The Mission of Betrayal: Shepherd Wolves, Red Herrings and Poisoned Meatballs, 5

Furthermore, when in an area there is a great amount of conflicting opinions about how things work and ought to be handled, this is a serious indicator that there is a lack of data, whose vacuum gets filled with opinions, and that there is something definitely wrong in the first place. And when you find out that at the root of such situation there is a lack of basics, that comes as no surprise. And we know that someone profits from chaos twice: either by leading you in wrong directions or by paralysing you with confusion.

The conflicting opinions that form the confusion we’re interested in are revolve around economic theories, and an adjective seldom heard is used to describe both the opinions and especially the theories whose definition is rather explicit:
Specious: having a false look of truth or genuineness; of an argument which is good, true and right only apparently, which aims at convincing by deceiving with the appearance.
We are now aware of money parasites and of their quest for invisibility and for increased host metabolism.
On this basis we can more easily observe how economic theories tend to be spread in a form we may call “religious doublespeak”. And how some call “religious capitalist doublespeak” the fallout of these theories, the mantra of “everybody knows that…” stemming from those theories and passed off to us all as taken for granted so we make it our own passively, blindly and unquestioningly. It cannot be repeated often enough how a basic deception technique is passing off as not only demonstrated, but even as taken for granted, what is neither demonstrated nor taken for granted in the first place. And how its degree of penetration in minds and societies proves and measures the power of those behind it.

Religious here is meant in its wicked sense, whereas its “sine qua non” is blind faith… for the very good reason that the real ultimate purpose is exploiting that blindness in its followers. And blind faith is what opens the door to, among other niceties, doublespeak.