ALL MY FRIENDS WERE COLLUDING BEHIND MY BACK PAID OFF BY SCOTTISH NAZI PARTY. ALEX SALMOND he is the killer faking a referendum faking independence colluding with Facebook owner mark Zuckerburg former Rangers players Maurice Johnson TFC selling people into slavery. Colluding with Nazis to have me tortured on grounds im not Canadian. Then nazi send me to germany faking human rights demand I claim political asylum and torture me on every street in Germany on grounds I am not British or Canadian. Germany faked human rights and political asyl and the reason the internet is blocked, if you gas 5 million refugees no one would no. I worked in IT for 20 years and I cant do anything. as soon as the anti depressants were stopped managed to get my health back at 105 Harrison Garden Blvd, dropped all the weight danny quottrocci got me the IT Manager job at Royal Bank of Canada SNP WENT FOR THE KILL AS DID MY dirty politics of scapegoating – and why victims are always the harmless, easy targets. TORTURED BY NAZIS THAT I NEVER LIVER 105 HARRISON GARDEN BLVD OWNED BY JEWISH. The word “scapegoat” is being used a lot in discussions about politics in 2016. The new US president-elect, Donald Trump, appealed to some voters with rhetoric that appeared to scapegoat Mexicans and Muslims for various social and economic problems. Campaigning ahead of the UK’s vote for Brexit also scapegoated immigrants and foreign bureaucrats for many social problems, from violent crime to funding problems for the NHS. Since both votes were cast, hate crimes against immigrants and ethnic minorities have increased in both countries. There have also been frequent calls for harsh policies, including mass forced deportations of migrant workers and invasive medical examinations for asylum seekers. To polarise the community’s aggressive impulses and redirect them toward victims that may be actual or figurative, animate or inanimate, but that are always incapable of propagating further violence. If the community as a whole lashes out against a victim who cannot retaliate, then the community’s resentments and frustrations can be violently vented in a way that does not run the risk of unleashing an uncontrollable plague of violence. A safe alternative to class war Girard’s insights can also be applied to modern society. The results of the US election and the UK referendum have been partially explained by the economic anxiety felt within former industrial regions that have been left behind by globalisation. The blame for this anxiety lies with the political classes, the elites, the Washington and London “insiders”. They put their faith in an economic model and ignored its effects on ordinary lives. They made no visible effort to create new jobs in communities that had been been built around heavy industry. It was as though they hoped the people would rust away alongside the machines. The rhetoric in both campaigns was nominally directed against these elites: against “the establishment”. But when it came to the crunch, voters in the US gave power to a plutocrat – a direct beneficiary of the new economic model. And in the UK, support remains high for a government that is pure establishment. Lies of Denial. This type of lie will involve an untruthful person (or a truthful person) simply saying that they were not involved. • Lies of Omission. ... • Lies of Fabrication. ... • Lies of Minimization. ... • Lies of Exaggeration. Lying allows a person to establish perceived control over a situation by manipulating it. It’s a defense mechanism that (seemingly) prevents them from being vulnerable, that is, to not open up and reveal their true self to another person. DO: Maintain your baseline. Stay calm. ... 1. DON’T: Swallow hard. Swallowing hard is a giveaway. ... 2. DO: Breathe normally. Inhale, exhale. ... 3. DON’T: Touch your skin. ... 4. DO: Lean in. ... 5. DON’T: Shorten the syntax of words. ... 6. DO: Try not to sweat. ... 7. DON’T: Say “I don’t lie“
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