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.
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.