The Trojan Horse
By Mohammad Ali Taheri
The Trojan Horse is the story of a wooden horse used to capture a seemingly impregnable fortress that could not be conquered through siege or battle.
The story goes that enemy soldiers had besieged the city of Troy for a long time. After numerous failed attempts, they became desperate and devised a cunning plan. They built a large wooden horse and left it outside the fortress, then retreated, pretending to abandon the attack. To further deceive the defenders, they claimed that the wooden horse was a tribute to honor their resilience.
Enchanted by the beauty and grandeur of the horse, the Trojans brought it inside the city and celebrated their apparent victory. However, at midnight, while they were asleep and intoxicated from their festivities, enemy soldiers hidden inside the wooden horse emerged, opened the fortress gates, and let their army in. Taking advantage of the darkness, the enemy forces swiftly entered, caught the defenders off guard, massacred them, and ultimately seized control of the city.
The human mind is incredibly complex and equipped with powerful protective filters. The rational filter blocks any information that contradicts logic and personal beliefs. The mind is capable of processing incoming information with great precision, even if the information is distorted or reversed. At the central command of the mind, there are no limitations on understanding different languages—any content in any language is comprehensible and can be utilized. This level of the mind is part of the subconscious, which we are unaware of, yet it significantly influences human behavior.
Using this principle, the Negative Network transmits false information directly to the central command of the human mind, influencing behavior and steering desires in a specific direction. Poetry and music can be exploited as Trojan horses by this Negative Network on a large scale, as they bypass the mind’s usual resistance to external information. For example, if someone directly tells us to “listen to the devil,” we instinctively reject it. However, if the same message is embedded in the reversed lyrics of a song, we willingly listen to the music, allowing hidden and subliminal messages to slip past our defenses—like a Trojan horse entering our inner fortress—waiting for the right moment to take effect.
Interestingly, the reversed lyrics do not directly correlate with the original song when written in reverse. Additionally, achieving this effect is not possible through conventional techniques, making it seem almost miraculous.
Since a detailed explanation of this subject is quite extensive, it will be provided later. At this stage, the focus is solely on practical analysis to draw conclusions and verify these concepts. For this purpose, selected songs have been chosen as examples. First, the original song is played, followed by its reversed version for closer examination.
The results are astonishing, especially when the hidden messages within the reversed lyrics are decoded and their true meaning revealed. However, in many cases, the intended messages are already quite clear to listeners.