Hegelian Dialetic: How We Are CONTROLLED

March 6, 2007
Simply put, Hegelian Dialectic is how government leaders control and manipulate us into doing what they want us to do. The Hegelian dialectic is the framework for guiding our thoughts and actions into conflicts that lead us to a predetermined solution. The following explanation is republished from AmerikanExpose.com and does a better job of explaining it than I ever could. Emphasis has been added by me.
"Why is it important for you to understand the subject of the Hegelian Dialectic? Because it is the process by which all change is being accomplished in society today. More importantly, it is the tool that the globalists are utilizing to manipulate the minds of the average person to accept that change, where ordinarily they would refuse it."
"The Hegelian Dialectic is, in short, the critical process by which the ruling elite create a problem, anticipating in advance the reaction that the population will have to the given crisis, and thus conditioning the people that a change is needed. When the population is properly conditioned, the desired agenda of the ruling elite is presented as the solution. The solution isn't intended to solve the problem, but rather to serve as the basis for a new problem or exacerbate the existing one."
"When the newly inflamed difficulty reaches the boiling point of a crisis, it becomes the foundation upon which arguments may again be made for change. Hence, the process is repeated, over and over, moving society toward whatever end the planners have in mind."
"It's also important to understand that as this process is being driven, arguments are created both for and against certain measures of change. All arguments are controlled. The presented solutions — each with varying levels of unadornment — are "debated" publicly by the manipulators or their minions. This is done until a perceived compromise has been reached on the best measure to take in route to solving the crisis. Then, the outcome of the "debate" — which purportedly weighs the concerns of the public with the mandate to do something — is enacted as public policy."
You can see this at play every day in news every day and in the national and international political process. For example, look at the recent debate over the troop increases by the US in Iraq. Instead of having a debate over withdrawal from Iraq, the debate was quickly refocussed into a debate over whether or not there should be a troop increase. The predetermined outcome was we need to support the troops and nothing changed. When you start to watch the news from this perspective you can begin to understand not just politics but almost all events affecting our society.
Try it sometime and you'll see what I mean.
For more go to the web site: AmerikanExpose.com