Moral Philosophy
 
         
 
HOME Science Errors
 

 
The Reversal Mechanism

 

September 15, 2020

Corrupters never lose a fight, because a fight is their opportunity to reverse truth. Corrupters try to turn all disputes into a fight as a method of reversing truth.

So it's important to understand the difference between a dispute and a fight. A dispute has a reality element to it; a fight does not.

Fights are deliberately made as ridiculous as possible by corrupters, so the reality element does not get in the way of their fraudulent reversal of truth. It's a two step process. First create the most obnoxious lies as possible, then impose the opposite of the truth. Lying accusation are part of the obnoxiousness.

The reason why a reversal mechanism is needed is because corrupters are trying to impose unacceptable results onto society. Instead of making the results look good, which geniuses would fail to do, they simply blame others, primarily the victims, of being the cause.

But if the victims were not involved, how could they be the cause? They couldn't. So the victims must be brought into the problem, and a fight does that. It sucks the victims into the argument, and in the argument, the truth is reversed claiming the victims caused the problems. Simple as that.

It might seem preposterous, because it is preposterous to rational persons. But rational persons have nothing to say about it, because corrupters do the deciding, after they acquire the power to do so. It all starts with mongering power, which allows corrupters to impose their destructivity onto society.

It has been quite noticeable to critics that the accusations against Biden that Trump makes applies to himself. Not only is corruption being projected from source to opponent, but the ridiculousness is supposed to obscure the truth in a fight based on lies which allows the truth to be reversed.

 
Corruption Is An Ethic

How Power Mongering Works

What Corruption Is TOP

 

          top

Home Page
Moral Philosophy
Political Philosophy
Science Errors
   Home Page   
   Moral Philosophy   
   Political Philosophy   
   Science Errors