So, we're all aware of the infestation of paid shills into our memetic warfare geofront. First, congratulations to all of us, because that's proof we're doing something right. But there's one particular manifestation of this phenomenon that has piqued my interest - the attempted forcing of the Oathbreaker anti-meme.
BACKGROUND
It's all about mind control, innit?
Of course, mind control has been on the to-do list of the Archons for time immemorial. Since the very first cave painting, somebody has been using it as a divine justification for why whatever the current dominant minority (20% of the people do 80% of the ruling) wants to do is right. Memetic warfare has been going on for ten thousand years and magic and religion are intrinsically tied to the phenomenon.
MK ULTRA was a huge failure. It gave CIA boys all the acid they could drop in the 60s, but as a tool for mind control, it left something to be desired. Well, they realized that the OG mind control was right in front of their faces the whole time - religion. Religious passions have been making people do beautiful, crazy, and suicidal shit since the dawn of time, and if you want an assassin who won't hesitate for a moment to take the potassium cyanide once the mission is over, you need to guarantee to his satisfaction that he's going to Heaven a few minutes later.
So they experimented with the Campus Crusade for Christ and the Jesus freak movement. I don't know to what extent they created it out of whole cloth, and how much of it was the reaction of naturally-religious members to their peace-and-love generation, but it was definitely subject to conscious manipulation by the mindhacker wannabes. And they took what they learned and applied it in their first major campaign - creating a fanatical jihadist Mujahideen to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan.
I think some of us have wondered why the CIA is in bed with the worst of Islamic crazies. It's obvious to all that Daesh is just Western intelligence agencies in bad drag, and the government of Saudi Arabia is what it looks like when organizations like that go legitimate. Well, that's why - because religious fanaticism is the tool that works. Highly structured religions tell you not to think about their structure, and sends you on a recursive loop where you do all the work for them in justifying why you shouldn't question their authority.