Domains Are Your Eyewear

Part One: From Toasters to Truths – The Weaponization of Persuasion

When historians list the most dangerous weapons to emerge from World War II, they tend to mention atomic bombs, V-2 rockets, and perhaps the early computers that cracked encrypted enemy communications. But they miss the most enduring one. A weapon so invisible, so integrated into everyday life, that most don’t realize they’re carrying it around in their minds.

Propaganda.

Long before the first bomb dropped, advertising in America had already matured into a formidable industry. The Great Depression birthed a generation of marketers skilled at using scarcity psychology and aspirational messaging to sell Americans everything from automobiles to canned soup. But it wasn’t until World War II that a profound shift occurred.

Advertising became militarized.

It stopped selling just things. It started selling truths — or rather, manufactured truths. Beliefs. Values. Enemies. Heroes. Fear. Hope.

In Nazi Germany, Joseph Goebbels transformed the Ministry of Propaganda into a precision instrument. Under Hitler, propaganda wasn’t a side campaign — it was the central nervous system of the Third Reich. It normalized genocide. It sanctified nationalism. It wrapped hate in a banner of destiny. And it worked. Efficiently. Massively.

America, for all its moral superiority claims, wasn’t far behind. The U.S. Office of War Information recruited Hollywood, Madison Avenue, and the nation’s best copywriters and illustrators to rally the public. “Loose lips sink ships” wasn’t just a slogan — it was a boundary, a domain border. A definition of loyalty. And like any good campaign, it stuck.

After the war, this machinery of mass persuasion didn’t shut down. It pivoted. The targets weren’t just external enemies anymore — they were internal: how Americans saw themselves, their government, their values, and eventually, each other.

Dwight D. Eisenhower, in his famous farewell address, warned of the military-industrial complex. But even that landmark speech missed what we now see as the fuller picture.

He warned us of the weapons industry embedding itself into government. But he didn’t mention its quieter twin — the perception industry, which embedded itself into the public mind.

The Self-Sorting of Post-War America

With the machinery of wartime propaganda still humming post-1945, something subtle but massive began to unfold. Americans started self-sorting — not just by class, geography, or income, but by worldview.

Not everyone knew it yet, but their eyewear had changed.

In the decades that followed, Americans weren’t just buying Chevrolets and Frigidaires anymore — they were buying identities. Each one came with its own lens. And each lens came with selective vision. You could now look at the same world and see two completely different realities — depending on your programming.

The Sexual Revolution of the 1960s is a prime example. Marketed as liberation, self-expression, and personal autonomy, it undeniably shifted cultural mores. But it also functioned — consciously or not — as a control paradigm upgrade.

Take the Women’s Rights Movement: Presented as a long-overdue correction to gender imbalance (and in many ways it was), its adoption as a mass movement was carefully shepherded by media, advertising, and policy elites. But what was left out of the narrative was just as important as what was included.

Where were the voices warning that pulling millions of women out of the home and into the formal economy might disintegrate the family unit? That outsourcing child-rearing to institutions might sever the intergenerational chain of wisdom and nurture? That women, now sold as “equals” in the workforce, might eventually be viewed not as sacred partners in a spiritual whole, but as line items on a dual-income mortgage spreadsheet?

The problem wasn’t equality — it was redefinition. Womanhood itself was recoded, not organically, but algorithmically. Motherhood was deprecated. Homemaking ridiculed. Domestic coherence collapsed — all in service of GDP, not dignity.

Then came the Civil Rights Movement. Again, unquestionably necessary. Again, co-opted. While legal equality for Black Americans was long overdue, the timing and manner of integration served another agenda: labor force expansion under a new pretext.

Just as women were now available to be commodified as labor, so too were Black Americans. But this wasn’t the Promised Land — it was an economic conscription. Participation was mandatory. Affirmative action gave with one hand while macroeconomics took with the other. The nuclear Black family, once a resilient foundation, was gradually eroded under the twin weights of welfare dependency and industrial automation. The “price of inclusion” wasn’t empowerment — it was entanglement.

And in both cases, the controllers kept their hands clean. These weren’t seen as manipulations — they were hailed as progress. Because that’s how it looked through the lenses we were sold.

The result?

A population more employed, more divided, and more spiritually diluted than ever before. One that needed more external stimulation, more consumption, and more media narratives to explain away the emptiness. The Bernays Payoff had arrived — not as revelation, but as blindfold.

Are humans ready to go in for a little Lasik surgery? Or, do you seriously believe our current “vision” is “good enough” for all to reach their ultimate potential as enlightened humans?

Ever parse that with answer to “Why aren’t UFO’s landing?” No? You’re not supposed to ask. UFOs have done a rebrand: UAPs.  And Aliens are not NHI’s.

Still confident in your vision of things?

~Anti-Dave 

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