All of this is true.
Another way to say the same thing is this:
Think of crowds. Think how in a crowd a persons individuality goes away and it gets replaced with a kind of swarm think. Without explaining how this works in our brains, one way to think about a crowd of humans in any formation is to consider them like a distributed life form.
Like any life form, it has a personality, an iq, maximum data processing capacity, maximum data transmission rate, maximum data transmission depth, and so on.
A lot has been written on this topic, there is a book called Wisdom of the Crowds (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wisdom_of_Crowds). Bascially, networked brains in a crowd can perform magical things like estimate the number of gumballs in a gumball machine. They can also do terrible things. However, the intelligence of a crowd (say something organized into a corporation) is that that while the iq of the organism is REALLY DULL and unbelievably stultifying to any individual that finds it self within one, the largest and most successful ones have the economies of scale + raw size + time to overcome those deficiencies.
So, while the post is true, it only mentions the weaknesses of that organism, it doesn't analyze the strengths of the organism. There is a reason oligopolies and monopolies come into being, it is the natural end point of a competitive marketplace of crowd based organisms.
The trick is to learn how to think like a jew and infest the infrastructure at key points to control these giant creatures and make them do what we want them to do.
(post is archived)