Winston Churchill "Fear is a reaction. Courage is a decision."

Fear is the Intended Response

Politicians, letter agencies, corporations, globalists, “philanthropic organizations”, and others that for their own motivations, are intentionally creating the difficulties we face, all rely on fear as a driver to achieve their goals. Their most effective tool or weapon is creating fearful situations that cause people to react emotionally based on dread, worry, and fright and without logic. That way, they can keep individuals off kilter and unable to rationally deduce what’s going on, how to push back, and how to protect themselves.

Fear creates a mental state of chaos that disables lucid thought and calls into question, cogent decisions and solutions. In that condition, there’s a high likelihood that the least beneficial, wrong, or even a harmful decision will be made. Additionally, overwhelming fear can cause a person to freeze mentally and become unable to make any rational analysis or decisions. In a sense, that inaction becomes “a decision” to do nothing. Whichever outcome manifests, the result is what was intended by the cultivators of chaos.

Fear can be readily fueled by groupthink, whereby one person’s fear feeds another’s as it spreads and mutates into deeper fears, wilder beliefs, and gains reinforcement. It’s also an offshoot of doubt. Someone who doubts themselves can devolve into greater doubt from fear, negative narratives, and negative thoughts. It can cause one to slip further into the abyss of panic and its ultimate goal of causing those who are panicked to seek solutions from the very creators of the problem.

One of the most common methods perpetrators of fear utilize to move a large group of people to a result that they ordinarily would not choose or accept is to use the Hegelian Dialectic (Problem, Reaction, Solution) method.

The initial phase (thesis) involves fabricating an issue. The subsequent phase (antithesis) aims to provoke a response—typically negative, to the fabricated issue (anxiety, alarm, and frenzy). The final phase (synthesis) presents a remedy to the issue introduced in the first phase: This solution represents a transformation that would have been unfeasible to implement without the requisite psychological preparation accomplished during the first two phases.

It seems that nearly every day, there are situations where stepping back, looking at claims, comparing them to known facts and applying logical deduction, it’s not too hard to see the Hegelian Dialectic at work. Events of the last four years are prime examples.

As gloomy as all of this sounds and as much as real-world examples have demonstrated that fear works, it’s not necessarily a matter of course. You have free thought. You can give into fear or stand up to it. You can be manipulated or chart your own course. You decide what truth is even in the face of what seems like an opposing majority consensus.

If you can sidestep fear and rise above it, you are emotionally prepared for readiness and keeping your family as safe as possible.