Data in the Fog: How Narrative Warfare Hides the Hidden Holocaust
Jimmy Kimmel was cheered back onto the airwaves after Disney suspended him. Millions cancelled Disney subscriptions, costing the company billions. Consumer power forced him back.
And then, suddenly, headlines screamed his ratings had “dropped 70%.”

Does that make sense? No.
But it reveals something deeper: we’re not just living through propaganda. We’re inside a narrative war where the primary weapon is data control. When the data itself is hidden, manipulated, or never gathered, a fog descends — and in that fog, reality disappears.
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The Weapon of Fog Is Data Control
Narrative warfare doesn’t only distort facts; it destroys the ability to measure. It creates a world where there is no reliable data — or where the data exists but is selectively gathered, processed, or presented until it becomes propaganda.
Fog is confusion by design. Fog is uncertainty as a tactic. When you can’t get trustworthy data, you can’t prove anything. When you can’t prove anything, you can’t fight back. And inside that fog, the enemy moves unseen.
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Who Controls the Data Controls the Story
From my vantage point, the pattern is clear:
Men in power benefit from keeping women’s reality undocumented, uncounted, and unseen.
These men — and clearly the great majority of men in America — live in a protected bubble where the real data, the hidden holocaust targeting women—trafficking, economic theft, daily violence—never appears in the official record.
To preserve that bubble, they manipulate not just headlines but data collection itself: who counts, what’s counted, what’s published, and how the numbers are framed.
When they say, “Kimmel’s ratings cratered,” they’re not just reporting. They’re controlling the data — and therefore controlling the story.
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Data as a Battlefield
Ratings, engagement counts, crime stats, maternal mortality rates — these are treated as neutral facts. But they’re black-box numbers generated behind closed doors. No public audit. No transparency. Always with incentives.
In narrative warfare, controlling data is as powerful as controlling guns. Data creates the story of who’s winning, who’s losing, who matters, and who vanishes.
That’s why there is so little trustworthy data about women’s lives in America. That’s why our deaths, disappearances, and daily harms are undercounted or uncounted. That’s not an accident. That’s the system working exactly as designed.
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The Fog and the Enemy
It’s hard to name who’s doing what. That’s the maddening part. But again: that’s the design.
Control the data → create fog → hide the enemy.
Fog obscures responsibility. Fog protects the operators. Fog makes women look “crazy” for noticing patterns that were built to be hidden.
But the truth is simple: if reality is obscured and women are erased from the data, then the beneficiaries of that fog are the men in charge — the ones desperate to keep control.
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The Geek as Warrior