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CONSENSUS
IS KILLING US!
by John Loeffler
Contributor, Steel on
Steel Radio Program
July 3, 2002
Oh no! The government says your
town is the critical habitat of the brown-backed slimy slug.
The EPA forbids the townspeople to do anything – even belch
-without first obtaining permits from the government.
Half of the town will have to move so Slimy has more room to
slither in pristine habitat lest he perish from the earth.
Public outrage follows.
The EPA schedules a “visioning meeting” with local
“stakeholders” so they can express their “concerns” and build a
“consensus” on how to deal with Slimy.
The night of the meeting,
citizens arrive at the town hall in expectation filling the EPA’s ear
with unpleasantries, after which they hope the EPA will lamely retreat and
find some other place for Slimy to slither.
The meeting is chaired by a “facilitator” supplied by the
government, who seems friendly enough and seems to care about the town.
He encourages everyone to express how they “feel” so they can
achieve a “community consensus” about Slimy.
But everyone is only allowed three minutes to speak and no direct
issues seem to come into question. Debate
is not tolerated because that would be “intolerant” of others and
there are no “right or wrong” answers.
At one point the meeting
breaks up into small groups so everyone can better express their feelings.
These are chaired by sub-facilitators.
By the end of the meeting
everyone has blown off steam and the facilitator pronounces that they have
a marvelous consensus, which will form the basis of the EPA’s new policy
for their town. Everyone goes home. Some are
happy since their concerns will now be included in public policy.
True, a couple of people got angry at the meeting but they did seem
a bit “extreme” and really did look stupid.
Besides they were quickly silenced because they didn’t share the
“common good.”
But surprise, surprise!
In very short order, the so-called “stakeholders” discover
nothing has changed. They still
have to get permits to belch and half the town still has to move but now
the townspeople are told this is
their plan! This town has been
consensed!
Communism is dead.
Long live Consensus!
Today we hear about
“achieving consensus” in all issues of public life; in government, the
workplace, schools and even churches. To
the western ear, consensus has the sound of representative government in
action, a group of people debating their issues and coming to some form of
workable solution. But it operates
on a totally different agenda.
The consensus process
(sometimes called the “Delphi Technique”) is a psychological method
used to steer the participants to a pre-determined outcome, while
eliminating opposition by causing the majority of people to view
dissenters as angry, out-of-touch extremists not concerned with the public
good or holding the public’s values. The
community must believe it has arrived at these positions themselves
without realizing they have been manipulated into them.
Today’s consensus is
the very same “collective” process used in the Soviet Union to make
political decisions at all levels. The
word “soviet” means collective. Modern
consensus was the brainchild of transformational Marxists from the
Frankfurt School, who fled Nazi Germany in the 1930s and set up shop at
leading colleges in the United States from whence they proceeded to spread
their version of Marxism, called “transformational Marxism,” although
they weren’t able to call it that publicly at the time.
It was repackaged under non-threatening names.
Whereas Leninist Marxism
believed communism could only be spread by violence and revolution,
transformational Marxism believed it could be more effectively spread by
gradually changing a society’s attitudes, values and beliefs and
ultimately its public institutions. To do this, the public would have to be unaware that a major change
was underway.
Taking Leave of Your Senses
For consensus to work,
one must be conned into taking leave of one’s senses;
thus con-sensus. A more
technical definition would be a diverse group of people, dialoging to a
consensus over a social issue in a facilitated setting to a predetermine
outcome. The phrase
“predetermined outcome” is the key item.
What will be decided at a meeting is decided by government long
before the meeting ever starts. The only purpose of the meeting is to con the citizenry by making
them think it was their idea.
When citizens arrive at a
meeting driven by consensus, the facilitator does not simply chair the
meeting. He has been well trained
in psychological manipulation and plays on the audience’s feelings (a
dialectical process) rather than on their critical thought (a didactic
process). Consensus-building does
not actually involve convincing anyone to alter his or her views.
It causes them to accept new views without realizing they are in
conflict with their old ones by use of a technique known as semantic
deception; using words which have double meanings, making it possible for
people in conflict with each other to appear to agree even though they
disagree.
Citizens are encouraged
to express their concerns. This
isn’t because the facilitator cares about them but rather provides a
method of polling the crowd to determine where everyone stands so
“resistors” can be readily identified and the facilitator knows what
he has to do to manipulate everyone to the pre-determined outcome.
In large meetings, auxiliary facilitators – spies – are
situated in the crowd, unknown to the citizenry.
These people identify resistors and report back to the facilitator
at various points. They can also be
used to counter dissenters should the meeting get out of hand by posing as
citizens who oppose the dissenters.
Once key resistors are
identified, the facilitator’s job is to make sacrificial lambs of them.
He must make the crowd believe they are angry extremists, who
don’t care about the issue in question and that they do not share the
common interest or good. Making
examples of dissenters is designed to elicit silence from all others
present, who don’t want to appear extreme in front of their friends.
This technique plays on the psychological principle that most
people fear what their peers think of them.
A well-trained facilitator is capable of forcing a dissenter’s
friends to be very angry with him for being such a “jerk” as they
themselves fall prey to the deceptive manipulation the facilitator is
employing.
A lone dissenter can
expect to be barraged by a series of slogans, aggressive responses and
counter-allegations, to the effect that the dissenter is engaged in
“type-casting” or “fingerpointing.”
Incoming!
It is only when
dissenters themselves become trained and come in groups to such meetings
that the tables can be turned on the facilitators.
One thing a facilitator must avoid doing is being forced into a
position of defining his double-speak terms.
Otherwise the deception becomes immediately apparent to everyone
and the crowd will have lots of things to object to.
Exposing his duplicity short-circuits the process.
In rare cases, a brave
and intelligent dissenter succeeds in getting the upper hand, forcing the
facilitator into the position of defining what he means and what his
agenda is. The facilitator is now
in an embarrassing position. He
is prepared for this. One
technique is to immediately break the meeting into group sessions to avoid
answering the hardball questions. Another
is to have the spies become “outraged” or “offended” by the
dissenters’ position as if they were fellow citizens. This outrage appears to come from the public and puts the
dissenters’ objections at odds with the apparent public position.
The facilitator can also
engage in long-winded answers that lead nowhere and which numb
everyone’s minds so they forget what the issue in question is and
don’t care if it gets answered. If things get a bit rough, the facilitator – while continuing to
smile and play the good guy -- barrages dissenters with a torrent of ad
hominem invective for having the audacity to challenge the common good.
The facilitator always tries to make his position look like the
“reasonable” or “moderate” one commonly accepted by the public.
If the dissenter
successfully withstands the onslaught, the facilitator’s last trick is
to shut the meeting down. Nevertheless,
the public will frequently read in the local paper the next day that a
consensus was reached at the meeting. Strange, were they at the same meeting?
Remember:
any system, which uses consensus is a dog and pony show designed to
brainwash the participants into going along with the pre-determined
outcome, thinking they arrived at it themselves.
Death to Democracy
It is 70 years since
Wilhelm Wundt and others of the Frankfurt School began spreading
transformational Marxism in America. Today
the consensus process is the backbone of decision-making in government,
big business and even church growth programs, which seek to eject church
members who don’t go along with the new “vision” for church growth.
It was a Marxist revolution that happened without a shot being
fired.
Consensus is killing
representative government in the West because it systematically eliminates
input from the electorate and allows government to proceed with its
agendas unabated and unaccountably. More
and more decisions that were supposed to be made by legislatures or county
and city boards are being made by facilitator “change agents,” who are
unelected and unaccountable, using this facilitated consensus process.
A growing number of
concerned Americans has begun to realize that something is radically
wrong; that the representative process we used to enjoy is being subverted
by something but they don’t know quite what.
Consensus can be dealt with at any level but Americans must
understand the process. Anyone
involved in a consensus-driven event not understanding the deceptive
principles on which it functions, will be taken in by it and the process
will roll forward unabated as thousands of Americans wonder why their
government officials aren’t responsive to them and why actions they
strongly oppose continue to be implemented unabated.
Remember, consensus means
you have been conned into taking leave of your senses.
We must understand we’re being had.
Breaking consensus relies on forcing a facilitator and his
supporters to expose their actual agendas by defining what their words
mean. They will avoid doing that at all cost but trained dissenters can
force the issue and make the crowd realize it has been the victim of a
deliberately-planned hoax.

© 2002 John Loeffler
Editorial Archive
Important
reading:
The
Cloning of the American Mind by Beverly Eakman
available through www.amazon.com
Also important is Dean
Gotcher’s, MA, taped conference series
on the Diaprax consensus process available from (303) 548-3204.
Copyright
© 2002 by John Loeffler, Email
John Loeffler is host of the weekly syndicated talk show, Steel on Steel,
which can be heard at www.steelonsteel.com
Online subscriptions to the show or by tape are available.
John can be reached at (800) 829-5646
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