Linguistic psychological manipulation

Linguistic psychological manipulation comprises a variety of linguistic tactics
of word-selection, grammar, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling, any of which
serves to exert a psychological effect upon the person who reads them or hears them.
Such methods have various degrees of subtlety versus potency.
The psychological effect of such methods is to increase a person's suggestibility and to
disrupt their truth-perceiving perception, facilitating warped perception.
The duration of such effects increases as the chronic frequency of exposure to
such methods increases.
This serves to facilitate a more psychologically malleable population that is not
mentally tethered to reality.

The three foremost types of punctuation-mediated linguistic psychological
manipulation are comma-omission, hyphen-omission, and
quote-mark externalization.

Capitalization-mediated linguistic psychological manipulation
usually consists of having the definit article "the" followed by
a descriptiv noun that is capitalized rather than appropriately non-capitalized,
such as "the Sun", "the Moon", "the Internet".
It also consists of writing the descriptiv noun "god" in a capitalized manner
with no article, as if it were a name.

Grammar-mediated psychological manipulation is done via
omitting the clarifying phrase "that/which is/are" after a noun,
in cases where that phrase is necessary,
thus creating a statement that has ambiguous meaning.

Regarding spelling-mediated linguistic psychological manipulation:
All non-phonetic spellings exert at least a slight manipulativ effect,
but some non-phonetic spellings exert a more significant manipulativ effect than others.
Probably the most significant effect is produced by spellings in which
a vowel is pronounced as a short-vowel, despite being before a single consonant
(rather than a double consonant) that is in the middle of a word
(which is typically the case for long-vowels),
when it precedes an "-ing" or "-ed" or "-er" suffix,
such as in the spellings "editing" and "traveler".
In addition to the non-phonetic methods,
another method which creates a substantial effect is having plural nouns which are
identical to their singular-noun equivalent.

The intelligence-agencies of various countries are known to use such methods,
including those of the United States, Britain, Australia, France, Sweden, and Finland.
For the english language, London-based british intelligence uses such methods the most
extensively.