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Nov. 30, 2025 - Lionel Nation
30:32
US Army’s Secret Mind Control Unit Releases Chilling New Recruitment Video: “We Are Everywhere”
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Tonight or today or this morning, whenever you're watching this, tonight we explore what many suspect, but few dare to fully confront.
A fascinating subject.
A quiet army that exists within our own military.
Not so quiet because they're announcing who they are.
Not an army of rifles or tanks or the usual, but an army of narratives, an army of deception, of propaganda, of psyops.
A force that fights with imagery and suggestion and repetition and psychological leverage.
It's great.
I love this stuff.
And it operates out of Fort Bragg under the banner of the fourth psychological operations airborne known as the ghost in the machine.
Wow, that's what I call it.
I think Mr. Sting would say that as well.
Their new recruitment video is absolutely fascinating.
And what's fascinating about it is that it involves itself with something that's a little bit different.
It tells you, and this is the part that I find interesting.
It tells you what they are doing.
It tells you what they are doing.
I don't understand it.
It kind of defeats the purpose.
They have no problem whatsoever telling you that what I believe would be something that would be quiet, something that is secret, something that is not in any way discussed, something that is, how do we say this?
Something that we don't talk about.
Why would anybody want to do this?
Why would you want to tell people, this is what we do?
We're psychological operations and we're coming to you.
What?
You're coming to us.
Yes, we're coming to you.
We're psychological operations.
We're psyops.
I don't get it.
Maybe that's weird.
Maybe that's me.
I don't really understand it.
But as you know, for those of us who have been doing this, our group of people, our folks, we love this stuff.
I love it.
I love it madly.
And I love it for reasons that really people don't understand.
I love it in ways that is so critical and so fascinating.
And what's interesting as well is everything is psyops.
You see, our people, our group, our side, our notion, we're always laughed at because we've been talking about this forever.
And we've been talking about these folks and these things forever.
And we've been telling people for the longest time, this is what is going on.
This is what happens.
This is what actually is going on in the world.
And we've known about this.
Psychological operations, dystopian, post-Orwellian narratives, themes.
And if you don't think AI is going to be kicking into this even more, oh my God.
Like you cannot believe it.
My friends, if people knew how fascinating our world was, more of them would believe us.
Would you like to see this?
Would you like to see this video?
It's pretty interesting.
The new recruitment video is short.
It's about 77 seconds, but those 77 seconds roughly feel engineered to, and that says bypass more thought and reach straight into the subconscious.
Flash cuts, masked faces, surreal laughter, cartoon fragments of a phrase that appears and vanishes.
Anything we touch is a weapon that it feels less like a recruiting tool and more like a test.
Are you paying attention or are you simply absorbing?
Let's watch this, shall we?
I think it's phenomenal.
Let's watch this and see what you think.
Let me see.
Let me see something right here.
Let me turn this off.
Turn this.
There we go.
Okay.
Very good.
Let me go back here.
Let us watch this.
See what you think.
There's another force applied in combat that we generally don't think of as a weapon of war.
That weapon is words.
Words are weapons.
Telling the truth is the only way in which to influence people.
this is psychological warfare so what's your take
You saw that?
What do you think?
Did that do anything for you?
Does it seem rather amateurish?
Does it seem like they didn't really know what they wanted to do?
They just wanted to create the image of being somewhat surreptitious.
What's the message?
What's the take?
The operative word obviously is creepy, but what does it do?
What was the point?
How did it I'm not sure what it was?
Psychological warfare, psyops really, is nothing new.
It's as old as war itself.
I don't know if that qualifies, but from ancient leaders using omens to influence armies to medieval sermons that used scripture and kind of twisted around to justify conquest, propaganda, has been a strategic weapon forever.
But in the 20th century, it became a science.
And World War I introduced mass posters and slogans and emotional imagery and enemy caricatures.
You know, World War II fine-tuned the method in particular, especially with Hollywood and Capra.
The Ghost Army deceived commanders using inflatable tanks.
Remember that one?
Like fake radio chatter, staged movements that misdirected entire divisions.
I don't know if that was psyops as much as just clever misdirection.
Leaflets fell from the sky promising mercy or doom.
And every headline, every broadcast, every rumor became part of the larger story, the larger chessboard.
And the battlefield was not just, you know, Lancy and Air.
It was the human mind.
And they wanted to get not just the way you thought of the war, but your feelings of winning, of support.
Are you going to make it?
They wanted to affect your ability to fight.
And at the end of World War II, something changed.
The techniques perfected in war were carried over into peace, into the peace.
Instead of enemy soldiers, the targets became populations, nations, citizens.
The Cold War turned psychological operations into an essential tactic.
The CIA established programs like Operation Mockingbird, one of the best.
Still in use, by the way.
Oh, they're not going to say it is, but it is.
Absolutely.
Mockingbird was a vast attempt to influence media personalities and journalists and cultural voices.
Did every reporter know they were being nudged?
Of course not.
Of course not.
Influence doesn't need consent.
It only needs presence.
And newspapers began to favor certain narratives.
Television segments framed ideological conflict as moral absolutes.
Language was reshaped.
Thought was guided.
Energy, the energy taken, foreign governments, foreign governments were destabilized through rumor alone.
Votes were swayed without a single boot on the ground.
It was critical.
I don't know if they went so far as to announce we're psyop.
Does Russia do that?
Does anybody else say, hi, we're the FSB?
What?
I think it's silly, but what do I know?
And my friend, this is where propaganda becomes menticide.
Brainwashing.
Menticide is the systematic destruction of independent thought, not through violence, but suggestion.
It works by wearing down the subject's certainty, fragmenting identity and creating helplessness, feelings of it, and replacing personal judgment and control with implanted little cues.
Oh, it's beautiful.
Soviet psychiatrists explored it.
Western advertising defines it.
This is Bernays.
We know all about this.
Intel agencies weaponized it.
Instead of demanding obedience, they encouraged confusion, a fog of choices, a swirl, a kind of a miasma of trends, a flood of headlines.
The mind seeks clarity.
It reaches for whatever signal appears strongest.
And that signal, that signal is provided by those who understand the mechanics of perception.
We still have that now, bigger than you could ever imagine.
And our friends, our normie friends, they don't get it.
Psychological operations, psyops, are built on a principle.
Emotion outruns logic.
If you want to shape a belief, if you want to shape a group of people into thinking something, you don't argue, you stimulate, you simulate fear and desire and isolation, all of this stuff belonging as well with anxiety relief.
These are the true levers.
This is what they pull.
This is why repetition matters.
The power of repetition, the power of reparation, the power of all of this, as scholars call it, I explain this, is for you to keep hearing something over and over and over again.
Say it often enough, hint at it subtly enough, and suddenly the viewer, the viewer believes they've reached the conclusion on their own.
I don't want you to think of what I'm saying.
I want you to believe it.
That's not persuasion.
That's capture.
And the target ceases to feel targeted.
It's beautiful.
Here is what makes here is what makes the modern era uniquely dangerous.
Technology, and now with AI, has made psychological war psyops continuous and invisible.
Except when you put ads like this up, the feed, the feed replaces the pamphlet that they used to drop from the sky.
The algorithm replaces the radio wave.
In the past, propaganda was broadcast.
Now propaganda is personalized.
It's directed just to you.
Data profiles tell the system who fears what or who follows what or who doubts what.
And throw in Palantir and Peter Thiel.
Oh, dear God.
Oh, my God.
That's right.
This little ad is cute, but psychological triggers, psyop triggers, are tailored and deployed with machine efficiency.
It isn't just about politics.
It's about perception itself.
Images appear before we think.
They want you to feel emotions, emotions before there's any reasoning.
And over time, over time, the subject learns to crave this guidance.
That's exactly what AI is doing.
We're not going to make you decide.
We're going to give you a bunch of options.
Here are your options.
See, you've got choice.
These are the options.
We determine the option.
And the internal compass, your internal director, it breaks down.
It rusts.
The fourth PSYOP video is perfect because I think it attempts to embody this transformation.
It doesn't advertise.
It wants to provoke.
And it doesn't explain anything.
It immerses.
It seems kind of cool, sort of.
And other countries are laughing.
What is this supposed to do?
It speaks in fragments like a dream does.
Carl Jung once wrote that the subconscious speaks in symbols, not in sentences.
I believe that.
I believe it.
And that's why video and attempts like this, they use masks and eyes and static and half-finished phrases.
It also creates, by the way, somebody deliberately trying to appear to be creating something like this.
And it activates you rather than teaches.
It is not trying to recruit everyone.
It's trying to locate the ones who respond.
Not everybody is susceptible to this.
See, the ones who find coherence in the chaos, that's what they want.
Now, we must ask a very serious question.
How much of the world, how much of the world we think we understand has been shaped by deliberate psychological design.
Consider Operation Mockingbird.
Consider foreign color revolutions fueled by social media and narratives of social media rather than boots on the ground.
See, that's what's really fascinating.
Consider celebrity activism.
guided by unknown interests.
I hope you saw my piece on George Clooney.
George Clooney thinks he's going to be the linchpin.
He's going to be the kingmaker.
He thinks this.
And they're telling him, George, uh-uh, ain't going to happen.
But he doesn't know this.
He still wants his deal.
He wants the Oscar.
He wants the Tony.
He sold his soul to the devil being Hollywood and he wants something in return.
Consider these crises amplified to justify extraordinary executive powers.
Is that a conspiracy or is it merely strategy?
I don't know.
The line between, and this is what I find, between influencing somebody and controlling them is kind of easy to blur.
It's easy to blur where attention and focus is currency.
As I've been saying, information is currency.
Menticide, brainwashing, doesn't erase thought.
It redirects it.
It redirects it.
That's critical.
The subject, you, the one watching it, feels informed, but is actually being steered.
That's what's going on right now.
They form opinions, but only within provided boundaries.
See, they speak freely, but only within kind of manufactured discourse or argument.
There are no prisons.
The prison is invisible, but the walls and the limitations are very, very real.
This is spooky stuff.
And I don't think most people get it.
And I hope they don't get it.
You see, the human mind adapts to its cage faster than its captors ever imagined because the mind craves patterns.
Give it patterns and it will follow even into the abyss.
Operation Mockingbird may have begun in the 50s, but its spirit, its spirit is here.
It's here.
Not necessarily, remember, this isn't a secret room somewhere, but in editorial meetings and digital trends, you can see it on MSDNC every single night, especially when they realize that their world is going to collapse, that they have to come up with something really fast because they realize it's all over.
This is why even the Joy Reason, these folks are going great.
CNN is going nuts.
And they're bringing in Scott Jennings to hang on.
Scott Jennings is kind of diffusing and redirecting the argument.
Remember, this isn't going on not through bribery, but through some kind of an ideological fashioning.
Modern psyops do not need force, guns.
They need framing.
They need influencers.
Look at what I said this morning regarding Mr. Beast.
Don't dismiss that.
That was a critical.
Working with the Rockefeller Foundation.
Oh my God.
Influencers seated with tailored talking points, bought and sold, promising we're going to sell, we're going to make you, you're going to be an influencer.
You're going to make so much money.
Just say what we want.
Smile.
Change the narrative.
Change the thought.
We don't really want words.
We want feelings.
They need subtle little shifts in language and they need online storms, you know, that look kind of spontaneous, but are anything but.
These folks need an audience that still believes it is seeing the world as it is rather than as it is meant to be seen.
See, that's what's happening right now.
Trump needs more of this.
MAGA is a lot like that.
Don't kid yourself.
The word MAGA, the concept MAGA, is creating a sense of the belonging of something that we really can't even explain.
The word SIAP now appears on social media as kind of a slang term.
We use it, kind of a wink, you know, to manipulation, a joke about hidden agendas.
But that itself is a testament to its success.
When the subject begins to laugh about its conditioning, the conditioning has matured.
And when you have awareness without resistance, oh, that's acceptance.
Have you ever been driving down the road for a long period of time?
And all of a sudden you say, oh my God, I'm driving.
Oh, God.
And it scares you.
Oh, my God.
Oh, God.
That's perception without awareness.
You're taking so much stuff in, but you don't even know you're doing it.
It's the perfect analog.
It happens all the time.
You're taking more information and data in than you can possibly imagine.
They want to reinforce that acceptance becomes normalization.
That's what you've done.
Also, they have convinced you not to spend a lot of time, not to spend, do not spend a lot of time on different stories.
We don't want you to talk about certain things.
We don't want you to talk about, well, things that are kind of sort of sad, things that are scary, things that are bad.
We don't want you to talk about stuff.
We don't want you to speak about tragedy that doesn't really serve our purpose.
See, I believe, and I have thought for the longest time, this is, that everything is propaganda.
During the 50s, Leave It to Beaver was propaganda.
During the 50s, Leave It to Beaver was propaganda.
Father knows best, all of those perfect shows were deliberately set aside.
They were there.
Remember, Sarah Beckstrom.
Sarah Beckstrom was this 20-year-old martyr who died, and we've already forgotten her.
Nobody's, no big deal.
I brought up the case of Paddock of Las Vegas.
Fascinating.
Now we're going to find out maybe more and more information regarding Beckstrom.
It's not going to be from Kash Patel.
It's going to be from some independent journalist.
That's what's going on.
Do you see what's going on?
Once you understand, once you understand, you will never be the same person again.
Never.
Because even when our parents were coming up, they knew there was, you know, propaganda, like loose lip sync ships and that kind of stuff, but not like this.
Oh, no, no, this, this is a different story.
They want normalization.
And once something is normalized, it's no longer questioned.
The Fort Bragg video ends, of course, with an invitation to join SCYOP.
But many are already enlisted without even knowing it.
Every algorithmic feed, every emotional headline, every curated outrage moment recruits the mind to a cause it never examined.
Psychological operations are no longer a military specialty.
They are a cultural environment.
We live in them.
We breathe them.
We call them.
We call them news entertainment or activism truth or whatever it is.
I don't know.
But ask yourself, who built the frame?
Who wrote the script?
Who writes the script now?
Who do the same narratives appear from a thousand mouths at the same time?
Remember that Sinclair piece where all of the anchors said exactly the same thing?
We repeat words through LLMs AI programs are learning how to protect what people predict what people are going to say.
Words are weapons.
You know this.
And image are the kind of like the maps and the stories are structures.
And it all leads towards a lot of things.
Somebody call it freedom.
I don't know what it is.
But it's curating and it's directing you to think some way.
And some folks lead straight towards control.
And by the way, psychological warfare is not coming.
It's here.
And it doesn't like people like Alex Jones.
It doesn't like people focusing on this kind of manipulation.
You know who does it a little bit?
Tucker.
He talks about that a little bit.
The others really don't.
They'll talk about a story.
Their whole thing is, you know, the Middle East or Russia or, you know, Trump.
But they never talk about how things are perceived, how things are changed, how things are altered.
Trump knows image.
Trump knows image better than any.
He did psychological branding with the name.
This kind of like iconography.
Everything is Trump.
New York almost became eponymous with Trump.
The ghost in the machine.
Remember what they said, remember the theory?
That's that part of your mind and your soul that controls you who you are.
But the ghost in the machine here, it never hides.
It smiles at you.
It asks for your comment.
Come on, Lauren.
I'm a part of it.
I'm a part of it.
I invite your participation.
And I count on one thing that you have forgotten how to doubt.
But I want you to question.
I don't really care about how we, I want you to question everything.
I'm here to undo what they're doing.
I want you to question everything.
I want you to say, well, yeah, how do I know what I know?
This is the etymology, the ideology.
This is about the notion, it's almost metaphysical, about how we know what we know.
And the greatest victory in psychological warfare isn't winning the argument.
It's making the argument unnecessary.
I want to destroy the thoughts you have about this.
I want you to say, everything's fine regarding AI.
That's why big tech is doing so much work to try to get you away from protecting children.
They want you to get off that subject.
When the subject speaks the words of the operator voluntarily, the war is already over.
Your mind, your sense of free will has surrendered without even knowing it.
And in that silence, the true battle begins.
This is something that is so great.
This bothers people.
It scares people.
It really does.
It really scares people.
And you will hear people sometimes by some of their reactions.
They're rather circuitous.
They're kind of jumbled, but they're scared.
They don't really know what this means.
I mean, they do and they don't.
A lot of people in our neck of the woods claim to know what's happening because we, well, we believe that we kind of know what's going on, but we really don't.
But we're still a different group.
See, we're the group that unfortunately were outnumbered by a lot of, I love the word normies or just regular folks.
And the message that was initially provided for by Alex Jones and others, that's the one that I want to cultivate and curate and work with.
That's what I want to do.
Because I want you to know that whenever you are being told something, they are lying to you.
That simple.
Anyway, my friends, I hope you have a great night.
It's a nice, chilly 34 days degrees.
Yesterday it was freezing in New York City.
Same temperature as today, but the wind.
Ah!
I hope you had a great, great Thanksgiving and hope you're going through kind of a post-perennial breakdown.
Let me thank you always, as always, for listening, for being a part of this, for being a part of and listening to what we are saying and listening apart to everything that we are doing.
I mean it's critical.
We need you so much.
We need you to be a part, also to spread the word, but spread the way we think.
Ask people, take this out, bring this up to their attention.
Ask them, ever heard of Mockingbird, refer them to our channel, refer them to us.
We'll talk to them.
We want people to say, there are people who have no earthly idea of what you're talking about.
None.
It's not because they're stupid.
It's just, it's a subject matter that they've not availed themselves of.
Also, my friends, please like our video.
Please hit that little bell so you're notified of live streams and new videos.
And make sure that you subscribe because we found out, interestingly enough, that like 70% or so of the people who watch our videos, those don't actually subscribe.
And that's weird.
So in any event, dear friends, thank you.
Thank you immensely.
Thank you so much for everything.
Have a great and a glorious day.
We will talk again.
Don't be surprised if later on at midnight I say, oh, I'm on again.
My schedule is so odd.
My sleep schedule is so weird that I'm up when I'm up and I sleep when I sleep and that's it.
So in any event, thank you, dear friends.
Have a great and a glorious day.
Follow the comment section.
I'm going to be putting up some questions for you.
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