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C Rodgers's avatar

By coincidence I am currently reading the 2017 print of ‘Cheating and Deception’ by J. Bowyer Bell and Barton Whaley (originally published 1982, updated 1991).

It presents a broad overview on the topic and provides a framework for the analysis of deception. It is an eye opener and I would highly recommend it (despite it’s age) when considering the issues involved in false flag operations.

Cordially,

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Simon Frankau's avatar

I think it might be interesting to look at false flag in terms of Frankfurt's bullshit vs. lies.

Performing a false flag operation is a lie: You really want people to believe you, and you're likely to have a very bad time if you're caught out. So, use sparingly when you have good media control and want to send a message.

On the other hand, baselessly claiming an operation is false flag is bullshit. It's much less important that people believe you so much as you're instilling doubt - can you trust the news, etc.? It helps promote a conspiracy theory mindset. So, you can use it liberally, particularly when you don't have control of the narrative, to muddy things.

My 2 minute theory, anyway. :)

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