During the next week, you may begin to notice something different about press coverage of the Presidential election.
You may notice, for example, that reporters and commentators are becoming more critical of Hillary Clinton, even daring to cover her multitudes of illegal actions rather than ignoring them.
You may notice, to a certain extent, the opposite occurring for Donald Trump, where the press ceases to attempt to invent scandals and controversies to discredit him.
You may notice that polls begin to show a more even race, perhaps a few daring to portray Trump in the lead.
You need to understand the nature of this transformation. On its surface, it will appear that so-called journalists may have rediscovered their ethical roots, that they have decided to stop shilling and to play it straight.
The truth is basic human psychology. People want to be on the winning team. They want to feel as if they have accomplished something, won a great victory, regardless of their actual contributions to the effort, or even their previous attempts to block it.
But even more so, people are sycophants. And when it becomes clear that a position of great power is changing hands, the underlings will want to silently switch sides, in hope that they can curry their own favor with new regimes.
The truth is that the press, among legions of others who have for too long acted against you and your kind, want you to believe that they ever opposed you. They will now do what it takes to show you that they have changed, that they are on your side, that they have your best interests at heart in pursuit of their ethical mission. And they want you to forget what they have done.
But you're not going to forget, are you?
Never forget.