14 Replies to “Trust nothing.”

  1. The experts that Obama and the democrats sent to Canada for our last federal election advised the Liberals to use this kind of thing wherever Trudeau appeared. Our daughter was at a public event where Trudeau was present and she noticed people working the crowd pretending to be so excited to get near the prize attraction; asking people to keep their seat while they got a selfie with Justie Boober. Crowd psychology is a powerful thing.

  2. I assure you, the lineup in front of the new Popeye’s Chicken in Saskatoon was a purely grassroots phenomenon.

  3. Makes you wonder about that nicely filmed “Torch march of Nazis” filmed by Vice, itself of a questionable nature.
    Just so nicely staged, practiced, and chants never been heard before, all by millenials and hipsters, with apparently, a couple of true “nexus” thrown in to try and justify it.
    If that wasn’t a false flag event, I don’t know what is!

  4. Next thing you’ll be tryin’ to tell me is that all the union members lined up on the stage behind Wynne were paid to be there.

  5. Businesses have always manipulated EVERY possible angle of the customer experience to their benefit. For another modern day example, what kind of fool believes glowing on-line reviews without any question of their authenticity?
    Hell, any regular SDA reader knows that some entire industries are based on fraud and misinformation.
    I have been in sales and marketing most of my life and am aware of most tricks. From sprinkling employee cars throughout the customer parking area to look busier, to keeping near-empty displays to fool people into thinking a product is “flying off the shelves”. Even careful thought into the colors, sounds and also smells are given. It’s not an accident that the new show home you just toured was inundated with the smell of baking bread.
    But, what I would really like to know is, how advertisers convinced Brietbart to damage their brand by consistently hiding click-bait in with the legit news stories. It is shamefully dishonest and abusive of their readers’ trust, IMO.

  6. It’s like Hollywooden Idols … carrrrrring … about Global Warming (between Jet Set trips to the Amalfi coast). Their publicist insists it will make them “popular”

  7. I can’t stand everything about this. Fake society. When it comes to money, the person/company will do whatever it takes to get it. Marketing is mostly just full of all kinds of fraud.

  8. “Advertising may be described as the science of arresting the human intelligence long enough to get money from it.’
    Stephen Leacock

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