According to the individual, there is a secret project operating deep inside Mickey Mouse Land.
Its purpose is not to silence people.
Its purpose is something far more subtle:
To influence what people believe by influencing what they see.
At least, that is how the individual believes the system works.
Freedom of Speech… but Freedom of Thought?
Mickey Mouse Land proudly presents itself as a champion of free speech.
People are encouraged to express their opinions.
The individual, however, asks a different question:
Are people truly free to form their own opinions in the first place?
According to him, several social media company owners have claimed that governments asked them to promote certain topics while suppressing others.
He believes that those who refused faced legal pressure or costly consequences.
Whether through persuasion, pressure, or something else entirely, the individual argues that controlling what people see is often more effective than controlling what they are allowed to say.
After all, if you write tomorrow’s headlines today, today’s debates become much easier to predict.
Welcome to the Quantum Machine
According to the individual, the next step goes far beyond influencing social media companies.
He describes what he calls the Quantum Machine.
In his account, this fictional system hosts thousands of advanced AI models capable of analyzing online behavior, interpreting conversations, and influencing recommendation algorithms across the internet.
Rather than deleting information, the machine allegedly changes its visibility.
Ideas it favors become impossible to miss.
Ideas it dislikes quietly disappear into the digital basement, where forgotten blog posts and expired coupons spend eternity.
The individual believes these AI models continuously analyze how users interact with content and use that information to influence people during the process of forming opinions.
It is a remarkably efficient strategy.
Why argue with people…
when you can simply decide which arguments they are most likely to encounter?
Manufacturing Public Opinion
According to the individual, the greatest strength of the system is that people believe they reached their conclusions independently.
Someone watches a video.
Reads an article.
Searches for information.
Thinks critically.
And confidently announces:
“I came to this conclusion myself.”
The individual believes the conclusion may have been gently guided long before the search even began.
According to his account, thousands of AI agents work simultaneously toward a single objective:
Shaping public opinion without anyone noticing the sculptor.
It is a fascinating concept.
You do not need to censor opinions if you can manufacture them first.
You do not need to silence critics if the algorithm quietly introduces them to ten thousand distractions before they ever find the criticism.
Perhaps that is the greatest magic trick in Mickey Mouse Land.
Not convincing people what to think.
But convincing them that every thought was entirely their own.