omnilegent
subhumanschizo
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2024
- Posts
- 1,010
- Reputation
- 1,337
So I’ve been dissecting my ENTIRE LIFE for the past 47 hours because I’ve come to this SHOCKING conclusion that the cartoons you watched as a kid are NOT just “entertainment”, no, they are FULLY-ENCODED blueprints injected into your mind to literally hardwire your personality and trajectory in life. Every decision, every failure, every fleeting moment of “success”? All shaped by these deceptively harmless animations from day one. Buckle up nigger faggots, because we’re about to go DEEP.
It starts with what our parents turned on for us. Think about it: at ages 1-3, you’re basically a blank slate. And what happens? Your parents decide what cartoons you get exposed to, which essentially means they are choosing your future personality. Parents? They’re just the gatekeepers to the floodgates of our personality programming. I don’t know why no one else is talking about this, but IT’S CLEARLY BY DESIGN. Have you ever noticed how some people who watched “Looney Tunes” are absolute chaos magnets? Or how “Arthur” watchers have a weird obsession with rules and manners? Or how everyone who watched “Courage the Cowardly Dog” seems to have inherited this bizarre anxiety complex about the unknown???
And THEN I realized, wait… this doesn’t even stop at individual personality quirks. No, it’s like some kind of overarching psychological agenda at work here. Let’s break it down:
1. The “Successful Cartoon” Effect:
You got kids growing up on cartoons like Tom and Jerry, a literal cat-and-mouse chase for survival. Those who watched this are UNKNOWINGLY programmed to keep grinding in a chaotic world, chasing one success after another only to have it snatched from their jaws at the last second. These people? They’re the relentless “success chasers,” forever sprinting in an unwinnable race, getting the smallest taste of victory before it’s yanked away again and again. Coincidence? I THINK NOT.
2. The “Loser Cartoon” Brain Trap:
Now, let’s talk about SpongeBob SquarePants. Kids who watched SpongeBob? They’re DESTINED for mediocrity. How else do you explain it?? A sponge flipping burgers underwater with his neurotic squid co-worker and a pink starfish who lives under a rock. It’s an ode to the average. the subliminal messaging here is that happiness is found in being stuck in place, in the status quo, serving fast food. This show was a PSY-OP by Big Media to prime kids to ACCEPT MEDIOCRITY. They wanted us to watch this so we’d think, “Hey, being at the bottom of the corporate food chain is actually FUN!”
And now I can hear you saying, “but my parents didn’t know any better,” and that’s where you’re WRONG. These cartoon syndicates are working through your parents without them even realizing. Your parents are just unwitting vessels in the machine.
3. Enter Genetic Destiny
Because it doesn’t end there. I started looking at family genetics, and it gets DARK. If your dad grew up on something innocent like The Flintstones, he’s probably got this innate mindset of manual labor, maybe he’s “blue collar” through and through. But if your MOM watched Scooby-Doo obsessively, she’s got that constant worry loop, wondering if something’s out there that she just CAN’T SOLVE. And guess what? That anxiety’s been passed down through the bloodline. Scooby-Doo watchers are genetically predisposed to conspiracy thinking because their brains have been trained to “see mysteries” where there are none. This is generational.
4. And THEN we come to the JOOOOS
You think it’s a coincidence that some of the biggest cartoon studios just HAPPEN to be run by a certain powerful minority? Think about it. Warner Bros, Disney, Hanna-Barbera—ALL of them have hands in this psychological stew of cartoon-based behavioral engineering. They’re not just pushing cartoons; they’re PUSHING MESSAGES. Messages that prime entire generations to think, act, and believe a certain way.
Why? It’s about control. They use these cartoons to subtly indoctrinate us. EVERY. SINGLE. SHOW. has hidden “life lessons” specifically crafted to mold society. Why do you think we all get stuck with the same neuroses? Same anxieties? The same hang-ups about life? Because it’s all part of a premeditated plan to create a predictable, moldable society.
5. THE CARTOONS THEY DONT WANT YOU TO SEE
Look, they even hide certain cartoons because they don’t want free-thinking individuals breaking away from the herd. The kids who somehow got into Ren & Stimpy? Pure chaos energy. THEY wanted this gone because it made kids question reality itself. People raised on that show grew up unfiltered, unhinged, and refused to take things at face value. They’re the ones who broke out of the system, and THEY. DON’T. WANT. MORE. OF. US.
But you know who gets rewarded? Teletubbies kids. They’re docile, programmed to accept bright colors and simple answers. They’re systematically conditioned to be passive, the perfect followers, trained from birth to consume and obey. And when we look around today and wonder why society is just endlessly scrolling on apps, accepting soundbites and short videos instead of real, meaningful ideas? It’s because the Teletubbies Generation grew up and took over.
6. FINAL THOUGHTS
My brain is now in this never-ending vortex, connecting every character I ever watched to every failure, every success, every single THOUGHT that’s ever crossed my mind. Every second I peel back another layer of the onion, I’m seeing that even my ability to break down these ideas was cultivated by the cartoons I watched. I’ve counted 2,853 distinct personality traits, all derived from cartoons.
My consciousness is BEGGING to escape this hellish paradigm but it’s like my own mind is this endless cartoon rerun, each thought a character, each memory an episode, and I’m just flipping channels, unable to escape.
The final conclusion? We were doomed the second that television flickered on in the living room.
@ryuken @noobs @StarvedEpi @ey88 @NZb6Air @HighLtn @looksmaxxing223 @Gaygymmaxx @tombradylover @Master's KFC bucket @Gengar @truthhurts @ThraxxGlo @wristcryy
It starts with what our parents turned on for us. Think about it: at ages 1-3, you’re basically a blank slate. And what happens? Your parents decide what cartoons you get exposed to, which essentially means they are choosing your future personality. Parents? They’re just the gatekeepers to the floodgates of our personality programming. I don’t know why no one else is talking about this, but IT’S CLEARLY BY DESIGN. Have you ever noticed how some people who watched “Looney Tunes” are absolute chaos magnets? Or how “Arthur” watchers have a weird obsession with rules and manners? Or how everyone who watched “Courage the Cowardly Dog” seems to have inherited this bizarre anxiety complex about the unknown???
And THEN I realized, wait… this doesn’t even stop at individual personality quirks. No, it’s like some kind of overarching psychological agenda at work here. Let’s break it down:
1. The “Successful Cartoon” Effect:
You got kids growing up on cartoons like Tom and Jerry, a literal cat-and-mouse chase for survival. Those who watched this are UNKNOWINGLY programmed to keep grinding in a chaotic world, chasing one success after another only to have it snatched from their jaws at the last second. These people? They’re the relentless “success chasers,” forever sprinting in an unwinnable race, getting the smallest taste of victory before it’s yanked away again and again. Coincidence? I THINK NOT.
2. The “Loser Cartoon” Brain Trap:
Now, let’s talk about SpongeBob SquarePants. Kids who watched SpongeBob? They’re DESTINED for mediocrity. How else do you explain it?? A sponge flipping burgers underwater with his neurotic squid co-worker and a pink starfish who lives under a rock. It’s an ode to the average. the subliminal messaging here is that happiness is found in being stuck in place, in the status quo, serving fast food. This show was a PSY-OP by Big Media to prime kids to ACCEPT MEDIOCRITY. They wanted us to watch this so we’d think, “Hey, being at the bottom of the corporate food chain is actually FUN!”
And now I can hear you saying, “but my parents didn’t know any better,” and that’s where you’re WRONG. These cartoon syndicates are working through your parents without them even realizing. Your parents are just unwitting vessels in the machine.
3. Enter Genetic Destiny
Because it doesn’t end there. I started looking at family genetics, and it gets DARK. If your dad grew up on something innocent like The Flintstones, he’s probably got this innate mindset of manual labor, maybe he’s “blue collar” through and through. But if your MOM watched Scooby-Doo obsessively, she’s got that constant worry loop, wondering if something’s out there that she just CAN’T SOLVE. And guess what? That anxiety’s been passed down through the bloodline. Scooby-Doo watchers are genetically predisposed to conspiracy thinking because their brains have been trained to “see mysteries” where there are none. This is generational.
4. And THEN we come to the JOOOOS
You think it’s a coincidence that some of the biggest cartoon studios just HAPPEN to be run by a certain powerful minority? Think about it. Warner Bros, Disney, Hanna-Barbera—ALL of them have hands in this psychological stew of cartoon-based behavioral engineering. They’re not just pushing cartoons; they’re PUSHING MESSAGES. Messages that prime entire generations to think, act, and believe a certain way.
Why? It’s about control. They use these cartoons to subtly indoctrinate us. EVERY. SINGLE. SHOW. has hidden “life lessons” specifically crafted to mold society. Why do you think we all get stuck with the same neuroses? Same anxieties? The same hang-ups about life? Because it’s all part of a premeditated plan to create a predictable, moldable society.
5. THE CARTOONS THEY DONT WANT YOU TO SEE
Look, they even hide certain cartoons because they don’t want free-thinking individuals breaking away from the herd. The kids who somehow got into Ren & Stimpy? Pure chaos energy. THEY wanted this gone because it made kids question reality itself. People raised on that show grew up unfiltered, unhinged, and refused to take things at face value. They’re the ones who broke out of the system, and THEY. DON’T. WANT. MORE. OF. US.
But you know who gets rewarded? Teletubbies kids. They’re docile, programmed to accept bright colors and simple answers. They’re systematically conditioned to be passive, the perfect followers, trained from birth to consume and obey. And when we look around today and wonder why society is just endlessly scrolling on apps, accepting soundbites and short videos instead of real, meaningful ideas? It’s because the Teletubbies Generation grew up and took over.
6. FINAL THOUGHTS
My brain is now in this never-ending vortex, connecting every character I ever watched to every failure, every success, every single THOUGHT that’s ever crossed my mind. Every second I peel back another layer of the onion, I’m seeing that even my ability to break down these ideas was cultivated by the cartoons I watched. I’ve counted 2,853 distinct personality traits, all derived from cartoons.
My consciousness is BEGGING to escape this hellish paradigm but it’s like my own mind is this endless cartoon rerun, each thought a character, each memory an episode, and I’m just flipping channels, unable to escape.
The final conclusion? We were doomed the second that television flickered on in the living room.
@ryuken @noobs @StarvedEpi @ey88 @NZb6Air @HighLtn @looksmaxxing223 @Gaygymmaxx @tombradylover @Master's KFC bucket @Gengar @truthhurts @ThraxxGlo @wristcryy