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When the Colors Collide: Red, Blue, and the Subtle Art of Mental Manipulation

There’s a reason why certain colors dominate your screen, your wardrobe, and even your thoughts—you're being tuned. Red provokes. Blue pacifies. But when stitched together—as in Jordan Peterson’s red-blue suits—they do something far more subtle: they create cognitive equilibrium, a trance state where primal instincts and social control coexist. This isn’t just fashion—it’s psychological warfare woven in threads. And as an Afrocentric counselor tuned to symbolic codes, I see it for what it is: strategic manipulation of the collective mind.

Jordan Peterson wears suits split between red and blue—not by fashion, but by function. That’s mind control in cloth form.

Red taps the primal—it's the color of blood, rage, instinct. When he says "things will go red," he's announcing the rise of the beast within, triggered by violation.

Blue, on the other hand, is the color of calm influence. That’s why media giants bathe their platforms in it—X, Facebook, NTV. Blue seduces the intellect, anchors the gaze, and keeps the cash flowing.

When red and blue meet, they don’t clash. They create psychological equilibrium—a color-coded hypnosis.

The masses don’t just see the suit. The suit sees them.

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