- Nestle is using candy to peddle lesbianism (or vice versa)
in a deceitful socially destructive television campaign.
Their Aero chocolate bar commercial is the best example.
Two severe-looking young women (in masculine dress with cropped hair) are
in the office lunchroom. With obvious allusions to oral sex, one instructs
the other on how to let the Aero bar melt in her mouth slowly.
She places it in her friend's mouth.
"Put it on your tongue."
"Don't bite it."
"Can you feel the bubbles? The bubbles are melting."
They have an orgasmic experience. "Pure chocolate pleasure."
The scene naturally draws the attention of a nerdy male. They ignore him
and he goes away. The male is redundant.
You can view the commercial on line. http://www.visit4info.com/details.cfm?adid=16812
Nestle is currently targeting teenage girls with a revised version. The
girls are young and feminine so the lesbian message is even more reprehensible.
Imagine if the commercial were different. Imagine that a handsome male
is instructing a comely adult female on the sensual properties of this
chocolate bar. She blushes, aroused.
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-
- Imagine that a butchy female is attracted to the scene.
She is ignored.
I'm not advocating the use of sex to manipulate people but you get the
point. Commercials like these contribute to the lesbian chic sweeping Western
countries. Considering that 98% of the market is heterosexual, they are
clearly designed to sabotage the social fabric which is based on heterosexuality.
The Nestle ad is typical of scores of commercials that attack heterosexuals
by patronizing women and denigrating men.
The classic is the Clairol Herbal Essence commercial where a woman is having
an orgasmic experience while shampooing her hair in a service station bathroom.
The hapless mechanic who is working under her car's hood can hear everything.
The radiator spills over, a clear reference to premature ejaculation (i.e.
impotence).
The message: ladies, self-love and shampoo will satisfy you. Men are useless.
The academic literature in this area is predictable. It complains that
commercials enforce traditional gender roles. In fact, today traditional
gender roles are usually undermined. Women's groups would be howling if
ads portrayed women the way men are portrayed.
-
-
- For example, there is a commercial for Alfredo sauce
where a father is making supper.
His 10-year-old daughter keeps needling him, "Are you sure mommy isn't
mad at you?"
He keeps denying it, but finally her question gets under his skin.
"Did she say anything?" he asks timidly.
This man is abused. Imagine if the ad portrayed a woman living in fear
of her husband's wrath. Imagine the daughter repeating, "Are you sure
Daddy isn't mad at you?"
"Did he say anything?"
This ad teaches men to be wimps; and girls to manipulate males by having
tantrums.
The latest Swanson's TV Dinners commercial completely unsexes the father:
"Working mom asked for a big bowl she can eat on the run. Swanson
responded. [Mom rushing off to work.]
Kids wanted something for after school. Swanson responded. [Happy kids
enjoying snack.]
Dad wanted to wear mom's frilly under things! We didn't know how to respond."
[Father shown with goofy embarrassed smile.]
Message: Mothers are responsible providers. Fathers are sexually ambiguous
twits.
- NESTLE'S PYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE
The Swiss-based with annual sales in excess of $60 billion fosters sexual
dysfunction for both commercial and political reasons. www.nestle.com
Dysfunctional women gorge on candy. When women's natural instincts and
desires are frustrated, they make a beeline for chocolate.
There are political considerations as well. Nestle is controlled by the
same cabal that is destabilizing and depopulating society by destroying
the family.
Men who are deprived of their social role are not going to recognize or
resist the totalitarian world government called the New World Order. Furthermore,
broken homes produce dysfunctional children who are easily manipulated
as adults.
Another Nestle commercial for Smarties features two nerdy young males at
work. One has made a surprising discovery. When he eats the red Smarties
first, the office "hottie" /walks by his office door!/
They make high fives. This is the answer!
In a third Nestle commercial, a fertile blond asks to taste a nerdy guy's
ice cream cone. She walks away with it. Instead of being annoyed; he considers
it a compliment!
These commercials shape the way young males and females view themselves
and interact. They reinforce feelings of male impotence and female independence
and androgyny. Men can't humiliate themselves enough for these sexless
unapproachable God-like creatures. These attitudes stop healthy relationships
from developing.
-
- CONCLUSION
By nature, people tend to conformity. Our social norms (definition of reality)
are defined by society through education and the mass media.
We must recognize that the mass media contains the elite's political and
social message, usually subtly disguised. In terms of the best interests
of humanity, this message is usually destructive and subversive.
A reader, "Jerry" points out that Nestle's political agenda is
called the "UN Global Compact." He writes: "If one views
the websites of most large corporations it becomes evident they are getting
their values and policies from the same source." (See www.Nestle.com
"Social Responsibility")
These values express a bland humanism that disguises a satanic agenda.
Nestle is a leader in elite social engineering designed to breed a slave
race. The constant inflation of women and disparagement of men produces
sexual dysfunction that undermines the family and renders men politically
impotent.
- Henry Makow Ph.D. is the inventor of the board game Scruples
and the author of "A Long Way to go for a Date." His past articles
exposing feminism and the New World Order can be found on his web site
www.savethemales.ca He enjoys receiving feedback at Henryatsavethemales.ca
Some may be posted without names.
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-
- Comment
Alton Raines
10-4-4
There's a Cingular cellphone commercial that features a big, lovable, generous
Dad coming in the home to announce to his two teen daughters that he's
got them brand new cell phones and new, improved service that will allow
them to talk to Mom and Dad anytime while away at college. The two daughters
stare blankly at him like he's not even there. The mother, sitting next
to them, perks in, "O-Oh, and your FRIENDS, toooo..." The two
girls burst into idiotic smiles and spastic giggles and leap on the Mom
with hugs while snatching the phones. At the same moment, the Dad extends
his arms and says, "Group hug!?" only to be completely ignored,
the females leaving the room, with the new phones, together in a bonded
cluster. The Dad just stands there, an impotent bag of hopeless American
machinery, and says, sheepishly, "...anytime" while his extended
arms drop to his sides. He looks miserable, used, confused and damaged,
but still expected to just stand there and take it with a shrug and a smile.
He has no feelings or worth. He is just a machine to either appease or
please the females in his life.
These sort of characterizations are becoming so replete, so commonplace
in media that to claim they either do not reflect the true state of affairs
or will not have an influence is to be wantonly or deliberately intellectually
dishonest.
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