"Imagine that you got up one morning and everything was different. Suppose that your life partner asked you why you were wearing a blue shirt when you knew you were wearing a white shirt and seemed puzzled when you insisted that you saw it as white.
Suppose you got to work and your telephone extension had been changed from 4432 to 4435 but everyone insisted that it had always been 4435.
Imagine what you would begin to think if you pointed out a new piece of art in your favorite restaurant only to be told by your lunch partner that it had always hung just where it was.
Imagine that you began to notice that you experienced a reality slightly but significantly different from the reality other people experienced.
What if these sort of oddities began happening day in and day out? The world that other people perceived, understood, and remembered was different from the world you understood.
And now suppose that this condition persisted, not just for days, but for weeks, months, and even years."
Click here for this masterpiece in mass gaslighting & brainwashing!
ON LIARS.... (sound like an Administration near you?)
We're taught that there are nine categories of liars. The first are outright heinous liars who can't be trusted for anything, and they include people who are underhanded in business or who use subtle innuendoes that can't be pin-pointed as lies.
The second kind of liar is exemplified by the "con artist" who coaxes someone into believing he's his friend and confidant, when he’s not at all.
The third kind undermine others through some sort of ruse. They don't actually rob or assault anyone. What they do is connive and swindle their victims into giving them something or doing something for them.
The fourth kind make things up or change things around when they relate things to others-- oftentimes without being aware of what they’re doing. As a rule, though, such people just *love* to lie, and they’re utterly inspired by the infinite creative possibilities of untruth.
The fifth is the type of person who tells someone he’s going to do him a favor or give him something when he knows from the outset that he’s not going to do it.
The sixth kind promises to do someone a favor or give him a gift and actually means to, then winds up not doing so, which is tantamount to breaking a covenant and a trust.
The seventh is the kind of person who deludes someone into believing he’d done him a favor or complimented him, when he hadn't at all.
The eighth type extol themselves for qualities they don't have, or exaggerate the ones they do.
And the ninth don't actually lie about things so much as change things around simply because it brings them some sort of satisfaction.
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