Face Masks Are A Conditioning Tool To Make Your Child More Compliant
Reason #18 that Face Masks Hurt Kids
Dear Reader,
The wearing of a face mask to protect against a respiratory virus is an act of grand deceit. It is a behavior that defies research on the topic. Wearing a face mask, as this article (one of many) points to — is unsafe to do and is ineffective.
Until the narrative around mandatory masking has changed, each day by 6am Eastern, I will both post here and send out a science-based reason why no one should wear a face mask.
I ask that you help me circulate these pieces to those around you who you believe could most benefit from them. It is important not to remain silent on this topic. These are important discussions to be having with friends, family members, business owners, healthcare practitioners, public servants, and others in the community.
-Allan
Masks help teach a child to pervert the thought process: scientism replaces the scientific method.
Authority replaces thought.
Falsehoods replace reality.
But they do not just make a child stupid and dishonest, they also make a child more obedient.
There is an ugly trend in American life, which can generally be called “behaviorialism.” It can be generally grouped as treatment that researchers like B.F. Skinner paid to his lab rats, that he brilliantly “trained” to run a maze in order to get a piece of cheese. This field did not start with him, nor does it perfectly grow out of his work, but he is an excellent example.
Some people say this an awful lot: “I do X to get Y” or “I do X to avoid Z.”
This is pursuit of pleasure and avoidance of pain.
People train themselves in all kinds of way. Training is for animals. Training is not for man. The rationale behind any attempts at “training” man should be carefully examined and not easily acquiesced with, let alone automatically acquiesced with.
Compare the above rationale of avoiding pain and pursuing pleasure to this: “I do X, because I know it to be good,” “I do X, because it is in line with my values,” or “I do X, because I want to.”
There are far better reasons than the pursuit of pleasure and the avoidance of pain to engage in an activity.
To use risk and reward as the only basis for an activity is a method of conditioning. Skinner had rats, Ivan Pavlov had dogs.
The animals were “conditioned” or trained to have a certain output in response to a certain stimulus.
It feels an awful lot like intelligence, or sentience, or even eerily human. It is not.
A human has free will. A human has a moment to pause and reflect between input and output. A human is not a robot, nor is a human an animal. A human is quantifiably different.
Robots and animals may be able to do things humans cannot. That is okay. That does not make them human.
That moment of decision between input and output, the moment of thought, judgement, the moment that theologians call “free will,” is such an important part of what makes us human.
So much of our humanity resides in that moment and the ability to build upon it.
Any external “training” or “conditioning” that seeks to automate that moment should be greeted with great suspicion.
Any opportunity that seeks to grow that moment should be seen as an opportunity to edify the person.
Wonderful things are built upon the foundation of that moment.
School bells, unsolicited alerts from electronic devices, and traffic tickets, are examples of conditioning in the world around us. They are unavoidable when interacting with a world that adores behavioralism, which is to say a world that sees you as a programmable robot or a trainable animal and not as a human with free will.
Face masks are another conditioning tool imposed by the outside world. They are a conditioning tool that you can choose to place on your child, or not. I strongly discourage conditioning tools around children. From the moment life begins, I encourage the full recognition of them as humans and no less.
That is what a child is and no conditioning tool is to be appended to a child’s face or the face of any other human.
You broadcast so many negative messages about yourself to the world when you put on a face mask. You broadcast those messages tenfold — about yourself, your family, and your children — when you put that face mask on a child.
The bestselling book "Face Masks In One Lesson" by Allan Stevo describes how to never wear a face mask again. The follow-up to the book, "Face Masks Hurt Kids," describes why to never wear a face mask again. We must defeat the awful, narrative around the mandates.
Examples of how face masks hurt kids will be posted to the Lockdown Land Substack each morning by 6am Eastern until the narrative around this ineffective and harmful medical intervention has shifted. Face masks are, in fact, not just harmful to children. Face masks are harmful to everyone. Thank you so much for helping me circulate this research.
There is a linguistic reason why face masks are harmful. 'Face masks' anagrams to for example
fake scams