The 'do your best in school, work hard and make a good living' conditioning is so ingrained in our society that the effect of not participating in this conditioning automatically leads to exclusion. The CBS reports today that 1.1 million households can barely make ends meet. Mind you, we are talking about households. They can be families. The number of households on Jan. 1, 2015, was 7.7 million. That means 14.3% cannot make ends meet. That's 1 in 7 families. So if you ring the doorbell at 1 in 7 houses you will find people who cannot make ends meet. But director general (military title appropriate to a police state) T.B.P.M. Tjin-A-Tsoi of CBS reports in this report (which no one reads anyway) that in the Netherlands you can't complain[citation needed]. In the Netherlands, poverty is not a matter of physical survival. In principle, every citizen has a roof over his head, does not have to go hungry, can clothe himself properly and has access to medical care. Just so you know! That is Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) in optima forma. The man himself has a good salary, of course, but he "earned" it, because he worked hard for it. No, we don't see concentration camp-like starving types walking the streets. Those can't get out the door anymore. Wood floats to the surface and dirt sinks to the bottom Television determines your 'vision' of reality from a distance ('tele'). The media are the managers of your perception; of your view of the world.
In the same report, CBS reports [quote] After years of stability, including during the economic crisis, among low-income households the share indicating difficulty in making ends meet rose from 40 percent in 2012 to over 50 percent in 2013. Then the share dropped and returned to its old stable level in 2015 at 41 percent. Thus, CBS finds that 14.3 percent can barely make ends meet, but the number of low-income people who self-report not making ends meet is above 40 percent. Mind you, you must have declared it yourself. So do fill out the forms when asked. The reliability of CBS is, of course, debatable, because anyone who takes a really serious look at the reports quickly discovers that the readings have often been tampered with compared to previous years. For example, it turns out that the 2015 data are not based on actual research, but on estimates based on figures from 2014 [citation Appendix C] The results presented in Chapters 2 and 3 on the number of (persons in) low-income households are from the Income Panel Survey. The most recently available survey covers income for 2014. To get an up-to-date picture and a look ahead, the Central Planning Bureau (CPB) has made estimates of the extent of poverty in 2015 and 2016 at the request of CBS. But wait a minute; 2015 is already passé, right? So why can't those figures just be on the table? So everything said about 2015 is actually secretly based on a mathematical model and not on real measurements! So it may well all be much worse than the report mentions. So the decline in the graph below that the report supposedly shows for 2015 is not based on facts, but on assumptions from a mathematical model. It is an "estimate. So there could just as easily be an increase. But the Mainstream Media won't tell you that. Things are improving! That's what you should believe.
The conditioning from childhood that we have all been subjected to is that you have to study well and fall in line to have a good career. Then you make enough money not to end up below this poverty line. So in fact, you could argue that this poor underclass of society is needed to motivate young people to keep doing their best in school so that they don't end up in that group. And once you have safely completed your studies and end up in a big bank, government agency, semi-government or multinational corporation, you also need to do your best and obediently follow instructions so that you have a chance to move up. And higher up means that you get to manage newcomers who also do their best. Of course, the best jobs are up for grabs if you have joined a student choir like Minerva or if you join freemasonry. So everything really depends on your own efforts. You have to do some networking and do your best. In short: if you fall out of the boat, you have yourself to blame.
The elite class that runs the world, which actually consists of a group of humanoids possessed with entities (from another dimension) feeds on human life energy. This group has spent millennia building a system where what is naturally provided by nature can only be obtained through means of payment and participation in the pyramid model they have implemented. Because you grew up in that model from childhood, there is really no alternative but to simply "participate in that model. We have become far removed from who we actually are. Fortunately, you don't have time to think about this. You have bills to pay tomorrow or - if you have a well-paying job - you are far too busy planning the next fun outing.
Morpheus quote: You have to understand, most of these people are not ready to be unplugged. And many of them are so inured, so hopelessly dependent on the system, that they will fight to protect it."
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