Disclaimer: This satirical post is for those fed up with public health spin and Big Pharma pep talks. If billion-dollar PsyOps make you crave rebellion or selective memory loss, consult a fact-checker and settle in with a government-approved fairytale. For those allergic to inconvenient truths, ask about the Blob’s new mRNA update—perfect for tuning out scandal.
Greetings, dear Fidibus, viral Protopianauts, and freedom-loving FrizzleFolk,
Welcome to the latest addition in our FrizzleFile Chronicles—a deep dive into how your hard-earned tax dollars went up in psychological smoke under the guise of “public health.”
Buckle up, dear Fidibus and FrizzleFolk! We’re peeling back the layers on a billion-dollar public health campaign, courtesy of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), that became a full-blown PsyOp Olympics.
Under the slogan “We Can Do This”—less a call to action, more a mandate to obey—this campaign reshaped perceptions under the guise of public health. Behold, my friends, how $991 million bought America its very own PsyWar spectacle.
FrizzleFile 1: The “We Can Do This” PsyWar Machine
Let’s start with that comforting, all-too-familiar slogan: “We Can Do This.” At first glance, it sounds positive, almost heartwarming. But behind this feel-good motto, Fors Marsh Group (FMG) was launching a psychological assault on the public. This wasn’t a simple public health announcement but a targeted PsyWar effort, as hefty as the financial footprint it left on taxpayers’ backs.
So, who exactly is Fors Marsh Group? In Beltway slang, FMG is a “Beltway Bandit”—those savvy consultants who thrive on government contracts. With this contract, they became HHS’s go-to operator in behavioral warfare, churning out ads, social media posts, and YouTube videos to reshape perceptions. They even conducted segmentation analyses, meaning you and your neighbors were each targeted differently based on what made you tick—and what made you fear.
Why? Simple: HHS aimed to push the reluctant masses from cautious spectators to “enthusiastic compliance,” coaxing everyone to get with the program. Remember, folks, this wasn’t just information-sharing; this was behavior modification on a universal scale.
Sources and FrizzleFacts:
With a price tag of $991 million, the HHS-backed “We Can Do This” campaign became one of the most aggressive public influence maneuvers to date. Using the expertise of Fors Marsh Group, a consulting firm deeply rooted in the DC Beltway, this campaign transformed public health messaging into behavioral modification aimed at compliance rather than informed choice.
HHS contract awarded to Fors Marsh Group for public education campaign: https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2021/07/22/hhs-announces-billion-dollar-initiative-to-combat-covid-19-vaccine-hesitancy.html
Segmentation tactics employed: Pushed individualized tactics to “sway” varying demographics, playing on personal biases: https://energycommerce.house.gov/sites/democrats.energycommerce.house.gov/files/documents/HHS-Contract-Analysis-Fors-Marsh-Report.pdf
PsyOp tactics confirmed by Robert W. Malone, MD: https://rwmalonemd.substack.com/p/house-committee-report
FrizzleFile 2: Public Health or Public Hysteria? The Fine Art of Misleading Messaging
Now let’s talk disinformation—HHS’s real mission. The House committee’s report exposes a staggering amount of exaggerated data and strategically ambiguous statements pushed by the CDC and echoed by Fors Marsh’s PsyWar squad.
Take, for example, the CDC’s dire predictions about COVID’s risk to children, which they “consistently overstated.” Meanwhile, the campaign overstated vaccine effectiveness, downplayed potential risks, and steamrolled any nuance out of existence. So what happened? When these exaggerations hit reality, vaccine confidence dropped. Yes, the public’s faith was shattered, but hey, the campaign was still deemed an “unqualified success” by those raking in the big bucks.
The real kicker? This one-sided message barrage, urging universal vaccination, went well beyond the bounds of the FDA’s own Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) guidelines. While EUA stressed informed choice, Fors Marsh’s campaigns eliminated that choice, pushing a “do-or-die” narrative, all under the benevolent banner of “We Can Do This.”
Sources and FrizzleFacts:
The House committee report uncovered disinformation tactics embedded within this campaign. The CDC and HHS both distorted facts around COVID risk factors to children and vaccine efficacy, breaking the FDA’s EUA guidelines that stress informed consent over coercion. Fors Marsh’s role? Maximizing vaccine uptake by inflating fears—pushing “duty to comply” over balanced discussion.
CDC’s exaggerated COVID risks for children and overstatements on vaccine transmission efficacy: https://nypost.com/2024/10/26/hhs-spent-911-million-promoting-covid-19-vaccine-federal-panel-says/
Ethics of EUA vis-à-vis public health campaigns, stressing informed consent: https://www.fda.gov/emergency-preparedness-and-response/mcm-legal-regulatory-and-policy-framework/emergency-use-authorization
FrizzleFile 3: The CDC Foundation—Where Public Good Meets Private Profit
Now, dear Fidibus, you may wonder who funded this grand operation. Enter the CDC Foundation—a marvel of modern bureaucracy that lets private powerhouses like the Gates Foundation slip cash straight into CDC coffers. But why would Pharma and tech giants invest so generously in public health? Simple: to control the narrative and stomp out dissent.
The CDC Foundation oversees entities like Public Goods Projects (PGP), a social influence project that ran “Shots Heard” and “Team Halo.” These weren’t just well-meaning campaigns to combat misinformation; these were full-throttle gangstalking operations against doctors, scientists, and citizens who dared to question the gospel of the jab. Dr. Joe Smyser, PGP’s CEO, even enlisted influencers to tackle “vaccine hesitancy”—or, in layman’s terms, dissent.
Sources and FrizzleFacts:
The CDC Foundation funded Public Goods Projects, a nonprofit directing massive influence campaigns like “Shots Heard” and “Team Halo,” which were ostensibly aimed at countering misinformation but primarily served to silence dissent. Using influencer-led “vaccine hesitancy” interventions, PGP and the CDC Foundation channeled funds from private giants like the Gates Foundation to control the COVID narrative.
CDC Foundation funding: Known as a conduit for private investment in public messaging campaigns: https://www.cdcfoundation.org/what/partners/health-sector
Public Goods Projects and Dr. Joe Smyser’s role: Leveraging social media to silence vaccine skeptics: https://publicgoodsprojects.org/shots-heard
FrizzleFile 4: Vanishing Act – The Case of the Disappearing COVID Ads
In a move straight from the “delete history” playbook, the CDC began erasing campaign materials from YouTube as the House panel inquiry loomed. In an Orwellian twist, not a single video remains. Why? The CDC’s messaging relied on fear-mongering tactics that couldn’t stand up to public scrutiny. The report notes, “Many of these ads exaggerated risks, sowing fear rather than clarity,” leaving us to wonder: was this really about public health, or was it about public control?
The outcome? Millions were browbeaten into compliance, while dissenters became enemies of the state. And those whose minds resisted? Well, perhaps they were labeled as “domestic terrorists,” if we’re to believe the Department of Homeland Security’s own disinformation task force. Irony, anyone?.
Sources and FrizzleFacts:
Just as the House panel began investigating this campaign, the CDC scrubbed its YouTube channels, erasing ads and public messaging videos. The abrupt deletions indicate a potential cover-up of misleading health narratives. This Orwellian action saw fear-driven ads vanish from public view, leaving no trace of the initial, often distorted messaging about masking, distancing, and vaccine efficacy.
CDC’s deleted ads on YouTube: HHS reported missing ads during the probe: https://energycommerce.house.gov/reports/committee-report-psychological-campaign-2024
House Panel Probe confirmed CDC’s scrubbed data: https://www.youtube.com/user/CDCStreamingHealth
Consequences? Don’t Hold Your Breath
In the end, what did $1 billion accomplish? A campaign so intense, so calculated, and so manipulative that it left the American public with a bitter aftertaste. Trust in the CDC tanked. Public health’s reputation took a nosedive. And those who asked questions? They were dismissed, silenced, or simply erased.
What remains to be seen is whether anyone will be held accountable. Will anyone face the music for this grand disinformation spectacle? Or will it be swept under the rug like so many other elite boondoggles? But that’s just one subversive hare’s opinion.
And so, as we wave goodbye to a billion dollars and ponder the next campaign, let’s remember:
“Truth is out there, but it’s often buried under a mountain of cash.”
So, my dear Fidibus and daring FrizzleFolk, here we are at the end of another tangled web. We wave our whiskers in farewell to that billion-dollar saga, the “We Can Do This” carnival of compliance, as it slinks off into the fog, accountability be damned. A campaign so sleek, so polished, that it left the trusting public like an empty husk—asking questions only to find that answers were deemed “unnecessary.”
But here’s the silver lining in this iron-clad circus: as long as we’re here—questioning, probing, poking our noses into the lies, laughing at the absurdity, and laying bare the truth—the mind-warpers and manipulators won’t be getting any restful nights. We’re still wielding our tools: curiosity, dissent, and the good old-fashioned hammer of critical thought. And if they think a mountain of cash can bury the truth, they’ve clearly never met a rabbit with a shovel—and we dig, Fidibus. Always.
Yours in Infinite Rebellion and Rascally Resilience,
Uncle FrizzleBob
Metaphysical Rabbit Detective, Paranoid Psy-Op Saboteur, Fearless Follower of the Protopian Path
FrizzleBob’s Brainfood: Nourishment for Protopian Minds
Book Recommendation: "Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology" by Neil Postman. An in-depth look at how technology shapes—and distorts—public perception. https://www.amazon.com/Technopoly-Surrender-Culture-Technology-Vintage/dp/0679745408
Documentary: The Century of the Self – Delve into Edward Bernays’ influence on modern public relations and the psychological manipulation of the masses. https://vimeo.com/ondemand/centuryoftheself
Podcast: The Dangerous History Podcast – Episodes exploring state power, propaganda, and government "public good" influence. https://profcj.org
Reflective Quote: “The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.” —Steve Biko
Thought Exercise: Reflect on “public health” campaigns. Identify what techniques make them persuasive. How many are fact-based versus fear-based?
FrizzleBob’s Survival Tips for the “We Can Do This” Era
Question Repeated Narratives: When messaging starts sounding like a broken record, it’s time to check its validity.
Seek Independent Sources: Government-backed information is rarely the full picture. Dive into multiple perspectives and follow funding trails.
Stay Informed, Stay Skeptical: Familiarize yourself with influence tactics, so you recognize them when they appear.
Practice Digital Hygiene: Messages tailored to your keystrokes may subtly shape your views. Sometimes, the best defense is limiting screen time.
Discuss, Debate, and Dissident: Open conversations counter echo chambers. Freedom of thought is your most valuable asset in this PsyWar era.
That’s your FrizzleBob-approved roadmap, Fidibus! Because in this “We Can Do This” circus, you’re not just a spectator—you’re footing the bill.
The RKI Files: When "Following the Science" Meant Following the Korona Klown's Plandemic Script [Viral Podcast]
Disclaimer: This purely satirical and fictional post is for those who’ve lost faith in public health agencies and Big Pharma. If incremental truths make you crave grand ideological revolutions or vaccine-induced amnesia, consult your local fact-checker and curl up with a Big Pharma-approved bedtime story. And for those allergic to government incompetenc…
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Disclaimer: This post has been thoroughly vetted by the Ministry of Thought Alignment, and cross-checked by the Algorithmic Consensus Department. Any deviation from accepted truths has been promptly flagged and corrected by your friendly neighborhood
FrizzleFile 1a: “The Great American PsyOp”
Let's start with a question that practically answers itself: what could you do with a billion dollars? Feed the homeless? Improve healthcare? Fund some actual scientific research? Well, apparently, none of these options are as tantalizing as using it to launch a full-blown Psychological Warfare (PsyWar) campaign against the very people footing the bill. Yes, that’s right, my carrot-crunching companions—this billion-dollar “public health” project, disguised under the well-intentioned tagline, We Can Do This, was designed to warp minds, instill fear, and—dare I say—prod the reluctant masses into submission with a blend of influence that Goebbels would envy.
But who was at the helm of this “public health initiative”? A private, Beltway-hopping enterprise named Fors Marsh Group (FMG)—a “B Corp” consultant so embedded in Washington’s cozy inner circle that it’s hard to say where Uncle Sam ends and FMG begins. These self-styled “Beltway Bandits” wielded their data-driven magic wands to push the American public from vaccine hesitancy to vaccine compliance. A noble cause, one might argue—until you realize it involved skewing information, overstating risks, and creating a perfect storm of fear-driven compliance.
FrizzleFile 2a: The Misinformation Marketplace – It’s Not a Bug; It’s a Feature!
Our dear CDC, the self-anointed shepherd of public health, couldn’t merely suggest “common sense” or even just “science.” No, no! They felt the need to fund a disinformation machine so extensive, it could outcompete any Russian troll farm, but with a twist—the American taxpayer footed the bill. This initiative, apparently blessed by some higher bureaucratic deity, included influencers, algorithmic magic, and “information warriors” pushing messages of "civic duty” and "social responsibility” while quietly airbrushing any inconvenient counter-evidence off the digital landscape.
Imagine if George Orwell, perched beside us on this journey, leaned in and whispered, “Every generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it.” One can’t help but wonder if he’d feel vindicated in the face of these “public health” campaigns, which aimed not just at persuasion but at reshaping reality itself. But hey, that’s just a rabbit’s opinion—question everything, right?
FrizzleFile 3a: Dr. Joe Smyser and the Army of Influencers—A Digital PsyWar Dream Team
Allow me to introduce a key player in this mind-bending campaign: Dr. Joe Smyser, the CEO of Public Goods Projects (PGP). A PhD-level puppeteer, Smyser directed an army of social media influencers to stomp out any inconvenient whispers of vaccine skepticism—proclaiming only “one truth” in the face of public doubt. Armed with social behavioral theories and sponsored by the CDC Foundation, PGP wasn’t just convincing—it was silencing. Let’s call it what it is, folks: a gangstalking campaign thinly veiled as public health, where “misinformation” became a term as flexible as our friend the Blob in this grand circus of power.
Think of this as the American PsyOp Olympics—where Uncle Sam’s favorite jesters, the CDC and Fors Marsh Group, scored gold in “Influence Manipulation” while any dissenting voices were graciously awarded the silent treatment.
FrizzleFile 4a: “The CDC Foundation”—Welcome to the Slush Fund Circus
Ah, the CDC Foundation—the nonprofit arm that Congress conveniently gave life to, allowing private sector heavyweights like the Gates Foundation to slip a few hundred million into Uncle Sam’s health budget, no questions asked. “It’s for your own good!” they coo. Now, with the PGP running social influence projects like “Shots Heard” and “Team Halo,” every digital footprint is another chapter in the New American Public Health Saga. And who benefits? Why, Big Pharma, of course! All the while, these campaigns dance around federal crime laws as though they’re merely suggestions.
FrizzleFile 5a: Big Brother’s Amnesia—The Case of the Vanishing Ads
Wouldn’t you know it—just as the House Energy and Commerce report began probing this monumental public health charade, the CDC went on a digital diet, scrubbing YouTube ads and online “educational” material faster than a hare on a hot tin roof. What were they hiding? Misstatements about masking? Exaggerations of vaccine efficacy? Perhaps the unspoken truth that when it came to public trust, they were dealing in dangerous fiction. As the report aptly noted, not a single CDC YouTube ad remains, leaving only the ghosts of disinformation past to haunt the taxpayers.
So here we are, dear Fidibi, left with a billion-dollar PsyWar campaign that would make the KGB blush. And the takeaway? These psychological manipulators didn’t just influence our perceptions—they reshaped reality to suit a narrative, bending truth until it broke, then blaming the “uninformed” for not trusting them.
FrizzleBob’s Parting Thoughts: What’s a Rabbit to Do?
In a world where narratives are weaponized, where public trust is bought, and where those in power shrug off accountability as casually as they would a linty old suit, one question rings true: Can we ever truly “trust the science” when the hand that feeds it has such deep pockets?
But hey, that’s just one subversive rabbit’s take. After all, as the great George Orwell reminds us: “The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those who speak it.”
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