%?+B.%
Thea a*iation field po*ided the geatest e*olution in economic engineeing !y
way of the mathematical theoy of shoc/ testing" In this pocess, a po-ectile is
fied fom an aifame on the gound and the impulse of the ecoil is monitoed
!y *i!ation tansduces connected to the aifame and wied to chat ecodes"
By studying the echoes o eflections of the ecoil impulse in the aifame, it is
possi!le to disco*e citical *i!ations in the stuctue of the aifame which
eithe *i!ations of the engine o aeolian *i!ations of the wings, o a
com!ination of the two, might einfoce esulting in a esonant self#destuction
of the aifame in flight as an aicaft" ,om the standpoint of engineeing, this
means that the stengths and wea/nesses of the stuctue of the aifame in
tems of *i!ational enegy can !e disco*eed and manipulated"
@$$AI'@TI+) I) D'+)+MI'9
To use this method of aifame shoc/ testing in economic engineeing, the
pices of commodities ae shoc/ed, and the pu!lic consume eaction is
monitoed" The esulting echoes of the economic shoc/ ae intepeted
theoetically !y computes and the psycho#economic stuctue of the economy
is disco*eed" It is !y this pocess that patial diffeential and diffeence
matices ae disco*eed that define the family household and ma/e possi!le its
e*aluation as an economic industy 6dissipati*e consume stuctue7"
Then the esponse of the household to futue shoc/s can !e pedicted and
manipulated, and society !ecomes a well#egulated animal with its eins unde
the contol of a sophisticated compute#egulated social enegy !oo//eeping
system"
D*entually e*ey indi*idual element of the stuctue comes unde compute
contol though a /nowledge of pesonal pefeences, such /nowledge
guaanteed !y compute association of consume pefeences 6uni*esal poduct
code ## B$' ## :e!a#stipe picing codes on pac/ages7 with identified
consumes 6identification *ia association with the use of a cedit cad and late
a pemanent "tattooed" !ody num!e in*isi!le unde nomal am!ient
illumination"""
T%D D'+)+MI' M+>DA
"""The %a*ad Dconomic ?eseach $o-ect 61948#7 was an e8tension of &old
&a II +peations ?eseach" Its pupose was to disco*e the science of
contolling an economyF at fist the @meican economy, and then the wold
economy" It was felt that with sufficient mathematical foundation and data, it
would !e nealy as easy to pedict and contol the tend of an economy as to
pedict and contol the ta-ectoy of a po-ectile" 9uch has po*en to !e the case"
Moeo*e, the economy has !een tansfomed into a guided missle on taget"
The immediate aim of the %a*ad po-ect was to disco*e the economic
stuctue, what foces change that stuctue, how the !eha*io of the stuctue
can !e pedicted, and how it can !e manipulated" &hat was needed was a well#
ogani:ed /nowledge of the mathematical stuctues and inteelationships of
in*estment, poduction, disti!ution, and consumption"
To ma/e a shot stoy of it all, it was disco*eed that an economy o!eyed the
same laws as electicity and that all of the mathematical theoy and pactical
and compute /now#how de*eloped fo the electonic field could !e diectly
applied in the study of economics" This disco*ey was not openly declaed, and
its moe su!tle implications wee and ae /ept a closely guaded secet, fo
e8ample that in an economic model, human life is measued in dollas, and that
the electic spa/ geneated when opening a switch connected to an acti*e
inducto is mathematically analogous to the initiation of a wa"
The geatest hudle which theoetical economists faced was the accuate
desciption of the household as an industy" This is a challenge !ecause
consume puchases ae a matte of choice which in tun is influenced !y
income, pice, and othe economic factos"
This hudle was cleaed in an indiect and statistically appo8imate way !y an
application of shoc/ testing to detemine the cuent chaacteistics, called
cuent technical coefficients, of a household industy"
,inally, !ecause po!lems in theoetical economics can !e tanslated *ey
easily into po!lems in theoetical electonics, and the solution tanslated !ac/
again, it follows that only a !oo/ of language tanslation and concept definition
needed to !e witten fo economics" The emainde could !e gotten fom
standad wo/s on mathematics and electonics" this ma/es the pu!lication of
!oo/s on ad*anced economics unnecessay, and geatly simplifies po-ect
secuity"
I)>B9T?I@A >I@.?@M9
@n ideal industy is defined as a de*ice which ecei*es *alue fom othe
industies in se*eal foms and con*ets into one specific poduct fo sales and
disti!ution to othe industies" It has se*eal inputs and one output" &hat the
pu!lic nomally thin/s of as one industy is eally an industial comple8 whee
se*eal industies unde one oof poduce one o moe poducts"""
T%?DD I)>B9T?I@A 'A@99D9
Industies fall into thee categoies o classes !y type of outputF
'lass 31 # 'apital 6esouces7
'lass 30 # .oods 6commodities o use ## dissipati*e7
'lass 3( # 9e*ices 6action of population7
'lass 31 has thee su!#classesF
)atue # souces of enegy and aw mateials"
.o*enment # pinting of cuency e;ual to goss national poduct 6.)$7, and
e8tension 6inflation7 of cuency in e8cess of .)$"
Ban/ing # loaning of money fo inteest, and e8tension 6inflation J
countefeiting7 of economic *alue though deposit loan accounts"
'lass 30 industies e8ist as poduces of tangi!le o consume 6dissipated7
poducts" This sot of acti*ity is usually ecogni:ed and la!eled !y the pu!lic as
an "industy""
'lass 3( industies ae those which ha*e se*ice athe than a tangi!le poduct
as thei output" These industies ae called 617 households, and 607
go*enments" Thei output is human acti*ity of a mechanical sot, and thei
!asis is population"
@..?D.@TI+)
The whole economic system can !e epesented !y a thee#industy model if
one allows the names of the outputs to !e 617 capital, 607 goods, and 6(7
se*ices" The po!lem with this epesentation is that it would not show the
influence of , say, the te8tile industy on the feous metal industy" This is
!ecause !oth the te8tile industy and the feous metal industy would !e
contained within a single classification called the "goods industy" and !y this
pocess of com!ining o aggegating these two industies unde one system
!loc/ they would lose thei economic indi*iduality"
T%D D#M+>DA
@ national economy consists of simultaneous flows of poduction, disti!ution,
consumption, and in*estment" If all of these elements including la!o and
human functions ae assigned a numeical *alue in li/e units of measue, say,
19(9 dollas, then this flow can !e futhe epesented !y a cuent flow in an
electonic cicuit, and its !eha*io can !e pedicted and manipulated with
useful pecision"
The thee ideal passi*e enegy components of electonics, the capacito, the
esisto, and the inducto coespond to the thee ideal passi*e enegy
components of economics called the pue industies of capital, goods, and
se*ices, especti*ely"
Dconomic capacitance epesents the stoage of capital in one fom o anothe"
Dconomic conductance epesents the le*el of conductance of mateials fo the
poduction of goods"
Dconomic inductance epesents the inetia of economic *alue in motion" This
is a population phenomenon /nown as se*ices"
D'+)+MI' I)>B'T@)'D
@n electical inducto 6e"g", a coil of wie7 has an electic cuent as its pimay
phenomenon and a magnetic field as its seconday phenomenon 6inetia7"
'oesponding to this, and economic inducto has a flow of economic *alue as
its pimay phenomenon and a population field as its seconday phenomenon of
inetia" &hen the flow of economic *alue 6e"g", money7 diminishes, the human
population field collapses in ode to /eep the economic *alue 6money7 flowing
6e8teme case ## wa7"
This pu!lic inetia is a esult of consume !uying ha!its, e8pected standad of
li*ing, etc", and is geneally a phenomenon of self# pese*ation"
I)>B'TIHD ,@'T+?9 T+ '+)9I>D?
$opulation
Magnitude of the economic acti*ities of the go*enment"
The method of financing these go*enment acti*ities 69ee $ete#$aul $inciple
## inflation of cuency"7
T?@)9A@TI+)
6@ few e8amples will !e gi*en"7
'hage ## coulom!s ## dollas 619(97"
,low J 'uent ## amphees 6coulom!s pe second7 ## dollas of flow pe yea"
Moti*ating ,oce ## *olts ## dollas 6output7 demand"
'onductance ## ampees pe *olt ## dollas of flow pe yea pe dolla demand"
'apacitance ## coulom!s pe *olt ## dollas of poduction in*entoy J stoc/ pe
dolla demand"
TIMD ,A+& ?DA@TI+)9%I$9 @)> 9DA,#>D9T?B'TIHD
+9'IAA@TI+)9
@n ideal industy may !e sym!oli:ed electonically in *aious ways" The
simplest way is to epesent a demand !y a *oltage and a supply !y a cuent"
&hen this is done, the elationship !etween the two !ecomes what is called an
admittance, which can esult fom thee economic factosF 617 hindsight flow,
607 pesent flow, and 6(7 foesight flow"
,oesight flow is the esult of that popety of li*ing entities to cause enegy
6food7 to !e stoed fo a peiod of low enegy 6e"g", a winte season7" It consists
of demands made upon an economic system fo that peiod of low enegy
6winte season7"
In a poduction industy it ta/es se*eal foms, one of which is /nown as a
poduction stoc/ o in*entoy" In electonic sym!ology this specific industy
demand 6a pue capital industy7 is epesented !y capacitance and the stoc/ o
esouce is epesented !y a stoed chage" 9atisfaction of an industy demand
suffes a lag !ecause of the loading effect of in*entoy pioities"
$esent flow ideally in*ol*es no delays" It is, so to spea/, input today fo output
today, a "hand to mouth" flow" In electonic sym!ology, this specific industy
demand 6a pue use industy7 is epesented !y a conductance which is then a
simple economic *al*e 6a dissipati*e element7"
%indsight flow is /nown as ha!it o inetia" In electonics this phenomenon is
the chaacteistic of an inducto 6economic analog L a pue se*ice industy7 in
which a cuent flow 6economic analog L flow of money7 ceates a magnetic
field 6economic analog L acti*e human population7 which, if the cuent
6money flow7 !egins to diminish, collapse 6wa7 to maintain the cuent 6flow
of money ## enegy7"
+the lage altenati*es to wa as economic inductos o economic flywheels
ae an open#ended social welfae pogam, o an enomous 6!ut fuitful7 open#
ended space pogam"
The po!lem of sta!ili:ing the economic system is that thee is too much
demand on account of 617 too much geed and 607 too much population"
This ceates e8cessi*e economic inductance which can only !e !alanced with
economic capacitance 6tue esouces o *alue ## e"g", in goods o se*ices7"
The social welfae pogam is nothing moe than an open#ended cedit !alance
system which ceates a false capital industy to gi*e nonpoducti*e people a
oof o*e thei heads and food in thei stomachs" This can !e useful, howe*e,
!ecause the ecipients !ecome state popety in etun fo the "gift," a standing
amy fo the elite" fo he who pays the pipe pic/s the tune"
Those who get hoo/ed on the economic dug, must go to the elite fo a fi8" In
this, the method of intoducing lage amounts of sta!ili:ing capacitance is !y
!oowing on the futue "cedit" of the wold" This is a fouth law of motion ##
onset, and consists of pefoming an action and lea*ing the system !efoe the
eflected eaction etuns to the point of action ## a delayed eaction"
The means of su*i*ing the eaction is !y changing the system !efoe the
eaction can etun" By this means, politicians !ecome popula in thei own
time and the pu!lic pays fo it late" In fact, the measue of such a politician is
the delay time"
The same thing is achie*ed !y a go*enment !y pinting money !eyond the
limit of the goss national poduct, an economic pocess called inflation" This
puts a lage ;uantity of money into the hands of the pu!lic and maintains a
!alance against thei geed, ceates a false self#confidence in them and, fo
awhile, stays the wolf fom the doo"
They must e*entually esot to wa to !alance the account, !ecause wa
ultimately is meely the act of destoying the cedito, and the politicians ae
the pu!licly hied hit men that -ustify the act to /eep the esponsi!ility and
!lood off the pu!lic conscience" 69ee section on consent factos and social#
economic stuctuing"7
If the people eally caed a!out thei fellow man, they would contol thei
appetites 6geed, poceation, etc"7 so that they would not ha*e to opeate on a
cedit o welfae social system which steals fom the wo/e to satisfy the !um"
9ince most of the geneal pu!lic will not e8ecise estaint, thee ae only two
altenati*es to educe the economic inductance of the system"
617 Aet the populace !ludgeon each othe to death in a wa, which will only
esult in a total destuction of the li*ing eath"
607 Ta/e contol of the wold !y the use of economic "silent weapons" in a
fom of ";uiet wafae" and educe the economic inductance of the wold to a
safe le*el !y a pocess of !ene*olent sla*ey and genocide"
The latte option has !een ta/en as the o!*iously !ette option" @t this point it
should !e cystal clea to the eade why a!solute sececy a!out the silent
weapons is necessay" The geneal pu!lic efuses to impo*e its own mentality
and its faith in its fellow man" It has !ecome a head of polifeating !a!aians,
and, so to spea/, a !light upon the face of the eath"
They do not cae enough a!out economic science to lean why they ha*e not
!een a!le to a*oid wa despite eligious moality, and thei eligious o self#
gatifying efusal to deal with eathly po!lems endes the solution of the
eathly po!lem uneacha!le !y them"
It is left to those few who ae tuly willing to thin/ and su*i*e as the fittest to
su*i*e, to sol*e the po!lem fo themsel*es as the few who eally cae"
+thewise, e8posue of the silent weapon would destoy ou only hope of
pese*ing the seed of futue tue humanity"""
T%D %+B9D%+A> I)>B9T?=
The industies of finance 6!an/ing7, manufactuing, and go*enment, eal
countepats of the pue industies of capital, goods, and se*ices, ae easily
defined !ecause they ae geneally logically stuctued" Because of this thei
pocesses can !e desci!ed mathematically and thei technical coefficients can
!e easily deduced" This, howe*e, is not the case with the se*ice industy
/nown as the household industy"
%+B9D%+A> M+>DA9
"""The po!lem which a theoetical economist faces is that the consume
pefeences of any household is not easily pedicta!le and the technical
coefficients of any one household tend to !e a nonlinea, *ey comple8, and
*aia!le function of income, pices, etc"
'ompute infomation dei*ed fom the use of the uni*esal poduct code in
con-unction with cedit#cad puchase as an indi*idual household identifie
could change this state of affais, !ut the B"$"'" method is not yet a*aila!le on
a national o e*en a significant egional scale" To compensate fo this data
deficiency, an altenate indiect appoach of analysis has !een adopted /nown
as economic shoc/ testing" This method, widely used in the aicaft
manufactuing industy, de*elops an aggegate statistical sot of data"
@pplied to economics, this means that all of the households in one egion o in
the whole nation ae studied as a goup o class athe than indi*idually, and the
mass !eha*io athe than indi*idual !eha*io is used to disco*e useful
estimates of the technical coefficients go*ening the economic stuctue of the
hypothetical single#household industy"""
+ne method of e*aluating the technical coefficients of the household industy
depends upon shoc/ing the pices of a commodity and noting the changes in
the sales of all the commodities"
D'+)+MI' 9%+'K TD9TI).
In ecent times, the application of +peations ?eseach to the study of the
pu!lic economy has !een o!*ious fo anyone who undestands the pinciples of
shoc/ testing"
In the shoc/ testing of an aicaft aifame, the ecoil impulse of fiing a gun
mounted on that aifame causes shoc/ wa*es in that stuctue which tell
a*iation enginees the conditions unde which pats of the aiplane o the whole
aiplane o its wings will stat to *i!ate o flutte li/e a guita sting, a flute
eed, o a tuning fo/, and disintegate o fall apat in flight"
Dconomic enginees achie*e the same esult in studying the !eha*io of the
economy and the consume pu!lic !y caefully selecting a staple commodity
such as !eef, coffee, gasoline, o suga, and then causing a sudden change o
shoc/ in its pice o a*aila!ility, thus /ic/ing e*ey!ody<s !udget and !uying
ha!its out of shape"
They then o!se*e the shoc/ wa*es which esult !y monitoing the changes in
ad*etising, pices, and sales of that and othe commodities"
The o!-ecti*e of such studies is to ac;uie the /now#how to set the pu!lic
economy into a pedicta!le state of motion o change, e*en a contolled self#
destucti*e state of motion which will con*ince the pu!lic that cetain "e8pet"
people should ta/e contol of the money system and eesta!lish secuity 6athe
than li!ety and -ustice7 fo all" &hen they su!-ect citi:ens ae endeed una!le
to contol thei financial affais, they, of couse, !ecome totally ensla*ed, a
souce of cheap la!o"
)ot only the pices of commodities, !ut also the a*aila!ility of la!o can !e
used as the means of shoc/ testing" Aa!o sti/es deli*e e8cellent test shoc/s
to an economy, especially in the citical se*ice aeas of tuc/ing
6tanspotation7, communication, pu!lic utilities 6enegy, wate, ga!age
collection7, etc"
By shoc/ testing, it is found that thee is a diect elationship !etween the
a*aila!ility of money flowing in an economy and the psychological outloo/
and esponse of masses of people dependent upon that a*aila!ility"
,o e8ample, thee is a measua!le ;uantitati*e elationship !etween the pice
of gasoline and the po!a!ility that a peson would e8peience a headache, feel
a need to watch a *iolent mo*ie, smo/e a cigaette, o go to the ta*en fo a
mug of !ee"
It is most inteesting that, !y o!se*ing and measuing the economic modes !y
which the pu!lic ties to un fom thei po!lems and escape fom eality, and
!y applying the mathematical theoy of +peations ?eseach, it is possi!le to
pogam computes to pedict the most po!a!le com!ination of ceated e*ents
6shoc/s7 which will !ing a!out a complete contol and su!-ugation of the
pu!lic thu a su!*esion of the pu!lic economy 6!y sha/ing the plum tee7"""
I)T?+>B'TI+) T+ D'+)+MI' @M$AI,ID?9
Dconomic amplifies ae the acti*e components of economic engineeing" The
!asic chaacteistic of any amplifie 6mechanical, electical, o economic7 is
that it ecei*es an input contol signal and deli*es enegy fom an independent
enegy souce to a specified output teminal in a pedicta!le elationship to that
input contol signal"
The simplest fom of economic amplifie is a de*ice called ad*etising"
If a peson is spo/en to !y a T"H" ad*etise as if he wee a twel*e# yea#old,
then, due to suggesti!ility, he will, with a cetain po!a!ility, espond o eact
to that suggestion with the uncitical esponse of a twel*e#yea#old and will
each into his economic ese*oi and deli*e its enegy to !uy that poduct on
impulse when he passes it in the stoe"
@n economic amplifie may ha*e se*eal inputs and outputs" Its esponse might
!e instantaneous o delayed" Its cicuit sym!ol might e a otay switch if its
options ae e8clusi*e, ;ualitati*e, o "go" o "no go," o it might ha*e its
paametic input J output elationships specified !y a mati8 with intenal
enegy souces epesented"
&hate*e its fom might !e, its pupose is to go*en the flow of enegy fom a
souce to an output sin/ in diect elationship to an input contol signal" ,o this
eason, it is called an acti*e cicuit element o component"
Dconomic @mplifies fall into classes called stategies, and, in compaison with
electonic amplifies, the specific intenal functions of an economic amplifie
ae called logistical instead of electical"
In the design of an economic amplifie we must ha*e some idea of at least fi*e
functions, which ae
the a*aila!le input signals,
the desied output#contol o!-ecti*es,
the stategic o!-ecti*e,
the a*aila!le economic powe souces,
the logistical options"
The pocess of defining and e*aluating these factos and incopoating the
economic amplifie into an economic system has !een populaly called .ame
Theoy"
The design of an economic amplifie !egins with a specification of the powe
le*el of the output, which can ange fom pesonal to national" The second
condition is accuacy of esponse, i"e", how accuately the output action is a
function of the input commands" %igh gain com!ined with stong feed!ac/
helps to deli*e the e;uied pecision"
Most of the eo will !e in the input data signal" $esonal input data tends to !e
specific, while national input data tends to !e statistical"
9%+?T AI9T +, I)$BT9
2uestions to !e answeedF
617 what 6(7 whee 617 why
607 when 647 how 667 who
.eneal souces of infomationF
617 telephone taps 6(7 analysis of ga!age
607 su*eillance 647 !eha*io of childen in school
9tandad of li*ing !yF
617 food 6(7 shelte
607 clothing 647 tanspotation
9ocial contactsF
617 telephone # itemi:ed ecod of calls
607 family # maiage cetificates, !ith cetificates, etc"
6(7 fiends, associates, etc"
647 mem!eships in ogani:ations
617 political affiliation
T%D $D?9+)@A $@$D? T?@IA
$esonal !uying ha!its, i"e", pesonal consume pefeencesF
617 chec/ing accounts
607 cedit#cad puchases
6(7 "tagged" cedit#cad puchases # the cedit#cad puchase of poducts
!eaing the B"$"'" 6Bni*esal $oduct 'ode7
@ssetsF
617 chec/ing accounts 617 automo!ile, etc"
607 sa*ings accounts 667 safety deposit at !an/
6(7 eal estate 677 stoc/ ma/et
647 !usiness
Aia!ilitiesF
617 ceditos 6(7 loans
607 enemies 6see #
legal7

.o*enment souces 6ploys7MF
617 &elfae 647 doles
607 9ocial 9ecuity 617 gants
6(7 B"9">"@" suplus food 667 su!sidies
M$inciple of this ploy ## the citi:en will almost always ma/e the collection of
infomation easy if he can opeate on the "fee sandwich pinciple" of "eat now,
and pay late""
.o*enment souces 6*ia intimidation7F
617 Intenal ?e*enue 9e*ice
607 +9%@
6(7 'ensus
647 etc"
+the go*enment souces ## su*eillance of B"9" mail"
%@BIT $@TTD?)9 ## $?+.?@MMI).
9tengths and wea/nessesF
617 acti*ities 6spots, ho!!ies, etc"7
607 see "legal" 6fea, ange, etc" ## cime ecod7
6(7 hospital ecods 6dug sensiti*ities, eaction to pain, etc"7
647 psychiatic ecods 6feas, anges, disgusts, adapta!ility, eactions to stimuli,
*iolence, suggesti!ility o hypnosis, pain, pleasue, lo*e, and se87
Methods of coping ## of adapta!ility ## !eha*ioF
617 consumption of alcohol
607 consumption of dugs
6(7 entetainment
647 eligious factos influencing !eha*io
617 othe methods of escaping fom eality
$ayment modus opeandi 6M+7 ## pay on time, etc"F
617 payment of telephone !ills
607 enegy puchases
6(7 wate puchases
647 epayment of loans
617 house payments
667 automo!ile payments
677 payments on cedit cads
$olitical sensiti*ityF
617 !eliefs 6(7 position 617 po-ectsJacti*ities
607 contacts 647 stengthsJwea/nesses
Aegal inputs ## !eha*ioal contol 6D8cuses fo in*estigation, seach, aest, o
employment of foce to modify !eha*io7
617 cout ecods 647 epots made to police
607 police ecods ## )'I' 617 insuance infomation
6(7 di*ing ecod 667 anti#esta!lishment ac;uaintances
)@TI+)@A I)$BT I),+?M@TI+)
Business souces 6*ia I"?"9", etc7F
617 pices of commodities
607 sales
6(7 in*estments in
6a7 stoc/sJin*entoy
6!7 poduction tools and machiney
6c7 !uildings and impo*ements
6d7 the stoc/ ma/et
Ban/s and cedit !ueausF
617 cedit infomation
607 payment infomation
Miscellaneous soucesF
617 polls and su*eys
607 pu!lications
6(7 telephone ecods
647 enegy and utility puchases
9%+?T AI9T +, +BT$BT9
+utputs ## ceate contolled situations ## manipulation of the economy, hence
society ## contol !y contol of compensation and income"
9e;uenceF
617 allocates oppotunities"
607 destoys oppotunities"
6(7 contols the economic en*ionment"
647 contols the a*aila!ility of aw mateials"
617 contols capital"
667 contols !an/ ates"
677 contols the inflation of the cuency"
687 contols the possession of popety"
697 contols industial capacity"
6157 contols manufactuing"
6117 contols the a*aila!ility of goods 6commodities7"
6107 contols the pices of commodities"
61(7 contols se*ices, the la!o foce, etc"
6147 contols payments to go*enment officials"
6117 contols the legal functions"
6167 contols the pesonal data files ## uncoecta!le !y the paty slandeed"
6177 contols ad*etising"
6187 contols media contact"
6197 contols mateial a*aila!le fo T"H" *iewing
6057 disengages attention fom eal issues"
6017 engages emotions"
6007 ceates disode, chaos, and insanity"
60(7 contols design of moe po!ing ta8 foms"
6047 contols su*eillance"
6017 contols the stoage of infomation"
6067 de*elops psychological analyses and pofiles of indi*iduals"
6077 contols legal functions Cepeat of 11E
6087 contols sociological factos"
6097 contols health options"
6(57 peys on wea/ness"
6(17 cipples stengths"
6(07 leaches wealth and su!stance"
TAB/E OF STRATEGIES
>o thisF To get thisF
Keep the pu!lic ignoant Aess pu!lic ogani:ation
Maintain access to contol points fo feed!ac/ ?e;uied eaction to outputs 6pices, sales7
'eate peoccupation Aowe defenses
@ttac/ the family unit 'ontol of the education of the young
.i*e less cash and moe cedit and doles Moe self#indulgence and moe data
@ttac/ the pi*acy of the chuch >estoy faith in this sot of go*enment
9ocial confomity 'ompute pogamming simplicity
Minimi:e the ta8 potest Ma8imum economic data, minimum enfocement po!lems
9ta!ili:e the consent 9implicity coefficients
Tighten contol of *aia!les 9imple compute input data ## geate pedicta!ility
Dsta!lish !ounday conditions $o!lem simplicity J solutions of diffeential and diffeence e;uations
$ope timing Aess data shift and !luing
Ma8imi:e contol Minimum esistance to contol
'ollapse of cuency >estoy the faith of the @meican people in each othe"
DIVERSION2 THE RI'AR1 STRATEG1
D8peience has po*en that the simplest method of secuing a silent weapon
and gaining contol of the pu!lic is to /eep the pu!lic undisciplined and
ignoant of !asic systems pinciples on the one hand, while /eeping them
confused, disogani:ed, and distacted with mattes of no eal impotance on
the othe hand"
This is achie*ed !yF
617 disengaging thei mindsI sa!otaging thei mental acti*itiesI po*iding a low#
;uality pogam of pu!lic education in mathematics, logic, systems design and
economicsI and discouaging technical ceati*ity"
607 engaging thei emotions, inceasing thei self#indulgence and thei
indulgence in emotional and physical acti*ities, !yF
6a7 unelenting emotional affontations and attac/s 6mental and emotional ape7
!y way of a constant !aage of se8, *iolence, and was in the media ##
especially the T"H" and the newspapes"
6!7 gi*ing them what they desie ## in e8cess ## "-un/ food fo thought" ## and
depi*ing them of what they eally need"
6(7 ewiting histoy and law and su!-ecting the pu!lic to the de*iant ceation,
thus !eing a!le to shift thei thin/ing fom pesonal needs to highly fa!icated
outside pioities"
These peclude thei inteest in and disco*ey of the silent weapons of social
automation technology"
The geneal ule is that thee is pofit in confusionI the moe confusion, the
moe pofit" Theefoe, the !est appoach is to ceate po!lems and then offe
the solutions"
>IHD?9I+) 9BMM@?=
MediaF Keep the adult pu!lic attention di*eted away fom the eal social
issues, and capti*ated !y mattes of no eal impotance"
9choolsF Keep the young pu!lic ignoant of eal mathematics, eal economics,
eal law, and eal histoy"
DntetainmentF Keep the pu!lic entetainment !elow a si8th#gade le*el"
&o/F Keep the pu!lic !usy, !usy, !usy, with no time to thin/I !ac/ on the
fam with the othe animals"
CONSENT2 THE RI'AR1 VICTOR1
@ silent weapon system opeates upon data o!tained fom a docile pu!lic !y
legal 6!ut not always lawful7 foce" Much infomation is made a*aila!le to
silent weapon systems pogammes though the Intenal ?e*enue 9e*ice" 69ee
9tudies in the 9tuctue of the @meican Dconomy fo an I"?"9" souce list"7
This infomation consists of the enfoced deli*ey of well#ogani:ed data
contained in fedeal and state ta8 foms collected, assem!led, and su!mitted !y
sla*e la!o po*ided !y ta8payes and employes"
,uthemoe, the num!e of such foms su!mitted to the I"?"9" is a useful
indicato of pu!lic consent, an impotant facto in stategic decision ma/ing"
+the data souces ae gi*en in the 9hot Aist of Inputs"
'onsent 'oefficients ## numeical feed!ac/ indicating *ictoy status"
$sychological !asisF &hen the go*enment is a!le to collect ta8 and sei:e
pi*ate popety without -ust compensation, it is an indication that the pu!lic is
ipe fo suende and is consenting to ensla*ement and legal encoachment" @
good and easily ;uantified indicato of ha*est time is the num!e of pu!lic
citi:ens who pay income ta8 despite an o!*ious lac/ of ecipocal o honest
se*ice fom the go*enment"
A'/IFICATION ENERG1 SO0RCES
The ne8t step in the pocess of designing an economic amplifie is disco*eing
the enegy souces" The enegy souces which suppot any pimiti*e economic
system ae, of couse, a supply of aw mateials, and the consent of the people
to la!o and conse;uently assume a cetain an/, position, le*el, o class in the
social stuctueI i"e", to po*ide la!o at *aious le*els in the pec/ing ode"
Dach class, in guaanteeing its own le*el of income, contols the class
immediately !elow it, hence pese*es the class stuctue" This po*ides
sta!ility and secuity, !ut also go*enment fom the top"
@s time goes on and communication and education impo*e, the lowe# class
elements of the social la!o stuctue !ecome /nowledgea!le and en*ious of
the good things that the uppe#class mem!es ha*e" They also !egin to attain a
/nowledge of enegy systems and the a!ility to enfoce thei ise though the
class stuctue"
This theatens the so*eeignty of the elite"
If this ise of the lowe classes can !e postponed long enough, the elite can
achie*e enegy dominance, and la!o !y consent no longe will hold a position
of an essential economic enegy souce"
Bntil such enegy dominance is a!solutely esta!lished, the consent of people to
la!o and let othes handle thei affais must !e ta/en into consideation, since
failue to do so could cause the people to intefee in the final tansfe of enegy
souces to the contol of the elite"
It is essential to ecogni:e that at this time, pu!lic consent is still an essential
/ey to the elease of enegy in the pocess of economic amplification"
Theefoe, consent as an enegy elease mechanism will now !e consideed"
/OGISTICS
The successful application of a stategy e;uies a caeful study of inputs,
outputs, the stategy connecting the inputs and the outputs, and the a*aila!le
enegy souces to fuel the stategy" This study is called logistics"
@ logistical po!lem is studied at the elementay le*el fist, and then le*els of
geate comple8ity ae studied as a synthesis of elementay factos"
This means that a gi*en system is analy:ed, i"e", !o/en down into its
su!systems, and these in tun ae analy:ed, until, !y this pocess, one ai*es at
the logistical "atom," the indi*idual"
This is whee the pocess of synthesis popely !egins, and at the time of the
!ith of the indi*idual"
THE ARTIFICIA/ WO'B
,om the time a peson lea*es its mothe<s wom!, its e*ey effot is diected
towad !uilding, maintaining, and withdawing into atificial wom!s, *aious
sots of su!stitute potecti*e de*ices o shells"
The o!-ecti*e of these atificial wom!s is to po*ide a sta!le en*ionment fo
!oth sta!le and unsta!le acti*ityI to po*ide a shelte fo the e*olutionay
pocesses of gowth and matuity ## i"e", su*i*alI to po*ide secuity fo
feedom and to po*ide defensi*e potection fo offensi*e acti*ity"
This is e;ually tue of !oth the geneal pu!lic and the elite" %owe*e, thee is a
definite diffeence in the way each of these classes go a!out the solution of
po!lems"
THE O/ITICA/ STR0CT0RE OF A NATION (( DEENDENC1
The pimay eason why the indi*idual citi:ens of a county ceate a political
stuctue is a su!conscious wish o desie to pepetuate thei own dependency
elationship of childhood" 9imply put, they want a human god to eliminate all
is/ fom thei life, pat them on the head, /iss thei !uises, put a chic/en on
e*ey dinne ta!le, clothe thei !odies, tuc/ them into !ed at night, and tell
them that e*eything will !e alight when they wa/e up in the moning"
This pu!lic demand is incedi!le, so the human god, the politician, meets
incedi!ility with incedi!ility !y pomising the wold and deli*eing nothing"
9o who is the !igge liaG the pu!licG o the "godfathe"G
This pu!lic !eha*io is suende !on of fea, la:iness, and e8pediency" It is
the !asis of the welfae state as a stategic weapon, useful against a disgusting
pu!lic"
ACTION 3 OFFENSE
Most people want to !e a!le to su!due andJo /ill othe human !eings which
distu! thei daily li*es, !ut they do not want to ha*e to cope with the moal
and eligious issues which such an o*et act on thei pat might aise"
Theefoe, they assign the dity wo/ to othes 6including thei own childen7 so
as to /eep the !lood off thei own hands" They a*e a!out the humane teatment
of animals and then sit down to a delicious ham!uge fom a whitewashed
slaughtehouse down the steet and out of sight" But e*en moe hypocitical,
they pay ta8es to finance a pofessional association of hit men collecti*ely
called politicians, and then complain a!out couption in go*enment"
RESONSIBI/IT1
@gain, most people want to !e fee to do things 6to e8ploe, etc"7 !ut they ae
afaid to fail"
The fea of failue is manifested in iesponsi!ility, and especially in delegating
those pesonal esponsi!ilities to othes whee success is uncetain o caies
possi!le o ceated lia!ilities 6law7 which the peson is not pepaed to accept"
They want authoity 6oot wod ## "autho"7, !ut they will not accept
esponsi!ility o lia!ility" 9o they hie politicians to face eality fo them"
9BMM@?=
The people hie the politicians so that the people canF
o!tain secuity without managing it"
o!tain action without thin/ing a!out it"
inflict theft, in-uy, and death upon othes without ha*ing to contemplate eithe
life o death"
a*oid esponsi!ility fo thei own intentions"
o!tain the !enefits of eality and science without e8eting themsel*es in the
discipline of facing o leaning eithe of these things"
They gi*e the politicians the powe to ceate and manage a wa machine toF
po*ide fo the su*i*al of the nationJwom!"
pe*ent encoachment of anything upon the nationJwom!"
destoy the enemy who theatens the nationJwom!"
destoy those citi:ens of thei own county who do not confom fo the sa/e of
sta!ility of the nationJwom!"
$oliticians hold many ;uasi#militay -o!s, the lowest !eing the police which ae
soldies, the attoneys and the '"$"@"s ne8t who ae spies and sa!oteus
6licensed7, and the -udges who shout the odes and un the closed union
militay shop fo whate*e the ma/et will !ea" The geneals ae industialists"
The "pesidential" le*el of commande# in#chief is shaed !y the intenational
!an/es" The people /now that they ha*e ceated this face and financed it with
thei own ta8es 6consent7, !ut they would athe /nuc/le unde than !e the
hypocite"
Thus, a nation !ecomes di*ided into two *ey distinct pats, a docile su!#nation
and a political su!#nation" The political su!#nation emains attached to the
docile su!#nation, toleates it, and leaches its su!stance until it gows stong
enough to detach itself and then de*ou its paent"
S1STE' ANA/1SIS
In ode to ma/e meaningful computei:ed economic decisions a!out wa, the
pimay economic flywheel, it is necessay to assign concete logistical *alues
to each element of the wa stuctue ## pesonnel and mateial ali/e"
This pocess !egins with a clea and candid desciption of the su!systems of
such a stuctue"
THE DRAFT
4As %ilitar# ser5i"e6
,ew effots of human !eha*io modification ae moe ema/a!le o moe
effecti*e than that of the socio#militay institution /nown as the daft" @
pimay pupose of the daft o othe such institution is to instill, !y
intimidation, in the young males of a society the uncitical con*iction that the
go*enment is omnipotent" %e is soon taught that a paye is slow to e*ese
what a !ullet can do in an instant" Thus, a man tained in a eligious
en*ionment fo eighteen yeas of his life can, !y this instument of the
go*enment, !e !o/en down, !e puged of his fantasies and delusions in a
matte of mee months" +nce that con*iction is instilled, all else !ecomes easy
to instill"
D*en moe inteesting is the pocess !y which a young man<s paents, who
pupotedly lo*e him, can !e induced to send him off to wa to his death"
@lthough the scope of this wo/ will not allow this matte to !e e8panded in
full detail, ne*etheless, a coase o*e*iew will !e possi!le and can se*e to
e*eal those factos which must !e included in some numeical fom in a
compute analysis of social and wa systems"
&e !egin with a tentati*e definition of the daft" The daft 6selecti*e se*ice,
etc"7 is an institution of compulsoy collecti*e sacifice and sla*ey, de*ised !y
the middle#aged and the eldely fo the pupose of pessing the young into
doing the pu!lic dity wo/" It futhe se*es to ma/e the youth as guilty as the
eldes, thus ma/ing citicism of the eldes !y the youth less li/ely
6.eneational 9ta!ili:e7" It is ma/eted and sold to the pu!lic unde the la!el
of "patiotic L national" se*ice"
+nce a candid economic definition of the daft is achie*ed, that definition is
used to outline the !oundaies of a stuctue called a %uman Halue 9ystem,
which in tun is tanslated into the tems of game theoy" The *alue of such a
sla*e la!oe is gi*en in a Ta!le of %uman Halues, a ta!le !o/en down into
categoies !y intellect, e8peience, post#se*ice -o! demand, etc"
9ome of these categoies ae odinay and can !e tentati*ely e*aluated in tems
of the *alue of cetain -o!s fo which a /nown fee e8ists" 9ome -o!s ae hade
to *alue !ecause they ae uni;ue to the demands of social su!*esion, fo an
e8teme e8ampleF the *alue of a mothe<s instuction to he daughte, causing
that daughte to put cetain !eha*ioal demands upon a futue hus!and ten o
fifteen yeas henceI thus, !y suppessing his esistance to a pe*esion of a
go*enment, ma/ing it easie fo a !an/ing catel to !uy the 9tate of )ew =o/
in, say, twenty yeas"
9uch a po!lem leans hea*ily upon the o!se*ations and data of watime
espionage and many types of psychological testing" But cude mathematical
models 6algoithms, etc"7 can !e de*ised, if not to pedict, at least to
pedetemine these e*ents with ma8imum cetainty" &hat does not e8ist !y
natual coopeation is thus enhanced !y calculated compulsion" %uman !eings
ae machines, le*es which may !e gasped and tuned, and thee is little eal
diffeence !etween automating a society and automating a show factoy"
These dei*ed *alues ae *aia!le" 6It is necessay to use a cuent Ta!le of
%uman Halues fo compute analysis"7 These *alues ae gi*en in tue measue
athe than B"9" dollas, since the latte is unsta!le, !eing pesently inflated
!eyond the poduction of national goods and se*ices so as to gi*e the economy
a false /inetic enegy 6"pape" inductance7"
The sil*e *alue is sta!le, it !eing possi!le to !uy the same amount with a gam
of sil*e today as could !e !ought in 1905" %uman *alue measued in sil*e
units changes slightly due to changes in poduction technology"
ENFORCE'ENT
FACTOR I
@s in e*ey social system appoach, sta!ility is achie*ed only !y undestanding
and accounting fo human natue 6action J eaction pattens7" @ failue to do so
can !e, and usually is, disastous"
@s in othe human social schemes, one fom o anothe of intimidation 6o
incenti*e7 is essential to the success of the daft" $hysical pinciples of action
and eaction must !e applied to !oth intenal and e8tenal su!systems"
To secue the daft, indi*idual !ainwashing J pogamming and !oth the family
unit and the pee goup must !e engaged and !ought unde contol"
FACTOR II (( FATHER
The man of the household must !e house!o/en to ensue that -unio will gow
up with the ight social taining and attitudes" The ad*etising media, etc", ae
engaged to see to it that fathe#to#!e is pussy#whipped !efoe o !y the time he
is maied" %e is taught that he eithe confoms to the social notch cut out fo
him o his se8 life will !e ho!!led and his tende companionship will !e :eo"
%e is made to see that women demand secuity moe than logical, pincipled, o
honoa!le !eha*io"
By the time his son must go to wa, fathe 6with -elly fo a !ac/!one7 will slam
a gun into -unio<s hand !efoe fathe will is/ the censue of his pees, o ma/e
a hypocite of himself !y cossing the in*estment he has in his own pesonal
opinion o self#esteem" Junio will go to wa o fathe will !e em!aassed" 9o
-unio will go to wa, the tue pupose not withstanding"
FACTOR III (( 'OTHER
The female element of human society is uled !y emotion fist and logic
second" In the !attle !etween logic and imagination, imagination always wins,
fantasy pe*ails, matenal instinct dominates so that the child comes fist and
the futue comes second" @ woman with a new!on !a!y is too stay#eyed to
see a wealthy man<s cannon fodde o a cheap souce of sla*e la!o" @ woman
must, howe*e, !e conditioned to accept the tansition to "eality" when it
comes, o soone"
@s the tansition !ecomes moe difficult to manage, the family unit must !e
caefully disintegated, and state#contolled pu!lic education and state#opeated
child#cae centes must !ecome moe common and legally enfoced so as to
!egin the detachment of the child fom the mothe and fathe at an ealie age"
Inoculation of !eha*ioal dugs can speed the tansition fo the child
6mandatoy7" '@BTI+)F @ woman<s impulsi*e ange can o*eide he fea" @n
iate woman<s powe must ne*e !e undeestimated, and he powe o*e a
pussy#whipped hus!and must li/ewise ne*e !e undeestimated" It got women
the *ote in 1905"
FACTOR IV (( 70NIOR
The emotional pessue fo self#pese*ation duing time of wa and the self#
se*ing attitude of the common hed that ha*e an option to a*oid the !attlefield
## if -unio can !e pesuaded to go ## is all of the pessue finally necessay to
popel Johnny off to wa" Thei ;uiet !lac/mailings of him ae the theatsF ")o
sacifice, no fiendsI no gloy, no gilfiends""
FACTOR V (( SISTER
@nd what a!out -unio<s sisteG 9he is gi*en all the good things of life !y he
fathe, and taught to e8pect the same fom he futue hus!and egadless of the
pice"
FACTOR VI (( CATT/E
Those who will not use thei !ains ae no !ette off than those who ha*e no
!ains, and so this mindless school of -elly#fish, fathe, mothe, son, and
daughte, !ecome useful !easts of !uden o taines of the same"
CendE
Incidentally, "Behold a $ale %ose" is an e8cellent souce of infomation
concening the )ew &old +de, and I ecommend it ## if it can still !e
puchased" It was B9N 05 when I !ought it in 1991" 6pu!lished !y Aight
Technology, @i:ona7"

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