Creepy Video Captures Dozens of News Broadcasts Airing Same Word-for-Word Attack on So-Called 'Misinformation'
The role of the establishment media, both nationally and locally, has long been to shape the narratives that dominate public perception.
Consider phrases like "mostly peaceful" or "safe and effective." These carefully curated terms were not the result of organic discourse but were instead employed to push establishment-favored viewpoints on topics such as social unrest and COVID-19 vaccines.
For skeptics, a recently shared compilation offers a startling example of how identical, scripted messages are delivered across local news stations nationwide.
Posted on the social media platform X on Christmas Eve, the compilation had garnered over 93,000 views by Thursday morning.
The video begins with clips of local broadcasters delivering a generic message that seems part promotional, part public-service announcement. But then it pivots to a message that is eerily uniform, clearly disseminated from a centralized authority but presented by familiar faces on local TV. This approach appears to aim at manipulating viewers by projecting a sense of authenticity and trustworthiness.
One broadcaster from KBAK in Bakersfield, California, declared, “The sharing of biased and false news has become all-too common on social media. More alarming, some media outlets publish the same fake stories without checking facts first.”
Such warnings about "false news" and "social media" thinly veil calls for censorship under the guise of protecting the public.
The compilation then shifts to a mash-up format, revealing 36 small video boxes featuring different news stations, each delivering the same message verbatim. Finally, the broadcasters speak in unison: “This is extremely dangerous to our democracy.”
The video concludes with a montage of 15 consecutive stations repeating the identical "extremely dangerous to our democracy" line.
Shared by an X user named "Ignorance, the root and stem of all evil," the post accompanying the video read, “This is what mind control looks like. Operation Mockingbird never ended. The CIA controls the MSM. The Conspiracy Theorists were right again.”
Whether the CIA had a hand in crafting this message remains uncertain.
It’s equally plausible that the message originated with corporate executives rather than government agencies. For example, the "extremely dangerous to our democracy" phrase was aired by KATU in Portland, Oregon, and WACH in Columbia, South Carolina—both stations owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group (SBG), a massive telecommunications company that also owns KBAK in Bakersfield.
Whether or not the CIA directly influenced these broadcasts may ultimately be irrelevant. If a powerful entity sought to shape public opinion, it could simply work through conglomerates like SBG rather than directly addressing individual stations in smaller cities.
Even without direct coordination from the CIA or another government body, a broader "conspiracy of interest" emerges. Establishment-serving messages are likely to be amplified by government agencies and corporate entities alike, regardless of whether they explicitly collaborate.
No matter the source, this consolidation of influence represents what can only be described as “extremely dangerous to our democracy.”