The real battlefield isn’t where you think it is. During World War II, the U.S. Army created a unit unlike any other. Not soldiers. Artists. Designers. Sound engineers. It was called the Ghost Army. And instead of weapons, they used inflatable tanks. Yes, inflatable. From the air, it looked like an entire armoured division. On the ground? Props. They built fake bases. And it worked. Enemy forces moved. Reacted. Repositioned. All based on something that wasn’t real. No firefight. No force. Just perception. That’s the power of psychological operations. You don’t always need strength. You need framing. Attention. Belief. Back then? Rubber tanks and sound effects. Today? Headlines. Different tools. Same principle. The battlefield has always been the mind. If you understand that, you start to see things differently. And if you don’t? You’re being influenced without realising it. If you want to understand how this works (properly and ethically): Because whether you’re selling ideas, products, or movements. You’re either shaping perception. Or being shaped by it. Regards |

