Information Warfare: Electronic Jamming
Electronic Jamming as applied to muddied search result sets.
** NOTE FOR CLARITY ** Detailed reading of the article in question below reveals a tragedy and the loss of a young child, but it appears to be unrelated to the failed and toxic mRNA Gene Serum injections due to the timeline of the event.
It is worth noting that the term “died suddenly” appears in the piece — therefore making searching for possible Gene Serum related deaths more difficult.
In kinetic warfare — Electronic Jamming is used to muddy communication links between different groups. Aircraft often conduct this mission.
Jamming can be targeted to command & control functions between large cohorts of units — or at the squad level. Communications are always mission critical. Can’t talk to your team? You run the risk of inadvertently calling in artillery or airstrikes on your own friends positions. Fairly well understood and basic concept.
Apply this framework to the ‘information’ streams coming across your screen on a daily basis.
Below you’ll find the methodology for how this search was conducted.
Search Google for “died suddenly” [1]
Open the toolbar menu [2]
Filter on time — down to the most recent 1hr. [3]
Filter on either relevance or latest [4]
The search term ‘died suddenly’ is becoming more difficult to sort through. This alleged piece of news that shows up as having occurred ~40 minutes ago is about a story 9 years old already.
The search term “died suddenly” is being electronically jammed.
Several other searches show result sets for deaths resulting in the shooting in Monterey as well as a car crash.
Make sure to be extra careful about these stories — they’re trying to bait an error in reporting by muddying the search results.
I did a short stint as a Google Rater a decade ago. I was hired as an independent subcontractor by one of the two companies who had the rating contracts for Google at the time. A rater has access (at least then) to the results of the new algorithms Google is testing, and the job was to determine whether the results for search terms were “accurate.”
I only had access to the results of the new algorithms and instructions written by Google, with Google branding on every page, but I had to sign a nondisclosure agreement before I even started. So all I can say is this: I learned a decade ago that Google only wants you to see what it wants you to see.
I quit after a short time, not only because I was disgusted with Google, but because the company that hired me broke every rule in the IRS book re subcontractors.
You can't see the forest for the trees. Or you can't see the forest at all.✝️🇺🇸