When it comes to television use in the nineteen twenties, thirties, and
forties, I have personally seen television recordings from these decades. Back in
those days they didn't let anyone know television existed, so no one except the
people who had and used television could view or monitor it. As television became
publicly known in the forties and fifties, the security of these recordings became
less sensitive. I personally was born in 1965 and through the seventies, eighties,
and even now in the nineties, I have seen television recordings from the twenties,
thirties, and forties. Especially in documentaries on the public channels. I have
seen television recordings of the first tanks the Ford motor company mass
produced. It was more of a documentary of the tests they put them through to see
how well they worked. I believe this one was from the twenties. I have seen
television recordings of the thirties in documentaries of the so called "Great
Depression". I have also seen alot of television recordings of WW2, which was in
the early forties. I have even seen documentaries of prominent people of those
decades which also included television recordings.
Back in those days alot of things were video recorded on film. However, the
video recordings on film are alot different then the video recordings with
television. The film they used back in those days was a slow speed film, plus the
cameras that were used to record the video on film were kind of slow too. The
cameras could only record so many frames per second. So, when you are viewing
film recordings of those decades, the quality of the pictures aren't that good
compared to the television recordings. The film recordings have a tendency to
jump around a little bit and you can tell it is film. The television recordings are
alot clearer, more constant, and they don't jump around at all. Also, when you are
viewing the television recordings, the natural sunlight looks different on TV then in
the film recordings, because the light bulb from the film projector changes it a
little.
There is one more point I would like to make about the use of television
back in those decades. There are so many television recordings of WW2, that it is
most likely that Hitler used television as a military tool to establish and maintain
his military occupation and repression over the people and countries he occupied.
For anyone who doesn't know, "Uncle Sam", was just an advertising gimmick
management used to recruit people with, for WW2 and to promote the family way
in kind of a subliminal way.
When it comes to communications, there are many ways to use natural
human energy to communicate words in particular ways or to vary the meaning or
the intent of the conversation. Here are just a few ways a person can use their
energy to communicate things, with or without words.
A person can use their energy and,or words to; insinuate, suggest, imply,
insult, hint, cue, intimidate, offend, irritate, annoy, antagonize, coerce, pressure,
persuade, influence, tempt, entice, seduce, bribe, assure, inspire, encourage,
convince, lie, and so on, and so on, and so on.
A person can use their energy and,or words for; insinuation, innuendo,
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