For instance, Wire Service News: "Feldman said the Maharishi's work 
would live on because he has trained tens of thousands of teachers 
over the years." 




>Duveyoung <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 
Twenty-Five Ways To Suppress Truth: The Rules of Disinformation
>
> 
> Twenty-Five Rules of Disinformation ~
> 
>    1. Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil
>    2. Become incredulous and indignant
>    3. Create rumor mongers
>    4. Use a straw man
>    5. Sidetrack opponents w name calling, ridicule
>    6. Hit and Run
>    7. Question motives
>    8. Invoke authority
>    9. Play Dumb
>   10. Associate opponent charges with old news
>   11. Establish and rely upon fall-back positions
>   12. Enigmas have no solution
>   13. Alice in Wonderland Logic
>   14. Demand complete solutions
>   15. Fit the facts to alternate conclusions
>   16. Vanish evidence and witnesses
>   17. Change the subject
>   18. Emotionalize, Antagonize, and Goad
>   19. Ignore facts, demand impossible proofs
>   20. False evidence
>   21. Call a Grand Jury, Special Prosecutor
>   22. Manufacture a new truth
>   23. Create bigger distractions
>   24. Silence critics
>   25. Vanish 
> 
> Eight Traits of The Disinformationalist ~
> 
>    1. Avoidance
>    2. Selectivity
>    3. Coincidental
>    4. Teamwork
>    5. Anti-conspiratorial
>    6. Artificial Emotions
>    7. Inconsistent
>    8. Newly Discovered: Time Constant 

 
> by H. Michael Sweeney
> 
> 
> Built upon Thirteen Techniques for Truth Suppression by David 
>Martin,
> the following may be useful to the initiate in the world of dealing
> with veiled and half-truth, lies, and suppression of truth when
> serious crimes are studied in public forums. This, sadly, includes
> every day news media, one of the worst offenders with respect to 
>being
> a source of disinformation. Where the crime involves a conspiracy, 
>or
> a conspiracy to cover up the crime, there will invariably be a
> disinformation campaign launched against those seeking to uncover 
>and
> expose the truth and/or the conspiracy. 




There are specific tactics
> which disinfo artists tend to apply, as revealed here. Also included
> with this material are seven common traits of the disinfo artist 
which
> may also prove useful in identifying players and motives. The more a
> particular party fits the traits and is guilty of following the 
rules,
> the more likely they are a professional disinfo artist with a vested
> motive. People can be bought, threatened, or blackmailed into
> providing disinformation, so even "good guys" can be suspect in many
> cases.
> 

> Provided Online by http://www.neurolinguistic.com
>
..

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