Friday, October 4, 2024

Fear, Control And Psychological Bioterrorism


Psychological Bioterrorism


Drs. Robert and Jill Malone’s book ‘PsyWar Enforcing the New World Order’ is due to be released next week. Ahead of its release, Dr. Malone has published a sample of the audiobook and the written text taken from Chapter 3, which we have republished below. 

Chapter 3 describes the mechanics of psychological bioterrorism, the harmful impact of fear-mongering and the role of the World Health Organisation.  It condemns the act of psychological bioterrorism, which involves exploiting the fear of infectious diseases for personal or organisational gain, and calls for holding people, organisations and media outlets accountable for spreading misinformation.


Psychological Bioterrorism

By Dr. Robert Malone


The text of this chapter was first published [on my] Substack, and long-term readers may recognise much of it, although there have been edits made to fit this into the broader context of the book

In any case, I sense that if this term (psychological bioterrorism) becomes more commonly used, if it is accepted as part of the language used to describe the process of weaponisation of fear to psychologically train people and populations to comply with various policies and procedures, that will contribute to stopping the use of this tactic to manipulate people for marketing or control purposes. Once you understand the term and concept, you will see examples of these tactics and strategies all around you.


Psychological Bioterrorism is the use of fear about a disease by governments and other organizations to manipulate individuals, populations, and governments. Although the fear of infectious disease is an obvious example, it is not the only way psychological bioterrorism is used.


“Psychological” or “Information Bioterrorism” involves the use of fear of an infectious disease to control people and their behavior. It is a very potent method for mass manipulation of populations, and this method works by creating a state of heightened anxiety and fear of death in the people who are targeted. 

This promoted fear is often based on allusions to misleading, poorly documented historical stories—essentially folktales or parables—about historical epidemics of very dangerous diseases such as plague, typhoid fever, yellow fever, polio, or smallpox. Often, these parables have little relevance to modern society with its sophisticated sanitary practices, clean water, hospital networks, and wide spectrum of antibiotics, antifungals, antiparasitics, and anti-inflammatory drugs. One example of such a story is the tale of the global “Spanish Influenza” pandemic of 1918. This story has long been used to justify the need for mass annual influenza vaccination to avoid some future influenza pandemic. But this is misleading folklore. This story has been repeated for over a century since these events occurred and still incites deep fear in the minds of many.

The truth is that the waves of mass death from infectious disease which did occur around 1918 were not really due to the H1N1 influenza strain, which did infect and cause upper respiratory sickness in many people all over the world—but did not actually cause mass death. Instead, current scientific analysis indicates that these deaths were primarily due to bacterial pneumonia, which co-circulated with the H1N1 influenza virus, together with inappropriate use of non-pharmaceutical public health measures, including masks, and inappropriate dosing with a newly discovered pharmaceutical drug—aspirin. A much more nuanced reality, but not one that supports the need for annual influenza virus vaccination.

The recent global surge in propaganda concerning a more pathogenic strain of H5N1 (Avian Influenza) that is now circulating in large chicken flocks (and a wide range of wild birds) provides a great case study of how a psychological or information bioterrorism event campaign is crafted and deployed. This current round of psychological bioterrorism almost precisely mirrors the previous campaign deployed during 2010–2016.


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