Farley on Nostr: The very agency designed to protect and uphold national security—the CIA—becomes ...
The very agency designed to protect and uphold national security—the CIA—becomes the architect of the enemies it warns us about. The narrative that "1,000 or more" operatives are already within our borders is an alarming piece of the puzzle. But when you peel back the layers, you uncover the deeper truth: the CIA has long been in the business of creating threats, engineering enemies, and shaping narratives to serve their geopolitical objectives.
In a world where fear is the currency, the CIA knows how to play the game. The enemy is never a single face, nor a simple cause; it is a constantly shifting, fabricated concept. They orchestrate covert operations, fund extremist groups, and manipulate conflicts to sow discord. Then, when the dust settles, they present the very terror they cultivated, ensuring that the world remains in a state of perpetual fear and distrust.
This deliberate creation of enemies ensures a continuous cycle: the government justifies expanding surveillance, increasing control, and stripping away freedoms in the name of protection. The public, fearing these invisible enemies, becomes complicit in their own subjugation, believing that safety comes at the cost of liberty. And thus, the CIA’s role as both creator and protector of these fabricated threats positions them not as defenders of the nation, but as the ultimate puppeteers, pulling the strings of both fear and control.
What’s more chilling is the fact that this strategy is not an isolated incident—it is a consistent pattern in modern history. From the Cold War to the War on Terror, the CIA's manipulation of public perception and the creation of new enemies has always served to justify their existence, expand their power, and solidify their place in the global order.
In a world where fear is the currency, the CIA knows how to play the game. The enemy is never a single face, nor a simple cause; it is a constantly shifting, fabricated concept. They orchestrate covert operations, fund extremist groups, and manipulate conflicts to sow discord. Then, when the dust settles, they present the very terror they cultivated, ensuring that the world remains in a state of perpetual fear and distrust.
This deliberate creation of enemies ensures a continuous cycle: the government justifies expanding surveillance, increasing control, and stripping away freedoms in the name of protection. The public, fearing these invisible enemies, becomes complicit in their own subjugation, believing that safety comes at the cost of liberty. And thus, the CIA’s role as both creator and protector of these fabricated threats positions them not as defenders of the nation, but as the ultimate puppeteers, pulling the strings of both fear and control.
What’s more chilling is the fact that this strategy is not an isolated incident—it is a consistent pattern in modern history. From the Cold War to the War on Terror, the CIA's manipulation of public perception and the creation of new enemies has always served to justify their existence, expand their power, and solidify their place in the global order.