Jon Ronson presents: Crazy Rulers of the World
6 Comments
Three years in the making, Jon Ronson’s Crazy Rulers of the World explores the apparent madness at the heart of US military intelligence. With first-hand access to the leading players in the story, Jon Ronson examines the extraordinary – and plain bizarre – national secrets at the core of the War on Terror.




July 7th, 2009 at 11:41 am
jon ronson is a textbook shill, he’s bent over backwards to defend the 9/11 and 7/7 account put out by the government.
the guy is a weazle.
November 16th, 2009 at 2:05 pm
Dear Jon Ronson,
Know a woman who spent ten years writing a book about her life in which many of the phenomenon you have recorded in Crazy Rulers of the World was experienced by her naturally without a teacher . No one wants to publish her book; three publishers ‘love it,’ but don’t think there is a market for it. She felt quite at home watching the movie, ‘goats.’ She knows people who can do more. Would like to talk. She found nothing out of the ordinary with the video on Wide Eye, as this is her understanding of life. Sincerely, MM
January 12th, 2010 at 6:10 pm
Dear MM,
Apparently you missed the point of my documentary. No phenomenon were recorded in Crazy Rulers. That’s why it’s called Crazy Rulers. These people are fucking nuts, and it looks like you and this woman are too. Fortunately you have no influence in American military or political circles, so fuck off dickface.
Sincerely, Jon Ronson
P.S. Wowzer, give up the truther thing. That shit is so 2004.
January 14th, 2010 at 8:11 am
Jon,I too feel frustated with people when you can present them with all the facts in the world,(the proof is all around us) and they will belittle or discredit you in a second!
I have known since I was a child that the world is not what most think it is.Most are brainwashed and conditioned to think like the elite want them to,its called dumbed down. The think is when you go off like you just did you take so much credibility away from what your trying to communicate to peopole that many will go,”oh,this nut!”
Just a thought but glad many like you are trying to tell the rest to OPEN THEIR EYES!!!
January 17th, 2010 at 4:20 am
What a waste. I watched the Clooney movie and was fascinated by the material, but dissatisfied with the presentation (Clooney aside). So I found the original Ronson film and find that ruined by its maker’s decision to voice it himself. Why? There’s still a great movie/documentary here despite two major attempts.
January 21st, 2010 at 6:43 pm
Jon, after you experienced palpable fear and obvious brainwashing in the documentary, (which I got more out of than the movie) and a kind of self-hypnosis, introduced through auto suggestion from the trainer, you said you were visibly trembling. You seemed to have every expectation that you were going to be hurt. You resisted the neutral, “safe” promptings from the trainer to get you to relax, because you truly believed you would be suffering some imminent physical pain; you even said you believed he had the power to do what he said he could do to you: “move into you without moving his feet.”
Given what you experienced, ie, pain, and the nearly overwhelming fear of the anticipation of that pain, can you actually say “The Men Who Stare at Goats” are truly nuts? Isn’t the “power” really the ability to make people do things they would not otherwise do? Isn’t that brainwashing? And the crazy rulers of this world, Hitler, Bush, Cheney, for instance, were especially good, because they could get us, including Mr. Blair, to do it to ourselves, that is, get us to react to pain and fear, even though it wasn’t there. Remember Hitler’s speeches, the trance-like effect he put into the crowd? Crazy like an evil fox…
Might it also be “crazy” to think that certain paranormal abilities are not real, given what you’ve experienced, and saw happen? What is undoubtedly true, I believe, is that the mind is a powerful medium in which to expand in, if one opens themselves to using powers we do not yet understand fully. I believe this is true because certain physical properties of nature, certain laws of physics, are yet to be understood as natural aspects of our metaphysical nature. How do I know this? Check out the books below.
The novices in the Army could not walk through walls, and no, they did not show you that they killed the goat, or the hamster. But didn’t he convince you entirely, that you were susceptable to mind control, and you, in effect, did it to yourself with your anticipatory fear? He presented the thought to you, “in your mind”, and you “ran with it”, and that is “power”, no matter what level you experience it at.
In addition, I would suggest you read, if you haven’t already, several books proving the scientific facts surrounding paranormal “skills”. The Field, by Lynne McTaggart, Infinite Mind, by Valarie Hunt, and biophysical research by Dr L.C. Levengood, regarding the effects and measurements of nonlocal energies in his experiments using a special polarized protein material. He basically proved Einstein’s quantum effects, caused by a nonlocal energy field, and was able to get levels of validity that fit into a high congruence with Einstein’s 4th polynomical equation. In other words, microvolts of energy sent from a “psychic medium” can be detected and sent, from thousands of miles away and recorded, instantly. That’s important because it further proves, or adds validity, to how many experiments in The Field, Infinite Mind happened so successfully. We haven’t been effective in proving paranormal effects until scientists were able to create devices capable of detecting microvoltages, starting in the mid-90’s.
And finally, and this is “out there”, I grant you, but when it comes to understanding how someone could walk through walls, may I suggest Budd Hopkins’ books, The Brooklyn Bridge UFO Abductions, and Sight Unseen; the latter has explanations done by Carole Rainey, his ex-wife, a physical scientist, who offers scientific explanations for possible paranormal experiences of Hopkins’ abductee clients. The first book describes a well publicized event in NY, near the Brooklyn Bridge, seen by several people, as a ufo craft hovers outside an upper level apartment building, for minutes, in which a woman is “floated” out a closed window in a blue light, by creatures attending. They also float out, and enter the craft from the bottom. Credible, important witnesses saw this, and could corroborate the experiences of the woman abductee.
Odd, I suppose, but so is trying to pass through a wall without proper equipment. Apparently, these aliens know how to do it, as well as how to use a beam of blue light to levitate and move all sorts of objects. Doubt it, if you must, but Hopkin’s credibility is beyond reproach scientifically, and in his appropriate use of hypno-regression, for 30-some years, using the same protocols as Dr. E Mack, another hypotherapist whose methods were examined and accepted by the Harvard Medical School. In addition, Hopkins had a fellow psychologist observe him while he did his regressions with abductee’s, which were often videotaped also.
Hopkins is the real deal, and I hope you continue your search for the truth, regarding The First Earth Battalion, or Eastern “mojo” used in warfare. it’s not the method, its the execution and skills of the practioner. They only appear nuts, because they have failed, not having learned yet how to morally and ethically use ‘the force’. And I’m not talking about Star Wars, I’m talking about the properties of that blue light, which seems to affect time, space, and mass, locally.
I’m damn curious about that light, aren’t you?
I hope you seriously check out Mr Budd Hopkins, and the NYMUFON, and the books above. I’m sure it will lead you to Area 51, or S4, and to the alien’s specialized equipment, and that blue light. Make a hell of a movie… and Disclosure is on its way.