On Feb 5, 2008 12:24 PM, Doyle Saylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Greetings Economists,
> On Feb 5, 2008, at 12:06 PM, Max B. Sawicky wrote:
>
> > It's as if the only way people can think is in terms of alternative
> > myths.
>
> Doyle;
> Creepy huh?  I look at your use of the state of feeling, revulsion, as
> being mythic as well.  Literally if you say on a very large scale
> millions of people see reality distorted by the current U.S.
> interests, but what is anyone to say about that whole mass?  Creepy is
> not in my view a realistic way of describing the public masses.  It
> seems at best moralistic in the sense there is some regulation
> governing sentiments, when there is not.
> Doyle
>

Trust me... Creepy. Uggggggly Americans.


The children need the focus of attention, not the adults... and
subconsciously, by teen age, they KNOW they're getting screwed and
impressionable.... By the time they attain voting age, it's probably
too late.

I just went ot a screening of 'War Made Easy' where Norman Solomon
deconstructs the exact psychological methods used that make us
'creepy'. Over and over, and over.... Generation after generation.

Leigh

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