United Secrets & Brainwash | Pt. 1
What does the “ United States of America” mean?
Here we go, another conspiracy-based article, another deep dive into what the U.S. actually is… is this a heated article? No, don’t tell me, the historic perceptions in this article are going to all be explained to decisively lean towards a point.
Actually, I want to be direct: this is an interpretation.
Think of this as more of an American reveal…
You are in a dimly concrete-floored room, and a tablet sits before you. The tablet displays:
“ What does the term ‘united’ mean to you? ”
You might think it means coming together, banding together, linking hands, becoming partners, bridging together symbolically — to become “one” and on the same side of the page in full unanimous agreement on a particular topic, agenda, argument, etc. It can mean those things, but when it’s used to describe the U.S., it means something more sinister or strategically productive — depending on how you frame it.
United is the past tense of “ Unit ”.
We often completely wipe out the word Unit, because of the modern-day pronunciation of the word “Unite” that sounds more like “ U Knight ” (this is very intentional).
It’s actually meant to be pronounced “Unit Ed”.
“Unit” indicates a group of a distinctive nature or quality inside a larger group, a piece of a group that owns or has its characteristics.
A coffee machine is beginning to start its brewing process in this concrete-floored room. Do you smell it?
States, Estates, Status… States are countries, right? We call them states, because in America, we don’t use the word ‘country’ to define the states. We use country to define the U.S.A.; but the States are countries, right?
Actually, this is quite a bamboozlement for many Americans. Many might make the connection that states are territories acting like American countries and translate each state to be a type of acting country that is part of the mainland of North America (without Canada) — which is sometimes considered a continental country….
A state is a condition. You hear this when describing someone’s behavior (state of mind). In dictionaries you will often see the word “considered” as part of the definition relating to national / European territories organized under political frameworks; but a state is a condition.
So a “ Unit’ed State” — a separate condition acting as part of a group.
This is where the brainwashing sets off: Oh, so you mean that the condition is joined with the group, so it is United.
For a separate or singular human to act as part of a group, what must that human be? A representative? A leader? Nope.
A member of that group.
How does one become a member of a group?
Citizenship? Yes — but let’s go deeper:
UNIFORMITY.
Each condition of land, and its people are to be made uniformed with the greater body of land, of which is: the Federal Republic.
But uniformity is basically white supremacy, right?
Nope, white supremacy doesn’t govern all; Uniformity controls behavior, permits or prohibits such behaviors to exist if considered appropriate by the intentions of a larger group.
There are two main centered sub-rulings when it comes to such controlled behavioral groups under a sense of unity:
Centrical Alliances ( i.e. white supremacy, religious movements, racial movements, gangs, guilds, sides, political parties)
Commonality / Commonalities (shared/learned etiquette (often understood by a select population) tastes, responses, symbolism, perceptions, behaviors, physical/mental characteristics (and studies), the nature of caressing, hygiene, clothing, body language, language arts (often shown in certain films, plays, literature, and passed down stories and other mediums), and ethnicity (ethnicity can sometimes be interpreted as inclusive of commonalities)
These two Sub-Rulings combined with a government / a structural ruling & law-enforcing body dictate Uniformity.
We are now at the big one:
What does “America” mean?
Does it derive from the Italian explorer and possibly Merchant Adventurer (of the Adventurer Companies), Amerigo Despucci? Does it relate to the Kingdom of Mercia (and there is quite a historic correlation from the U.S. to Mercia)?
Let’s break it down:
A Mer Ica
Ica — (derivative of Latin “-icus”) means “ a collection of things that relate to a specific place, person, theme, etc.” (Wiktionary)
So far: A Mer + A Collection of things related to
Mer — Right away, you’re thinking about ocean related terms: Mermaids, Mer- implies the the ocean, Merchants… Then you have an alternate term of Mer, which is “Mar”; maritime, marines, etc. Because of this you might see a variation of the Biblical name as being spelled “ Mary” or “Merry” or even “Merri”. Feeling “merry” yet?
Mer actually comes from Proto-Indo-European:
It means to bring death (Etymology):
TO MURDER
Why call the body of water such a sinister landscape? That is its own article. For now, let’s get back to America.
Mur, Mor, Mer, Mar — all derive from “Mer” and all relate to death (the limitations of living, and to enforce such an end).
Recall that even, Mars, the God of War, could also be implied as the God of Murder because of the Latin breakdown of the word.
The name Mark (or Marc), the month of march, or the march of a military, and even mercenary, all originate from merc (Mercian), and mearc (Old English) meaning a land boundary, a limit, a sign, a landmark, and a territory (Etymology).
“Please can I have some more, sir?”, a line often given to a begging character in a storyline actually could be redefined as “ Can I please have extra limitations, sir?”; it might be better to ask for excess.
Yet, these words have altered there way through language shifts into more positively defined words with a seafaring image. Why & How?
Lastly the A (added before “Mer”) is used as an element to create the naming of an existing noun (i.e. trophy to atrophy — turning an existing term to a new noun to be defined as something else). (Wiktionary)
So:
America
The name/terminology added to a collection of death-causing/causation
A term for the collection of death
So the Unit’ed States of America:
The Uniformity of conditional land/people of a Named Collection of Death / Massacre
The Information of Collective Murder
So, let’s get into the details, shall we?
A topic that seems to be brought up to no end has to do with why America (let’s just call it that as it still rings Stars, Stripes and Bald Eagles, {Commonality, am I right?} ) has cities, suburbs, and zoning laws that enforce similarities and cloned landscapes.
The famous interpretation seems to be, in a generalization: “ you could be anywhere in the U.S., but because of the cloned outlets and road design, you could potentially be (feel like you are) in the same place as if you were in another outlet, suburb in another state ”.
The response seems to be that the layout is to promote improved highway systems where cars are made to be vital, to go from one “station” of sameness to another. This is true, but there is more to this than meets the grim reminder of a sane sense of same.
Every street sign, similar building, familiar yet popular franchise is designed to promote Uniformity. Many observers often perceive this sameness as a form of corruptive planning behavior, but it’s heavily driven by the enforcement of uniformity.
So, why are there “rough areas” in the U.S. that do not carry the same level of “sameness” that other higher-end landscapes do?
If a population residing on American land does not promote “Uniformity”, they could be selectively punished; i.e. “It’s their problem”, “ They’re good for nothing”; “ they’re not like us, and they don’t deserve what we consider luxurious”. If one sticks to their culture to defy uniformity, they will receive deformity or disfigurement. The notion of disfigurement plays a huge role in controlling and shaping commonality (and it is quite an active brainwashing technique) .
Well then, why does the U.S. strive for diversity, difference, and its famous image as the melting pot of cultures while being a friendly welcome mat for immigration arriving on its great American frontier?
The term for this is often called the Great Uniformity Experiment, a.k.a:
THE GREAT AMERICAN EXPERIMENT
Why would you promote visitors to arrive to work as a drive for advancement? A sort of “American Dream”? What exactly is Advancement (sorry, a Pursuit of Happiness)?
Advancement is the state of moving “something” forward. (etymology)
What confuses almost everyone in the Unit’ed States is exactly what that “something” is.
Maybe it’s improved infrastructure, a better minimum wage, more rights, better laws, better schools, more technology, futuristic technology, cheaper groceries, no guns at schools, less violence on the street, etc., etc., etc.
To many Americans terms like freedom, progress, better housing, more jobs, no homelessness, and even the concept of voting (advertised to no end) all resemble this variable form of advancement. And when something has been met or created which meets someone’s or a population’s level of interpretive advancement, well: That is Progress!
But, that something is actually the further transition to a complete state of Uniformity. Let’s unite; Unity for all; We Stand United (as one [unit]).
A good portion of an American’s life is devoted to educating oneself, questioning one’s education, questioning the reason of their states and their Nation, National intentions, and their sole purpose.
This is why religion is a very profitable industry in the U.S., as are outlets of perception driven by limitations.
Originally, the purpose of the siege on the Americas was for Europeans to harvest the land to produce crops such as cotton, indigo, the Papua New Guinea sorghum plants (a.k.a. sugar cane), and a list of trade crops, that were being blocked off trade routes from Asia due to the expansive War of the Ottoman Empire.
At the time, the Portuguese were the trade leaders ahead of Great Britain and much of Europe, especially during (and after) the Bubonic Plague. Their close proximity to Africa allowed them to be more involved with the trading and mathematics of Islamic countries for the development of their navigational tools and ships. Europeans depended on Islamic mathematics for their own advancements.
Before the Ottoman war, the Portuguese were involved in finding fabrics, gold, ivory, and spices such as pepper from Western and Southern Africa. The problems of the Ottoman War, and the European push for trade advancement from another source, led to the Portuguese to start the Transatlantic Slave Route to horrifically bind and ship African human beings of all ages to the Americas (Met).
Each European country involved in turning the Americas (North and South) into a two-continental crop production and resource for European trade, were involved heavily in the abduction and torture-trade of African human beings to the New World to become trader-slaves.
Simultaneously, the native indigenous tribes and populations who had been living in the Americas for thousands of years (if not longer) were being massacred, or converted to become part of European organized religions, to be in sync with the European drive towards an advancement of uniformity under a system of authority.
Who would want to bring slaves and make slaves of natives? The general response is “ White Europeans ”.
But what type of “white Europeans”?
Who were given free rein to explore, colonize (which included mass murder and enslavement), and rename “discovered” locations on trade maps? Who were granted power by European monarchies to bring militias to do their own bidding? What type of European would have such reign?
The Merchants.
The overarching interpretation that comes to mind for many Americans of the stereotypical merchant of olde, carries three visual generalizations:
— The seafaring merchant, selling their wares on the water or bringing them to another market from the docks.
— The tented reseller, a peddler, a dealer, a storeowner, maybe a character from Disney’s Aladdin market in the fantasy city of Agrabah, who tells stories, has gimmicks and schemes, tries to manipulate customers and is often desperate for sales. This stereotype is parallel to how many Americans perceive solicitors or salespeople.
— Someone who works with imports and exports, similar to the likes of historic explorer Marco Polo, who goes and works with foreign governments to establish deals and work the trade routes bringing item A to location B for an agreed upon exchange.
Merchants were the original Middle class, the intermediary middlemen. The link between the wealthy and the less fortunate in an empire. The concept of modern-day business, marketing, advertising, dealmaking are all derived from merchants.
George Washington, the U.S.’ first President, ran a tobacco plantation ( why George Washington was never on a pack of cigarettes we’ll never know) before the Revolutionary War. Washington also used slave labor.
He made a profit selling his plantation’s tobacco through a merchant company called Robert Cary & Company (Mt. Vernon Washington Library). Simultaneously, Robert Cary & Co., was Washington’s own “Amazon.com” account, in that he used his same sellers to purchase items from London.
The word Merchant is also shaped by its past.
There is a link between merchant to the Maltese term for a merchant, called a “ merkant”; this correlates to mercantilism or the early rendition of the U.S.’ commercialism.
Here’s a brief video by Heimler’s History YT Channel:
A Telling Chariot
An additional connection to religions and mysticism comes from the Hebrew terminology Merkavah / Merkaba meaning a light spirit or light bearer (a theme and plot line used over and over again since its dawning). This word is used as a name to describe a flaming “Chariot of God” and the tale Ma’aseh Meravah (Holy Sands).
The chariot tale has appeared elsewhere in global mysticism and theology, such as in the Hinduism epic, the “ Mahabharata” with the mentioning of Arjuna’s chariot (in the Bhagavad Gita (part of the Mahabharata)).
This would make sense as Zoroastrianism, the major monotheistic religion which led to Islam, Judaism, and Christianity was shaped in India and Persia.
The history of world civilizations has some of its most early origins in the ancient Indus Valley civilization (Harappa), of which includes the precursor to chess and to many board games across the world, Chaturanga, a game that has pieces representing the chariot(s) from the Mahabharata.
This epic even has a story which could have been the precursor to the Achilles heel legend, where Krishna is murdered by a hunter hitting his only weakness- his foot (Britannica).
The name of Mahabharata was actually a rename for the epic; the original version was entitled Jaya (Sanskrit for “Victory”). It was passed down through kings, a bard, and storytellers. There were stories added onto the original verses; and as alterations came with additions, the title became The Mahabharata.
Could there be a connection between “Maha” and “Mer”? Mars and his Greek counterpart, Ares, both have unique chariots.
Could there be a connection between Jaya, the epic of conflict and war, reincarnation and karma, the city of Gaya, and what became known as Gaia, the mother of creations, as the stories were transformed by each culture and generation?
Now, what drives an ever-growing merchant population, and the new coming immigrants to the United States?
FREEDOM
Phrases like “Free Speech”, “it’s a free country”, I have the “freedom to do what I want, when I want to”, all sound great- but what is the general common day interpretation of freedom?
Freedom is a part of the popular American notion of not being ruled, being in a democracy, being able to speak one’s mind, being able to live how one pleases, to not be a slave or a prisoner — but is that really what freedom is?
Freedom originally implied, from the 14th Century, the “possession of certain privileges” (Etymology).
So if freedom is to have privileges, surely the term liberty will imply the same notion of freedom that is a popular understanding of its definition?
What is liberty? Now that we understand what freedom is, liberty was considered a granted privilege from the ownership of private land within a set boundary (a limitation) in the 14th century. The concept of liberty in the early days of America pertained to a “district’s (or a state’s) privilege to have a legal system and concept of peace particular to its own choosing” ( Etymology).
And a Privilege, based on its original 12th-century definition is a right, law or grant of ownership/power which serves or goes against an individual (yes, privilege can be a bad thing, too (who knew?) ). The notion of an individual comes from the root word of privilege, privus, also associated with privacy. This brings us to Individual, who surely is one who is granted such privilege?
An individual is one who is indivisible, they are someone who is inseparable from a given group: they are units of unity; they are the uniformed.
So… Americans are not free, frolicking humans from all walks of life, free from blame, free from worry, living it out while letting it all hang out? Not by design, but through carefully crafted manipulation and marketing, citizens and visitors have been infected with the notion of the Utopian Drive as their understanding of American Freedom(s).
THE UTOPIAN DRIVE
In many ways, the Utopian Drive is really the American Drive through rosy colored glasses. Utopian Drive is envisioned through active philosophical/theological propaganda and a sense of goodness directed towards action without direct involvement, i.e. “Things can only get better from here”; and the notion that hope and prayer will eventually help everyone if you participate in them (i.e. “ pray for those in a warzone so that they may find shelter and food” ).
Utopian Drive has become so influential, that brainwashing through generations of generations backing it, affects more than just the behavior to solve one’s problems.
The nature of being an American or an immigrant to the U.S., has become one who possesses the abilities that they can do anything they want to, because all it takes is hard work- and “if they can do it, I can do it”.
Utopian Drive has also become complex as it is shaped through American commonality. One commonality characteristic that completely plays off of the Utopian Drive is the act of Caressing.
To caress is to bestow gratitude, fondness and kindness onto something or someone (1640s). With the Utopian Drive, there is an American expectancy, that immigrants arriving to the country, the U.S. government, and the services that an American pays for, should return the favor by caressing the American unit.
It wasn’t always like this, but over time merchants and businesses have developed a circulating psychological American “Caress” (through the Utopian Drive) as a way of American living.
In the modern days of America, Caressing has merged with another term called Pampering (which from the 14th century, means to stuff oneself with food, to indulge, to partake and exist in luxury).
Some examples of American caressing include:
- Animals / i.e. certain “cute” or well-marketed animals which deserve our attention, our money for their treatment and our care and nourishment for their existence. This is done in animated films, documentaries, books, and the media for this is ongoing.
- Keeping or Owning objects as good as new (new, of course, being driven by one’s perception of what they need or require through their state of Uptopian Drive (or vision)).
- Expecting the experience of service and cleanliness of all businesses and locations to meet and serve to their liking.
- A Vacation: The notion of going on a “paid-for” journey where a set location and its people serve the utopian drive, indulgence and caress of the traveling American visitor (as they expect no less).