Book Review: The Porn Factor by Diane Roblin-Lee

Darlene Heckman
September 6, 2021

“You walk into the room with your pencil in your hand
You see somebody naked and you say, ‘Who is that man?’
You try so hard but you don’t understand
Just what you will say when you get home
Because something is happening here but you don’t know what it is
Do you, Mr. Jones?”

~ Bob Dylan, from “Ballad of a Thin Man”

By Catherine Austin Fitts

In my mind, porn online is a trap. It is not sex—it is sex that can be combined with sophisticated entrainment and mind control technology for purposes that are quite different than what the viewer has in mind.

Porn has been weaponized for quite some time.

As I watch scores of government and health officials say and do things that make no sense given medical science, I am reminded of the role of pornography in creating and maintaining control files. Get someone addicted to pornography, migrate them to child pornography and—BOOM—you have a control file. Even if it was only a short period of time. You have them on a felony. And not just any felony—it’s a felony for which the court of popular opinion will always turn on them. That is the most powerful blackmail —a form of pressure that can threaten legal and financial destruction while causing the loss of family, friends, and inclusion in society.

And—here is the best part—you can make money getting that control file. It is not an expense. The mark pays for the creation of the control file either directly or through the related advertising. And it can be engineered on a mass scale with telecommunications, software, algorithms, entrainment technology, subliminal programming, and smart archiving.

Ever wonder where big tech’s and the intelligence agencies’ real power comes from? The economics of online entrapment are clearly superior to storefront churches with confession booths.

There are plenty of other risks involved with an addiction to porn—particularly porn combined with mind control technologies. In The Porn Factor: Pornography and Child Sexual Abuse (updated edition, 2017), Diane Roblin-Lee provides an overview of many of them. Roblin-Lee experienced some of those risks personally when her husband became addicted to pornography and then started abusing children.

You have an enemy on the other side of most online systems, including when you watch porn. In many cases, that enemy is using AI and sophisticated software to record everything you say, do, and feel. Whatever you do, please understand the shark-infested waters you are swimming in. If you choose to swim there, for heaven’s sake pay up for DVDs involving adult actors only, and watch them off-line. Whatever you do, your sex life will be better if you do not give Mr. Global a seat in the peanut gallery and a recording for posterity.

If you do not understand the risk issues involved with porn, and particularly how to protect your children and family from them, this book covers some of them and is well worth reading.

Whatever you do, don’t stay in denial about the porn wars.

Related Reading:

Mind Control Tactics Used on Young People and Children

Purchase book:

Barnes & Noble

GoodReads

share Share

Log in to access subscriber-only content. Not a subscriber yet? Subscribe to the Solari Report.