The shepherd always tries to persuade the sheep that their interests and his own are the same. – [Stendhal]
To relate Hall’s quote on black magic to The Secret, consider the following quote by Joe Vitale taken from How to Control The "Command Center" In Your Prospect’s Mind.
Here’s a million-dollar secret I’ve never shared with anyone before. When you use it, you will get inside your prospects’ heads and manipulate their thinking to get them to do what you want—including sending you money right now for your product or service. Sound hard to believe? Keep reading and I’ll prove my point to you…
To put a spell on people, that turns them on to your product or service, guides them directly to your order page and like a robot, programs them to send you money 24-hours a day, 7-days a week!
Vitale’s CEO of Hypnotic Marketing and is widely known as a marketing genius. When considering that The Secret essentially is a book of quotes with Rhonda Byrne merely filling in the blanks, it is noteworthy that Vitale is one of the most prolific of the 30 contributors listed in the biography section of the book. In fact he is responsible for more than 10% of the almost 250 extracts. This is opposed to Neale Donald Walsch who has less than one percent of the quoted content attributed to him. It is also noted that only 1% (three short extracts) of the quotes are credited to Wallace Wattles, the author of the 1910 book The Science of Getting Rich which supposedly was the source of Byrne’s inspiration. Though based on Vitale’s prodigious coverage when compared to that of Wattles, in the very least Vitale had been a far more significant inspiration.
Notwithstanding this, what is abundantly apparent is that the book bears the hallmarks of his hypnotic writing style. And because what The Secret actually amounts to is targeted marketing, Vitale is suspected to be the true mastermind behind the project—specifically because it was initially marketed through the internet, viral marketing, Vitale’s other brainchild.
The previous extract was taken from a promotional publication titled Energy Marketing. Though at times giving some useful marketing tips, specifically on marketing through the internet, the objective of the 115 page document was to sell Vitale’s hypnotic writing services. Specifically the article was about convincing why Hypnotic Marketing works and why companies should pay Vitale $50,000 to write them a hypnotic script which he guarantees will significantly increase their sales revenue.
To get an idea of what Hypnotic Marketing is, I’ve extracted the following from the article.
Your prospects are all in trances. If you merge with their trance, you can then lead them out of it into the "buying trance" you want them to be in.
Agree with them. Merge with them. Accept that trance as your door. Then lead into what you want to sell by tying it back to their trance.
Let’s break down this process into steps:
1. What do your prospect’s believe right now (current trance)?
2. Agree with their beliefs (rapport).
3. Lead their beliefs into your offer (new trance).
That’s the real secret to "Hypnotic Selling."
Let’s look at possible existing trances your prospects may be in when you call, or send them a sales piece.
They include:
"I’m worried about money" trance; "I’m lonely trance"; "I’m afraid of people" trance; "I’m sick and tired of my job" trance; …
And so it goes. You’ll notice that each of these trances are self-serving. That’s the nature of people. They are interested in their well-being first. They are preoccupied with their own needs, desires, pains and more. Any inward state is a trance…
Vitale further gives us insight into how he goes about controlling the command centre of his prospect.
I learned the one hypnotic command that always works from hypnotists. A good hypnotist will never give a subject a choice or offer a list of "reasons why you should fall asleep right now."
Instead, a good hypnotist will simply issue a command, "when I count to three, you will close your eyes," or, "When I snap my fingers, you will bark like a dog." The subject responds because they want to please the hypnotist and because they don’t have much of a choice.
Your prospects are nearly the same. Give them one hypnotic command and they will do your bidding.
Know the exact one thing your prospect want and tie everything you say to it. You use every trick you’ve learned to grab and hold attention, build desire, and lead to a strong close, because you know that’s how you create truly hypnotic writing.
Because this is a way for you to plant hypnotic commands right into the skulls of people. This is a staggering power. You are in their command centre.
What Vitale admits in this article is that the page itself is Hypnotic Marketing in practice, and thus to any lucid thinking person the contents ought to be of little consequence. That is with the exception of the previous quotes which speak to Vitale’s unmistakable intent: to control and manipulate the command centre of his prospect’s mind by putting a spell on them that they, like a robot, give him money.
His “one command” he uses to put his prospects under his spell being that “they can gain anything their hearts desire”—that one can achieve happiness beyond one’s wildest desires, and without having to make the commensurate effort at all. While words such as spiritual, ethical and legitimate, are carefully chosen words to convince "his prospect" that what he is suggesting is morally above board.
It therefore appears as if The Secret had taken Hypnotic Marketing to the ultimate mass level.
While there certainly are deeper moral issues with regard to using what otherwise can be considered mind control methods to influence one’s ‘prospects’ mind for financial, political or other gain, the issue this work attempts to address is not that of the morality per se as it pertains to the methods; but rather of the content being propagated. I suppose in the dog eats dog world we are forced to eek out a living in, one can be somewhat excused for using whatever means one has at one’s disposal to draw attention to one’s commercial wares, particularly if there are those gullible enough to fall for it.
The real issue therefore, and the one this work attempts to address, concerns one’s own responsibility in having been duped. And how the following terms consequently would aptly apply to oneself.
To have been put a spell on … to act predictably like a robot… to have been programmed to send money to somebody you don’t know…or that you perpetually are in a self-serving trance…
And if one cannot see The Secret as such a concerted means of mass commercial indoctrination, then clearly Vitale and his cohorts have already put such a binding spell on your own command centre. Moreover, as if you were a robot, will also uncritically buy whatever esoteric non-existent wares they may be offering you.
In any event Vitale certainly appears to have scant regard for his ‘prospect’, viewing them as mere targets for his wares. Though at the same time Vitale clearly markets himself as a spiritually enlightened person. In his biography on The Secret it is indicated he holds a doctorate in metaphysics and is an ordained minister. Though clearly one cannot reconcile the above utterances with what these roles are supposed to represent.
For the purposes of this work it is important to impress on one's intellect that: these roles gives him the necessary psychological legitimacy in the mind of his prospect which allows him to exert the level of control over those he wishes to commercially exploit.
Furthermore, while I admittedly have not read any of Vitale’s other material, what is apparent from browsing through this 2004 publication, is that it can be regarded as a manifesto for The Secret. Particularly as it contains much of the Hypnotic Writing which had made the DVD and book such a monumental success.
To put it plainly, these marketers know how we are programmed and thus how we on mass are likely to respond to their suggestions. Perhaps it’s their right to take full advantage of our stupidity, so to exploit us in any way we allow them to. But certainly the onus must be on us to wizen up and take control by not giving up our conscious power as easily as they are expecting us to.


Salon.com
Comments
The whole positivity thing is one of the ways they entrap us, nothing wrong with positivity though, but it can be used as a dangerous tool. They create so much hype and emotion about what they are doing, and when your rational mind or your inner voice tells you not to go there, you override it with this looser crap they feed you. And since you don't want to be the odd one, the looser, you rather go along the path of least resistance, and go with the flow. The problem is, that they prey in our deepest humanity - our dreams, wishes and desires - until we don't know who we are any more.
They literally are thieves of the soul, and as such, these purveyors of mass delusion literally getting away with murder.
By the way, I believe the erroneously lionized Paul Harvey was a shill for them (and other suspect products). Now that he has just recently died, I hope he will reap his just reward.
As I've admitted on OS before, I have been tangentially involved in some of these marketing scams by writing copy for them -- that's not to excuse my behavior, but rather to suggest why I have at least a small insight into these things. My former boss was a protege of Kevin Trudeau
Despite repeated run-ins with regulatory agencies, heavy fines and prison time, Trudeau is still at it. If you see his name associated with any product, run like hell.
As for hypnosis, I don't consider it necessarily a hoax, but in my limited personal experience, those I've seen hypnotized were those I would have predicted would be the persons in the group to be susceptible to hypnosis. They tend to share certain extreme personality traits, such as repression or inversely exhibitionism. They are also highly suggestible. Might it be that religious fanatics and cults are simply manifestations of hypnotic predilection?
Though I've been writing and warning about this for some now, almost to no avail, I'm largely ambivalent about whether one gets duped or not. If you're stupid enough to fall for this crap, you in a way deserve it, and so be it that Byrne, Vitale, Pavlina, Trudeau, and co, are reaping their fantastic rewards—In fact Vitale and Trudeau are now running a joint operation together. On the other hand, it really pisses me off that these guys are so flagrantly getting away with it because folks let them, and that the likes of Oprah are popularizing and parading them on daytime TV.
However, the real problem for me is not that adults are falling for this hogwash (the shame on you if you fool me once, shame on me if you me twice, thing), but that they are feeding this stuff to youngsters who are naturally far more impressionable, and what these ideologies therefore spell for the future--see The Universe is confused? The economic crisis and how we are yet to cope with it, being my real concern. Also, that the religion of the future is being shaped right before our very eyes, and its foundation is based on an absolute sham.
Another one of these scumbags I had the misfortune to meet was a guy named Doug Burdick, and a more charming sociopath I've yet to meet. One day he slipped up and let me in on how the perps view MLM's. He characterized the scam he was running at the time as NFL -- No Friends Left.
For instance, consider the following:
"You don’t have to fight to get rid of disease. Just the simple process of letting go of negative thoughts will allow your natural state of health to emerge within you. And your body will heal itself.
I’ve seen kidneys regenerated. I’ve seen cancer dissolved. I’ve seen eyesight improve and come back.
"I had been wearing reading glasses for about three years before I discovered The Secret. One night I was tracing the knowledge of The Secret back through the centuries, I found myself reaching for my glasses to see what I was reading. And I stopped in my tracks. The realisation of what I had done struck me like a lightning bolt."
How many people stopped their cancer medication as they now do not have to fight to get rid of disease because they've discovered "the secret", and therefore had died directly because of this pronouncement. I know that Oprah had to make a pronouncement on her show after promoting these guys because people were in fact doing just that.
And what about this:
" Everytime you look inside your mail expecting to see a bill, guess what—it’ll be there. Each day you go out dreading the bill! You’re never expecting anything great. You’re thinking debt, you’re expecting debt. So debt must show up so you won’t think you’re crazy. And everyday you confirm your thought: Is debt going to be there? Yes, debt’s there. Why? Because you expected debt to be there. So it showed up, because the law of attraction is always obedient to your thoughts. Do yourself a favour—expect a check!
"Desire connects you with the thing you desired and expectation draws it into your life.
"I never opened my bills until I had got myself into the feeling that they were checks. If I opened my bills before convincing myself they were checks, my stomach would churn when I opened them. I knew that the emotion of the churning in my stomach was powerfully bringing more bills. I knew I had to erase that feeling, and replace it with joyful feelings, so I could bring more money into my life. In the face of a pile of bills, that game worked for me, and it changed my life. There are so many games you can create, and you will know what works best for you by the way you feel inside. When you make-believe, the results come fast! "
How many ordinary folks bought into this, and didn't pay the bills until they "felt" it was a check, but when they received a credit card in the mail, couldn't tell the difference because of the autosuggestion.
Because it roughly takes about 5 or so percent of the population to be influenced in this way, to then cause the domino effect that results in a credit crash, I honestly am of the view that the secret, considering the numbers, directly created the critical mass that exacerbated the eventual depth of the economic crisis.
By the way, there is an organization that is attempting to legislate against this type of fraud, and if anybody has been directly affected by these scams, perhaps its useful to contact them. The organization is Americans Against Selfhelp Fraud at http://www.selfhelpfraud.com/, and perhaps they can use whatever actual evidence to build up a civil or criminal case. There's a very good audio on it you can link onto as well--http://www.selfhelpfraud.com/uploads/Anti-Secret_Teleseminar.mp3.
Personally, I prefer healthy skepticism, and if it is too good to be true, it probably is.
The aforementioned Doug Burdick also snared people with a cheap psychological trick borrowed from cultists. "Avoid negativity," he said, "surround yourself only with people who believe as powerfully as you do. Do not let critics near you." We have witnessed how well that sort of advice worked out with the bush pseudo-administration.
Paul Tillich eloquently put the lie to the notion of unexamined faith with his statement that "doubt isn't the opposite of faith; it's an element of faith." Would that millions of so-called Christians got that -- to say nothing of other millions of True-Believers in The Secret. That The Secret has all the makings of a cult can be seen just from the comments on my post criticizing it.
By the way, add James Redfiled's The Celestine Prophecy to your shit list and Eric Hofer's The True Believer to your must-read list.
...
Newton, I forgot this story. Some time ago, when The Secret was new, one of the "philosophers" of The Secret, James Earl Ray, came to Atlanta where I live. He was giving a free talk and a friend of mine invited me. I went only because I was invited to go. There was a mixed crowd jammed up in a hotel corridor waiting feverishly to see him. I recall a number of middle-aged women clutching his latest book talking about how sexy Ray is and a 18-20 year old boy rambling about how "nothing means anything so what does it matter" .... I was uncomfortable to say the least.
So later we are all seated and James Earl Ray begins. My friend gets up without a word and leaves abruptly with his wife after about 15 minutes and doesn't come back. The other 200 people, including myself stay for the whole presentation.
It was a masterful sales pitch. I mean really, really well done, climaxing in an emotional charge to sign up for his weekend retreat, credit cards in hand.
I walked away without signing up, one of the few who did not. I felt guilty actually, a bit like the loser he made me out to be. I mean, didn't I want to transform? What was wrong with me?
I talked to my friend later and he recognized Ray for what he was right off the bat. My friend asked, "Would Eckart Tolle do that? Would Byron Katie? Would any authentic person with something of that nature to say come on like that with a sales pitch?" I had to say "no."
...
By the way, I'm not a Tolle fan, he's views are too airy fairy for my liking, but I certain don't think his a con man. That's where I draw the line.
I read your comments about the Geithner plan, and I give it a 50/50 shot of success. In economics they always add, ceteris paribus, all other things being equal. That's because economic predictions is about a thousand times less predictable than predicting the weather. The thing is, this long shot is the only thing we've got right now, or else the shit will hit the fan.
The unfortunate thing is that these guys are still gonna make one helluva killing because folks are still running on faith and hope that things are gonna return back to the way they were.
By the way, on there was a polling held on the self help fraud website.
...
Awards are determined by the highest number of total votes and, in some cases, when the totals are close, a runner-up is also selected. The winners are as follows:
* DUMB SPEAK AWARD given for the most unintelligent thing uttered by a Self-Help Guru goes to Joe Vitale & runner-up Eckhart Tolle
* HYPOCRITE AWARD given to the Self-Help guru with the biggest gap between their professed values and how they actually behave goes to David Schirmer & runner-up Bob Proctor
* DADDY BIG BUCKS AWARD given to the Self-Help Guru whose lifestyle shows that they are only in it for the money goes to Joe Vitale
* HOODWINKED AWARD given to the Self-Help Guru who did the best job of tricking celebrities into being their sponsor goes to Rhonda Byrne & runner-up Eckhart Tolle & L. Ron Hubbard (Awarded Posthumously)
* BI-POLAR AWARD given to the Self-Help Guru whose promises got the opposite results goes to Heidi Diaz promoter of the Kimkins Diet (while outside of the usual scope of the Scammy Awards, she received a huge "write-in" vote)
* BEST PERFORMANCE IN A MIS-LEADING ROLE AWARD given to the Self Help Guru who did the best job of deceiving the public goes to Rhonda Byrne
* BERNIE MADOFF LIFETIME MIS-ACHIEVEMENT AWARD given to the best, all around Self-Help Guru who did the most to diminish the human race goes to Joe Vitale & Tony Robbins
...
The only problem I have is that they are sometimes a little hard on Dr Phil. Am I being a sucker here or not because i really like the bloke?
Still, as a general rule, I don't place much stock in the "conversion" approach to healing psychic wounds that seems to be the basis for Dr. Phil's "miracle cures".
I also don't think Tolle is a con, but I find his views simplistic, even inane. And if you want to go around become a Tolle basing (as opposed to a bible thumping) lunatic, because Oprah says he's the greatest thing since spiced beef, that's your choice.
It's interesting that Oprah has this recent comment about Tolle's the Power of Now:
"I keep this book at my bedside. I think it's essential spiritual teaching. It's one of the most valuable books I've ever read.”
While in 2004 he had this to say about the book:
“Once I began to grapple with the immense power and vastness of the past and future I began to realize that now, which I had been telling people was so powerful, was actually a thin slice of practically nothing, something that is over just a moment after it has begun.”
The point about his is that the stuff he writes about is warm and fuzzy stuff, but has no place in the real world where there is a literal economic war going on. And I much add, which the Chinese are currently winning.