MSNBC Implies People Skeptical Of Government Are Psychologically Insane 

Chris Matthews and guests characterize concerns about Obama, gun control, open 
borders, 9/11 and the Bilderberg Group as a mental illness

Paul Joseph Watson

Tuesday, July 28, 2009
 
During a discussion of the Obama birth certificate controversy, MSNBC host 
Chris Matthews and his guests implied that anyone who questions the official 
9/11 story, thinks the Bilderberg group are exercising power to create a world 
government, people who are worried about gun control and immigration, or even 
people who are merely skeptical of government, are psychologically insane.
 
Responding to Matthews’ implication that people who had questions about Obama’s 
birthplace were “full mooners” and insane, MSNBC political analyst Howard 
Fineman included “people who are worried about the government taking up the 
guns, people who deny the federal government has a right to tax your income, 
people who are worried about being overrun at the borders,” in the same 
category and said they were merely looking for a reason to find a conspiracy 
behind Obama.
 
Matthews then brought up a psychological test which featured the question, “Is 
somebody chasing you right now?,” implying that anyone who doubts what the 
government tells them would answer in the affirmative, before asking, “Are we 
talking psychological problems here with people or what?”
 
Politico writer Ken Vogel then characterized people who question 9/11 and 
people who think Bilderberg are working towards a world government as a group 
that Republicans need to “watch out for” if they want to avoid being 
marginalized.
 
Matthews then said he was “in love” with Vogel because he had reminded him of 
“all the androgynous zones of insanity,” before cracking a lame joke about 
George W. Bush detonating the twin towers with a plunger.
 
Vogel then responded by including Ron Paul and supporters in the mix, noting 
that they embrace an “innate distrust of federal government,” again in the same 
context that to do so is a display of insanity.
 
(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)

 
Essentially, Matthews and his guests are implying that anyone who doubts the 
government’s official 9/11 story, anyone who believes the Bilderberg group have 
influence or power, anyone concerned about gun control and open borders, and 
anyone who is just generally skeptical or doesn’t trust government, is on the 
fringes of society, is potentially psychologically insane and may need 
treatment.
 
This is of course manifestly absurd – if embracing any one of those concerns 
deems one to be psychologically unstable and on the “fringes” then the majority 
of the American people would be classified as psychologically insane.
 
Indeed, only yesterday Rep. Collin Peterson, a Democrat, told Politico, 
“Twenty-five percent of my people believe the Pentagon and Rumsfeld were 
responsible for taking the twin towers down.”
 
In addition, a 2006 Zogby poll revealed that “less than half of the American 
public trusts the official 9/11 story or believes the attacks were adequately 
investigated.”
 
Does more than half of the population of America constitute a “fringe” element? 
It seems that Matthews, Vogel and Fineman aren’t as “mainstream” as they 
apparently thought they were – they are in fact the minority.
 
In reality, it is Matthews and his fellow establishment peanut gallery talking 
heads that need psychological help, embracing as they do some bizarre cult-like 
faith that government is angelic and can be completely trusted without 
skepticism.
 
As we have seen before in history, the designation of political opinions deemed 
to be antagonistic towards or even merely skeptical of the state is a hallmark 
of tyranny.
As Kurt Nimmo wrote last week in a story about a German man who was sent to a 
psychiatric institute for protesting Obama;

In the former Soviet Union, psikhushkas — mental hospitals — were used by the 
state as prisons in order to isolate political prisoners, discredit their 
ideas, and break them physically and mentally. The Soviet state began using 
mental hospitals to punish dissidents in 1939 under Stalin. The Psychiatric 
Prison Hospital in the city of Kazan was transferred to NKVD (the secret police 
organization for the People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs) control and in 
1969 Yuri Andropov, the head of KGB, submitted to the Central Committee of 
Communist Party of the Soviet Union a plan for creating a network of 
psikhushkas.
 
According to official Soviet psychiatry and the Moscow Serbsky Institute at the 
time, “ideas about a struggle for truth and justice are formed by personalities 
with a paranoid structure.” Treatment for this special political schizophrenia 
included various forms of restraint, electric shocks, electromagnetic torture, 
radiation torture, lumbar punctures, various drugs — such as narcotics, 
tranquilizers, and insulin — and beatings. Anne Applebaum, author of Gulag: A 
History, indicates that at least 365 sane people were treated for “politically 
defined madness,” although she surmises there were many more.
It now appears that the corporate media are taking their cue from the Stalinist 
dictatorship of the Soviet Union, and in alliance with government guidelines 
which characterize people with similar political beliefs as dangerous 
extremists and potential terrorists, are denouncing people who are skeptical of 
government as thought criminals who should be dismissed as mentally ill cranks.
 
 
http://www.prisonplanet.com/msnbc-implies-people-skeptical-of-government-are-psychologically-insane.html
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