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Dr Mike Yeadon's avatar

Shocking to think that Tavistock may have arranged to inject, in the 1960s, a children’s playground game with built in nudge training. I was a stubborn little boy and deeply suspicious of almost everything. So I probably didn’t play it. Can you tell? 🤭 Does it show? I rarely ask “May I?”

Tim West's avatar

😀💪🔥

Amaterasu Solar's avatar

I played a bit in elementary school, but never saw it as "reality." I never asked IRL "Mother may I." I was always getting put in My room for disobedience. LOL!

Kaylene Emery's avatar

I spent most of my school time out side of the class room…..for disobedience 🤔

Dr Mike Yeadon's avatar

I think there’s a pattern emerging ♥️

Amaterasu Solar's avatar

I managed to avoid that, but spent My time daydreaming and ignoring things. I was bored to tears!

Erin J. Morgart's avatar

May I leave a comment? 😬

Great Stack, Tim!

Sandy K's avatar

Early childhood outsider here, so I wasn't invited to play much of anything until I lost my heavy Hungarian accent and we moved to another community further away from the ethnic ghetto crowd. 🙏🙄

Amaterasu Solar's avatar

Indeed, They groom Us, indoctrinating from Our birth, lie to Us and fill Us with propaganda. They want obedient workers, not creative Individuals.

No doubt Tavistock had it's fingers in the game.

Sue Kilp's avatar

Great points to reflect upon!. Having been born and raised in colonized land I did not play the US children's popular games. This mornings dialogue on Indigenous redirections in political thought reminded me of the common assumption most of us played or at least participated in similar activities. I did enjoy playing hide and seek; apparently the problem was I was still in hiding mode past the allotted time.

Craig's avatar

May I pee in the drinking fountain?

Tim West's avatar

That’s not how the game works. Someone would have to say. “Pee in the drinking fountain” and you would say “May I?” (seeking secure permission to obey their despotic destructive command) and they would reply “yes you may” and then you would pee in the water fountain.

Kaylene Emery's avatar

Blessings and appreciation from Sydney Australia.

Calvin Perrins's avatar

Master psychologists are who is really running things. Dark occultism is master psychology. If you alter perception you control behaviour and it is the quality of our behaviour in the aggregate that governs the conditions we collectively experience. It's a continual battle of consciousness which is why knowledge of natural law and shadow work is critical if we are to change ourselves and the current human condition of slavery and suffering.

The universe favours courage and unity and the dark occult are deeply united and courageous. Dark care will win over no care and the general population has no care. Even the fake fuckery of the so called freedom movement has no care at all because the majority continue to ignore the universal requirements for freedom. Little do people realise that it is what we choose to ignore that most effectively manifests our reality.

Chaos teaches us what not to do. When there's mass violence and digital control maybe then we'll all realise the absolute necessity of objective morality and the rule of law.

Vic Mac's avatar

Well said. THI_show also share your views.

Snooze's avatar

Since the “carbon credit and emissions” model is based on a lie, doesn’t the whole system collapse? Sustainable development? What exactly does that mean? This entire CBDC/UN nonsense is such a waste of time. And we have to bend our brains to make sense of it? No thanks. Not playing that game.

Helen Seymour's avatar

Definately no May I?

When I grew up.Southern England.1950's🙏

We played in bombed and derelict buildings.

I was extra lucky and lived opposite a derilect Gas Works ,

with a large creek inlet behind it.What fun.😁

Not having a garden proved to be a bonus, as we ran wild and free.

The mind control came as fear of Nuclear bombs mentioned constantly.

I always though I would not live to be a “ grown up”

Not sure if I have yet 😁

Then every film of childbirth showing women crying out in agony.

Never a mention of it being pleasant in any way.

The Swinging 60’s.

Now I’m shocked to discover all the Social Engineering🤯

🙏 Tim,and yes escape is formidable,❤️❤️

Pighooey's avatar

Tim - I too am a long-time Rush fan and those lyrics resonate, along with many others, BUT my enjoyment was severely tainted after reading Geddy Lee's autobiography "My 'effin life" - amongst other things, he bought into the plandemic hook, line and sinker. He doesn't come across well... never meet your heroes!

About "May I?" - yes, I too played it at Primary School in the 1970s (NW England). I don't think it was a particular favourite for anyone, as far as I remember. It was too easily rigged by the one calling the shots who'd give giant steps to their best friends, and pin steps to anyone they'd fallen out with. One thing I'm trying to recall - how did we learn the rules? Was it a game our teachers taught us? I think perhaps it was, but that could be a false memory.