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- From: mcgrath@cs.uiuc.edu (Robert McGrath)
- Subject: Scary posting (very long)
- Message-ID: <1992Aug12.153748.26315@m.cs.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: news@m.cs.uiuc.edu (News Database (admin-Mike Schwager))
- Reply-To: mcgrath@cs.uiuc.edu
- Organization: University of Illinois, Dept of Computer Science
- Date: Wed, 12 Aug 1992 15:37:48 GMT
- Lines: 869
-
- I picked this up in alt.magick (please don't flame 'joshua', he
- didn't endorse the article or seek to have it posted to sci.skeptic)
- This is an absolutely amazing aggregation of nonsense, half-sense,
- pop sociology, and paranoia. How many errors are there in this one
- article? I lost count! But it is so goofy it is almost charming.
- After all, he is trying to teach us how to avoid exploitation, a goal
- I definitely sympathize with.
-
- I really like the "strange loops" produced by using exploitative
- propagandists like Key and Pucharich to attack exploitative
- propaganda!
-
- (BTW, there is a reference to real research at the University of Illinois
- that I believe is distorted, mistaken, or misinterpreted. I'm checking
- that citation even now.)
-
- REMcG
- mcgrath@cs.uiuc.edu
- ^^^^
- University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
-
- In article <JOSHUA.92Aug11195103@mole.gnu.ai.mit.edu>, joshua@mole.gnu.ai.mit.ed
- u (Joshua Geller) writes:
- |>
- |> here's something interesting and relating to a discussion we
- |> were having a while back about magickal techniques being used
- |> by christian groups.
- |>
- |> ___
- |> THE BATTLE FOR YOUR MIND
- |> by Dick Sutphen
- |>
- |> Persuasion and Brainwashing Techniques Being Used on the Public Today
- |>
- |>
- |> SUMMARY OF CONTENTS
- |>
- |> The Birth of Conversion/Brainwashing in Christian Revivalism in 1735.
- |> The Pavlovian explanation of the three brain phases. Born-again
- |> preachers:Step-by-Step, how they conduct a revival and the expected
- |> physiological results. The "voice roll" technique used by preachers,
- |> lawyers and hypnotists. New trance-inducing churches. The 6 steps to
- |> conversion. The decognition process. Thought-stopping techniques. The
- |> "sell it by zealot" technique. True believers and mass movements.
- |> Persuasion techniques: "Yes set," "Imbedded Commands," "Shock and
- |> Confusion," and the "Interspersal Technique."Subliminals. Vibrato and
- |> ELF waves. Inducing trance with vibrational sound. Even professional
- |> observers will be "possessed" at charismatic gatherings. The "only hope"
- |> technique to attend and not be converted. Non-detectable Neurophone
- |> programming through the skin. The medium for mass take-over.
- |>
- |>
- |> THE BATTLE FOR YOUR MIND
- |>
- |> I'm Dick Sutphen and this tape is a studio-recorded, expanded version
- |> of a talk I delivered at the World Congress of Professional Hypnotists
- |> Convention in Las Vegas, Nevada. Although the tape carries a copyright
- |> to protect it from unlawful duplication for sale by other companies,
- |> in this case, I invite individuals to make copies and give them to friends
- |> or anyone in a position to communicate this information.
- |>
- |> Although I've been interviewed about the subject on many local and
- |> regional radio and TV talk shows, large-scale mass communication appears
- |> to be blocked, since it could result in suspicion or investigation of the
- |> very media presenting it or the sponsors that support the media.
- |> Some government agencies do not want this information generally known.
- |> Nor do the Born-Again Christian movement, cults, and many human-potential
- |> trainings.
- |>
- |> Everything I will relate only exposes the surface of the problem. I
- |> don't know how the misuse of these techniques can be stopped. I don't
- |> think it is possible to legislate against that which often cannot be
- |> detected; and if those who legislate are using these techniques, there
- |> is little hope of affecting laws to govern usage. I do know that the
- |> first step to initiate change is to generate interest. In this case,
- |> that will probably only result from an underground effort.
- |>
- |> In talking about this subject, I am talking about my own business.
- |> I know it, and I know how effective it can be. I produce hypnosis and
- |> subliminal tapes and, in some of my seminars, I use conversion tactics
- |> to assist participants to become independent and self-sufficient. But,
- |> anytime I use these techniques, I point out that I am using them, and
- |> those attending have a choice to participate or not. They also know
- |> what the desired result of participation will be.
- |>
- |> So, to begin, I want to state the most basic of all facts about
- |> brainwashing: IN THE ENTIRE HISTORY OF MAN, NO ONE HAS EVER BEEN
- |> BRAINWASHED AND REALIZED, OR BELIEVED, THAT HE HAD BEEN BRAINWASHED.
- |> Those who have been brainwashed will usually passionately defend
- |> their manipulators, claiming they have simply been "shown the light"
- |> . . . or have been transformed in miraculous ways.
- |>
- |>
- |> The Birth of Conversion
- |>
- |> CONVERSION is a "nice" word for BRAINWASHING . . . and any study
- |> of brainwashing has to begin with a study of Christian revivalism in
- :
- |> eighteenth century America. Apparently, Jonathan Edwards accidentally
- |> discovered the techniques during a religious crusade in 1735 in
- |> Northampton, Massachusetts.By inducing guilt and acute apprehension
- |> and by increasing the tension, the "sinners" attending his revival
- |> meetings would break down and completely submit. Technically, what
- |> Edwards was doing was creating conditions that wipe the brain slate
- |> clean so that the mind accepts new programming. The problem
- |> was that the new input was negative. He would tell them, "You're a
- |> sinner! You're destined for hell!" As a result, one person
- |> committed suicide and another attempted suicide.And the neighbors of
- |> the suicidal converts related that they, too, were affected so deeply
- |> that, although they had found "eternal salvation," they
- |> were obsessed with a diabolical temptation to end their own lives.
- |>
- |> Once a preacher, cult leader, manipulator or authority figure
- |> creates the brain phase to wipe the brain-slate clean, his subjects
- |> are wide open. New input, in the form of suggestion, can be substituted
- |> for their previous ideas.Because Edwards didn't turn his message
- |> positive until the end of the revival,many accepted the negative
- |> suggestions and acted, or desired to act, upon them.
- |>
- |> Charles J. Finney was another Christian revivalist who used the
- |> same techniques four years later in mass religious conversions in
- |> New York. The techniques are still being used today by Christian
- |> revivalists, cults,human-potential trainings, some business rallies,
- |> and the United States Armed Services . . . to name just a few.
- |>
- |> Let me point out here that I don't think most revivalist
- |> preachers realize or know they are using brainwashing techniques.
- |> Edwards simply stumbled upon a technique that really worked, and
- |> others copied it and have continued to copy it for over two hundred
- |> years. And the more sophisticated our knowledge and technology become,
- |> the more effective the conversion. I feel strongly that this is one
- |> of the major reasons for the increasing rise in Christian
- |> fundamentalism, especially the televised variety, while most of the
- |> orthodox religions are declining.
- |>
- |>
- |> The Three Brain Phases
- |>
- |> The Christians may have been the first to successfully formulate
- |> brainwashing, but we have to look to Pavlov, the Russian scientist,
- |> for a technical explanation. In the early 1900s, his work with animals
- |> opened the door to further investigations with humans. After the
- |> revolution in Russia,Lenin was quick to see the potential of applying
- |> Pavlov's research to his own ends.
- |>
- |> Three distinct and progressive states of transmarginal inhibition were
- |> identified by Pavlov. The first is the EQUIVALENT phase, in which the brain
- |> gives the same response to both strong and weak stimuli. The second is the
- |> PARADOXICAL phase, in which the brain responds more actively to weak stimuli
- |> than to strong. And the third is the ULTRA-PARADOXICAL phase, in which
- |> conditioned responses and behavior patterns turn from positive to negative or
- |> from negative to positive.
- |>
- |> With the progression through each phase, the degree of conversion becomes
- |> more effective and complete. The way to achieve conversion are many and
- |> varied, but the usual first step in religious or political brainwashing is to
- |> work on the emotions of an individual or group until they reach an abnormal
- |> level of anger, fear, excitement, or nervous tension.
- |>
- |> The progressive result of this mental condition is to impair judgment and
- |> increase suggestibility. The more this condition can be maintained or
- |> intensified, the more it compounds. Once catharsis, or the first brain phase,
- |> is reached, the compleTe^Rmental takeover becomes easier. Existing mental
- |> programming can be replaced with new patterns of thinking and behavior.
- |>
- |> Other often-used physiological weapons to modify normal brain function
- s
- |> are fasting, radical or high sugar diets, physical discomforts, regulation of
- |> breathing, mantra chanting in meditation, the disclosure of awesome mysteries,
- |> special lighting and sound effects, programmed response to incense, or
- |> intoxicating drugs.
- |>
- |> The same results can be obtained in contemporary psychiatric treatment by
- |> electric shock treatments and even by purposely lowering a person's blood
- |> sugar level with insulin injections.
- |>
- |> Before I talk about exactly how some of the techniques are applied, I want
- |> to point out that hypnosis and conversion tactics are two distinctly different
- |> things--and that conversion techniques are far more powerful. However, the two
- |> are often mixed . . . with powerful results.
- |>
- |>
- |> How Revivalist Preachers Work
- |>
- |> If you'd like to see a revivalist preacher at work, there are probably
- |> several in your city. Go to the church or tent early and sit in the rear,
- |> about three-quarters of the way back. Most likely repetitive music will be
- |> played while the people come in for the service. A repetitive beat, ideally
- |> ranging from 45 to 72 beats per minute (a rhythm close to the beat of the
- |> human heart), is very hypnotic and can generate an eyes-open altered state of
- |> consciousness in a very high percentage of people. And, once you are in an
- |> alpha state, you are at least 25 times as suggestible as you would be in full
- |> beta consciousness. The music is probably the same for every service, or
- |> incorporates the same beat, and many of the people will go into an altered
- |> state almost immediately upon entering the sanctuary. Subconsciously, they
- |> recall their state of mind from previous services and respond according to the
- |> post-hypnotic programming.
- |>
- |> Watch the people waiting for the service to begin. Many will exhibit
- |> external signs of trance--body relaxation and slightly dilated eyes. Often,
- |> they begin swaying back and forth with their hands in the air while sitting in
- |> their chairs. Next, the assistant pastor will probably come out. He usually
- |> speaks with a pretty good "voice roll."
- |>
- |>
- |> Voice Roll Technique
- |>
- |> A "voice roll" is a patterned, paced style used by hypnotists when
- |> inducing a trance. It is also used by many lawyers, several of whom are highly
- |> trained hypnotists, when they desire to entrench a point firmly in the minds
- |> of the jurors. A voice roll can sound as if the speaker were talking to the
- |> beat of a metronome or it may sound as though he were emphasizing every word
- |> in a monotonous, patterned style. The words will usually be delivered at the
- |> rate of 45 to 60 beats per minute, maximizing the hypnotic effect.
- |>
- |> Now the assistant pastor begins the "build-up" process. He induces an
- |> altered state of consciousness and/or begins to generate the excitement and
- |> the expectations of the audience. Next, a group of young women in "sweet and
- |> pure" chiffon dresses might come out to sing a song. Gospel songs are great
- |> for building excitement and INVOLVEMENT. In the middle of the song, one of the
- |> girls might be "smitten by the spirit" and fall down or react as if possessed
- |> by the Holy Spirit. This very effectively increases the intensity in the room.
- |> At this point, hypnosis and conversion tactics are being mixed. And the result
- |> is the audience's attention span is now totally focused upon the communication
- |> while the environment becomes more exciting or tense.
- |>
- |> Right about this time, when an eyes-open mass-induced alpha mental state
- |> has been achieved, they will usually pass the collection plate or basket. In
- |> the background, a 45-beat-per-minute voice roll from the assistant preacher
- |> might exhort, "Give to God . . . Give to God . . . Give to God . . ." And the
- |> audience does give. God may not get the money, but his already wealthy
- |> representative will.
- |>
- |> Next, the fire-and-brimstone preacher will come out. He induces fear and
- |> increases the tension by talking about "the devil," "going to hell," or the
- |> forthcoming Armageddon.
- |>
- |> In the last such rally I attended, the preacher talked about the blood
- |> that would soon be running out of every faucet in the land. He was also
- |> obsessed with a "bloody axe of God," which everyone had seen hanging above the
- |> pulpit the previous week. I have no doubt that everyone saw it--the power
- of
- |> suggestion given to hundreds of people in hypnosis assures that at least 10 to
- |> 25 percent would see whatever he suggested they see.
- |>
- |> In most revivalist gatherings, "testifying" or "witnessing" usually
- |> follows the fear-based sermon. People from the audience come up on stage and
- |> relate their stories. "I was crippled and now I can walk!" "I had arthritis
- |> and now it's gone!" It is a psychological manipulation that works. After
- |> listening to numerous case histories of miraculous healings, the average guy
- |> in the audience with a minor problem is sure he can be healed. The room is
- |> charged with fear, guilt, intense excitement, and expectations.
- |>
- |> Now those who want to be healed are frequently lined up around the edge of
- |> the room, or they are told to come down to the front. The preacher might touch
- |> them on the head firmly and scream, "Be healed!" This releases the psychic
- |> energy and, for many, catharsis results. Catharsis is a purging of repressed
- |> emotions. Individuals might cry, fall down or even go into spasms. And if
- |> catharsis is effected, they stand a chance of being healed. In catharsis (one
- |> of the three brain phases mentioned earlier), the brain-slate is temporarily
- |> wiped clean and the new suggestion is accepted.
- |>
- |> For some, the healing may be permanent. For many, it will last four days
- |> to a week, which is, incidentally, how long a hypnotic suggestion given to a
- |> somnambulistic subject will usually last. Even if the healing doesn't last, if
- |> they come back every week, the power of suggestion may continually override
- |> the problem . . . or sometimes, sadly, it can mask a physical problem which
- |> could prove to be very detrimental to the individual in the long run.
- |>
- |> I'm not saying that legitimate healings do not take place. They do. Maybe
- |> the individual was ready to let go of the negativity that caused the problem
- |> in the first place; maybe it was the work of God. Yet I contend that it can be
- |> explained with existing knowledge of brain/mind function.
- |>
- |> The techniques and staging will vary from church to church. Many use
- |> "speaking in tongues" to generate catharsis in some while the spectacle
- |> creates intense excitement in the observers.
- |>
- |> The use of hypnotic techniques by religions is sophisticated, and
- |> professionals are assuring that they become even more effective. A man in Los
- |> Angeles is designing, building, and reworking a lot of churches around the
- |> country. He tells ministers what they need and how to use it. This man's track
- |> record indicates that the congregation and the monetary income will double if
- |> the minister follows his instructions. He admits that about 80 percent of his
- |> efforts are in the sound system and lighting.
- |>
- |> Powerful sound and the proper use of lighting are of primary importance in
- |> inducing an altered state of consciousness--I've been using them for years in
- |> my own seminars. However, my participants are fully aware of the process and
- |> what they can expect as a result of their participation.
- |>
- |>
- |> Six Conversion Techniques
- |>
- |> Cults and human-potential organizations are always looking for new
- |> converts. To attain them, they must also create a brain-phase. And they often
- |> need to do it within a short space of time--a weekend, or maybe even a day.
- |> The following are the six primary techniques used to generate the conversion.
- |>
- |> The meeting or training takes place in an area where participants are cut
- |> off from the outside world. This may be any place: a private home, a remote or
- |> rural setting, or even a hotel ballroom where the participants are allowed
- |> only limited bathroom usage. In human-potential trainings, the controllers
- |> will give a lengthy talk about the importance of "keeping agreements" in life.
- |> The participants are told that if they don't keep agreements, their life will
- |> never work. It's a good idea to keep agreements, but the controllers are
- |> subverting a positive human value for selfish purposes. The participants vow
- |> to themselves and their trainer that they will keep their agreements. Anyone
- |> who does not will be intimidated into agreement or forced to leave. The next
- |> step is to agree to complete training, thus assuring a high percentage of
- |> conversions for the organizations. They will USUALLY have to agree not to take
- |> drugs, smoke, and sometimes not to eat . . . or they are given such short meal
- |> breaks that it creates tension. The real reason for the agreements is to alter
- |> internal chemistry, which generates anxiety and hopefully causes at least a
- |> slight malfunction of the nervous system, which in turn increases the
- |> conversion potential.
- |>
- |> Before the gathering is complete, the agreements will be used to ensure
- |> that the new converts go out and find new participants. They are intimidated
- |> into agreeing to do so before they leave. Since the importance of keeping
- |> agreements is so high on their priority list, the converts will twist the arms
- |> of everyone they know, attempting to talk them into attending a free
- |> introductory session offered at a future date by the organization. The new
- |> converts are zealots. In fact, the inside term for merchandising the largest
- |> and most successful human-potential training is, "sell it by zealot!"
- |>
- |> At least a million people are graduates and a good percentage have been
- |> left with a mental activation button that assures their future loyalty and
- |> assistance if the guru figure or organization calls. Think about the potential
- |> political implications of hundreds of thousands of zealots programmed to
- |> campaign for their guru.
- |>
- |> Be wary of an organization of this type that offers follow-up sessions
- |> after the seminar. Follow-up sessions might be weekly meetings or inexpensive
- |> seminars given on a regular basis which the organization will attempt to talk
- |> you into taking--or any regularly scheduled event used to maintain control. As
- |> the early Christian revivalists found, long-term control is dependent upon a
- |> good follow-up system.
- |>
- |> Alright. Now, let's look at the second tip-off that indicates conversion
- |> tactics are being used. A schedule is maintained that causes physical and
- |> mental fatigue. This is primarily accomplished by long hours in which the
- |> participants are given no opportunity for relaxation or reflection.
- |>
- |> The third tip-off: techniques used to increase the tension in the room or
- |> environment.
- |>
- |> Number four: Uncertainty. I could spend hours relating various techniques
- |> to increase tension and generate uncertainty. Basically, the participants are
- |> concerned about being "put on the spot" or encountered by the trainers, guilt
- |> feelings are played upon, participants are tempted to verbally relate their
- |> innermost secrets to the other participants or forced to take part in
- |> activities that emphasize removing their masks. One of the most successful
- |> human-potential seminars forces the participants to stand on a stage in front
- |> of the entire audience while being verbally attacked by the trainers. A public
- |> opinion poll, conducted a few years ago, showed that the number one
- |> most-fearful situation an individual could encounter is to speak to an
- |> audience. It ranked above window washing outside the 85th floor of an office
- |> building. So you can imagine the fear and tension this situation generates
- |> within the participants. Many faint, but most cope with the stress by mentally
- |> going away. They literally go into an alpha state, which automatically makes
- |> them many times as suggestible as they normally are. And another loop of the
- |> downward spiral into conversion is successfully effected.
- |>
- |> The fifth clue that conversion tactics are being used is the introduction
- |> of jargon--new terms that have meaning only to the "insiders" who participate.
- |> Vicious language is also frequently used, purposely, to make participants
- |> uncomfortable.
- |>
- |> The final tip-off is that there is no humor in the communications . . . at
- |> least until the participants are converted. Then, merry-making and humor are
- |> highly desirable as symbols of the new joy the participants have supposedly
- |> "found."
- |>
- |> I'm not saying that good does not result from participation in such
- |> gatherings. It can and does. But I contend it is important for people to know
- |> what has happened and to be aware that continual involvement may not be in
- |> their best interest.
- |>
- |> Over the years, I've conducted professional seminars to teach people to be
- |> hypnotists, trainers, and counselors. I've had many of those who conduct
- |> trainings and rallies come to me and say, "I'm here because I know that what
- |> I'm doing works, but I don't know why." After showing them how and why, many
- |> have gotten out of the business or have decided to approach it differently or
- |> in a much more loving and supportive manner.
- |>
- |> Many of these trainers have become personal friends, and it scares us
- all
- |> to have experienced the power of one person with a microphone and a room full
- |> of people. Add a little charisma and you can count on a high percentage of
- |> conversions. The sad truth is that a high percentage of people want to give
- |> away their power--they are true "believers"!
- |>
- |> Cult gatherings or human-potential trainings are an ideal environment to
- |> observe first-hand what is technically called the "Stockholm Syndrome." This
- |> is a situation in which those who are intimidated, controlled, or made to
- |> suffer, begin to love, admire, and even sometimes sexually desire their
- |> controllers or captors.
- |>
- |> But let me inject a word of warning here: If you think you can attend such
- |> gatherings and not be affected, you are probably wrong. A perfect example is
- |> the case of a woman who went to Haiti on a Guggenheim Fellowship to study
- |> Haitian Voodoo. In her report, she related how the music eventually induced
- |> uncontrollable bodily movement and an altered state of consciousness. Although
- |> she understood the process and thought herself above it, when she began to
- |> feel herself become vulnerable to the music, she attempted to fight it and
- |> turned away. Anger or resistance almost always assures conversion. A few
- |> moments later she was possessed by the music and began dancing in a trance
- |> around the Voodoo meeting house. A brain phase had been induced by the music
- |> and excitement, and she awoke feeling reborn. The only hope of attending such
- |> gatherings without being affected is to be a Buddha and allow no positive or
- |> negative emotions to surface. Few people are capable of such detachment.
- |>
- |> Before I go on, let's go back to the six tip-offs to conversion. I want to
- |> mention the United States Government and military boot camp. The Marine Corps
- |> talks about breaking men down before "rebuilding" them as new men--as marines!
- |> Well, that is exactly what they do, the same way a cult breaks its people down
- |> and rebuilds them as happy flower sellers on your local street corner. Every
- |> one of the six conversion techniques are used in boot camp. Considering the
- |> needs of the military, I'm not making a judgment as to whether that is good
- |> or bad. IT IS A FACT that the men are effectively brainwashed. Those who won't
- |> submit must be discharged or spend much of their time in the brig.
- |>
- |>
- |> Decognition Process
- |>
- |> Once the initial conversion is effected, cults, armed services, and
- |> similar groups cannot have cynicism among their members. Members must respond
- |> to commands and do as they are told, otherwise they are dangerous to the
- |> organizational control. This is normally accomplished as a three-step
- |> Decognition Process.
- |>
- |> Step One is ALERTNESS REDUCTION: The controllers cause the nervous system
- |> to malfunction, making it difficult to distinguish between fantasy and
- |> reality. This can be accomplished in several ways. POOR DIET is one; watch out
- |> for Brownies and Koolaid. The sugar throws the nervous system off. More subtle
- |> is the "SPIRITUAL DIET" used by many cults. They eat only vegetables and
- |> fruits; without the grounding of grains, nuts, seeds, dairy products, fish or
- |> meat, an individual becomes mentally "spacey." INADEQUATE SLEEP is another
- |> primary way to reduce alertness, especially when combined with long hours of
- |> work or intense physical activity. Also, being bombarded with intense and
- |> unique experiences achieves the same result.
- |>
- |> Step Two is PROGRAMMED CONFUSION: You are mentally assaulted while your
- |> alertness is being reduced as in Step One. This is accomplished with a deluge
- |> of new information, lectures, discussion groups, encounters or one-to-one
- |> processing, which usually amounts to the controller bombarding the individual
- |> with questions. During this phase of decognition, reality and illusion often
- |> merge and perverted logic is likely to be accepted.
- |>
- |> Step Three is THOUGHT STOPPING: Techniques are used to cause the mind to
- |> go "flat." These are altered-state-of-consciousness techniques that initially
- |> induce calmness by giving the mind something simple to deal with and focusing
- |> awareness. The continued use brings on a feeling of elation and eventually
- |> hallucination. The result is the reduction of thought and eventually, if used
- |> long enough, the cessation of all thought and withdrawal from everyone and
- |> everything except that which the controllers direct. The takeover is then
- |> complete. It is important to be aware that when members or participants are
- |> instructed to use "thought-stopping" techniques, they are told that they will
- |> benefit by so doing: they will become "better soldiers" or "find
- |> enlightenment."
- |>
- |> There are three primary techniques used for thought stopping. The first is
- |> MARCHING: the thump, thump, thump beat literally generates self-hypnosis and
- |> thus great susceptibility to suggestion.
- |>
- |> The second thought stopping technique is MEDITATION. If you spend an hour
- |> to an hour and a half a day in meditation, after a few weeks, there is a great
- |> probability that you will not return to full beta consciousness. You will
- |> remain in a fixed state of alpha for as long as you continue to meditate. I'm
- |> not saying this is bad--if you do it yourself. It may be very beneficial. But
- |> it is a fact that you are causing your mind to go flat. I've worked with
- |> meditators on an EEG machine and the results are conclusive: the more you
- |> meditate, the flatter your mind becomes until, eventually and especially if
- |> used to excess or in combination with decognition, all thought ceases. Som
- e
- |> spiritual groups see this as nirvana--which is bullshit. It is simply a
- |> predictable physiological result. And if heaven on earth is non-thinking and
- |> non-involvement, I really question why we are here.
- |>
- |> The third thought-stopping technique is CHANTING, and often chanting in
- |> meditation. "Speaking in tongues" could also be included in this category.
- |>
- |> All three-stopping techniques produce an altered state of consciousness.
- |> This may be very good if YOU are controlling the process, for you also control
- |> the input. I personally use at least one self-hypnosis programming session
- |> every day and I know how beneficial it is for me. But you need to know if you
- |> use these techniques to the degree of remaining continually in alpha that,
- |> although you'll be very mellow, you'll also be more suggestible.
- |>
- |>
- |> True Believers & Mass Movements
- |>
- |> Before ending this section on conversion, I want to talk about the people
- |> who are most susceptible to it and about Mass Movements. I am convinced that
- |> at least a third of the population is what Eric Hoffer calls "true believers."
- |> They are joiners and followers . . . people who want to give away their power.
- |> They look for answers, meaning, and enlightenment outside themselves.
- |>
- |> Hoffer, who wrote THE TRUE BELIEVER, a classic on mass movements, says,
- |> "true believers are not intent on bolstering and advancing a cherished self,
- |> but are those craving to be rid of unwanted self. They are followers, not
- |> because of a desire for self-advancement, but because it can satisfy their
- |> passion for self-renunciation!" Hoffer also says that true believers "are
- |> eternally incomplete and eternally insecure"!
- |>
- |> I know this from my own experience. In my years of communicating concepts
- |> and conducting trainings, I have run into them again and again. All I can do
- |> is attempt to show them that the only thing to seek is the True Self within.
- |> Their personal answers are to be found there and there alone. I communicate
- |> that the basics of spirituality are self-responsibility and self-actualization.
- |> But most of the true believers just tell me that I'm not spiritual and go
- |> looking for someone who will give them the dogma and structure they desire.
- |>
- |> Never underestimate the potential danger of these people. They can easily
- |> be molded into fanatics who will gladly work and die for their holy cause. It
- |> is a substitute for their lost faith in themselves and offers them as a
- |> substitute for individual hope. The Moral Majority is made up of true
- |> believers. All cults are composed of true believers. You'll find them in
- |> politics, churches, businesses, and social cause groups. They are the fanatics
- |> in these organizations.
- |>
- |> Mass Movements will usually have a charismatic leader. The followers want
- |> to convert others to their way of living or impose a new way of life--if
- |> necessary, by legislating laws forcing others to their view, as evidenced by
- |> the activities of the Moral Majority. This means enforcement by guns or
- |> punishment, for that is the bottom line in law enforcement.
- |>
- |> A common hatred, enemy, or devil is essential to the success of a mass
- |> movement. The Born-Again Christians have Satan himself, but that isn't
- |> enough--they've added the occult, the New Age thinkers and, lately, all those
- |> who oppose their integration of church and politics, as evidenced in their
- |> political reelection campaigns against those who oppose their views. In
- |> revolutions, the devil is usually the ruling power or aristocracy. Some
- |> human-potential movements are far too clever to ask their graduates to join
- |> anything, thus labeling themselves as a cult--but, if you look closely, you'll
- |> find that their devil is anyone and everyone who hasn't taken their training.
- |>
- |> There are mass movements without devils but they seldom attain major
- |> status. The True Believers are mentally unbalanced or insecure people, or
- |> those without hope or friends. People don't look for allies when they love,
- |> but they do when they hate or become obsessed with a cause. And those who
- |> desire a new life and a new order feel the old ways must be eliminated before
- |> the new order can be built.
- |>
- |>
- |> Persuasion Techniques
- |>
- |> Persuasion isn't technically brainwashing but it is the manipulation of
- |> the human mind by another individual, without the manipulated party being
- |> aware what caused his opinion shift. I only have time to very basically
- |> introduce you to a few of the thousands of techniques in use today, but the
- |> basis of persuasion is always to access your RIGHT BRAIN. The left half of
- |> your brain is analytical and rational. The right side is creative and
- |> imaginative. That is overly simplified but it makes my point. So, the idea is
- |> to distract the left brain and keep it busy. Ideally, the persuader generates
- |> an eyes-open altered state of consciousness, causing you to shift from beta
- |> awareness into alpha; this can be measured on an EEG machine.
- |>
- |> First, let me give you an example of distracting the left brain.
- |> Politicians use these powerful techniques all the time; lawyers use many
- |> variations which, I've been told, they call "tightening the noose."
- |>
- |> Assume for a moment that you are watching a politician give a speech.
- |> First, he might generate what is called a "YES SET." These are statements that
- |> will cause listeners to agree; they might even unknowingly nod their heads in
- |> agreement. Next come the TRUISMS. These are usually facts that could be
- |> debated but, once the politician has his audience agreeing, the odds are in
- |> the politician's favor that the audience won't stop to think for themselves,
- |> thus continuing to agree. Last comes the SUGGESTION. This is what the
- |> politician wants you to do and, since you have been agreeing all along, you
- |> could be persuaded to accept the suggestion. Now, if you'll listen closely to
- |> my political speech, you'll find that the first three are the "yes set," the
- |> next three are truisms and the last is the suggestion.
- |>
- |> "Ladies and gentlemen: are you angry about high food prices? Are you tired
- |> of astronomical gas prices? Are you sick of out-of-control inflation? Well,
- |> you know the Other Party allowed 18 percent inflation last year; you know
- |> crime has increased 50 percent nationwide in the last 12 months, and you know
- |> your paycheck hardly covers your expenses any more. Well, the answer to
- |> resolving these problems is to elect me, John Jones, to the U.S. Senate."
- |>
- |> And I think you've heard all that before. But you might also watch for
- |> what are called Imbedded Commands. As an example: On key words, the speaker
- |> would make a gesture with his left hand, which research has shown is more apt
- |> to access your right brain. Today's media-oriented politicians and
- |> spellbinders are often carefully trained by a whole new breed of specialist
- |> who are using every trick in the book--both old and new--to manipulate you
- |> into accepting their candidate.
- |>
- |> The concepts and techniques of Neuro-Linguistics are so heavily protected
- |> that I found out the hard way that to even talk about them publicly or in
- |> print results in threatened legal action. Yet Neuro-Linguistic training is
- |> readily available to anyone willing to devote the time and pay the price. It
- |> is some of the most subtle and powerful manipulation I have yet been exposed
- |> to. A good friend who recently attended a two-week seminar on Neuro-Linguistics
- |> found that many of those she talked to during the breaks were government
- |> people.
- |>
- |> Another technique that I'm just learning about is unbelievably slippery;
- |> it is called an INTERSPERSAL TECHNIQUE and the idea is to say one thing with
- |> words but plant a subconscious impression of something else in the minds of
- |> the listeners and/or watchers.
- |>
- |> Let me give you an example: Assume you are watching a television
- |> commentator make the following statement: SENATOR JOHNSON is assisting local
- |> authorities to clear up the stupid mistakes of companies contributing to the
- |> nuclear waste problems." It sounds like a statement of fact, but, if the
- |> speaker emphasizes the right word, and especially if he makes the proper hand
- |> gestures on the key words, you could be left with the subconscious impression
- |> that Senator Johnson is stupid. That was the subliminal goal of the statement
- |> and the speaker cannot be called to account for anything.
- |>
- |> Persuasion techniques are also frequently used on a much smaller scale
- |> with just as much effectiveness. The insurance salesman knows his pitch is
- |> likely to be much more effective if he can get you to visualize something in
- |> your mind. This is right-brain communication. For instance, he might pause in
- |> his conversation, look slowly around your living room and say, "Can you just
- |> imagine this beautiful home burning to the ground?" Of course you can! It is
- |> one of your unconscious fears and, when he forces you to visualize it, you are
- |> more likely to be manipulated into signing his insurance policy.
- |>
- |> The Hare Krishnas, operating in every airport, use what I call SHOCK AND
- |> CONFUSION techniques to distract the left brain and communicate directly with
- |> the right brain. While waiting for a plane, I once watched one operate for
- |> over an hour. He had a technique of almost jumping in front of someone.
- |> Initially, his voice was loud then dropped as he made his pitch to take a book
- |> and contribute money to the cause. Usually, when people are shocked, they
- |> immediately withdraw. In this case they were shocked by the strange
- |> appearance, sudden materialization and loud voice of the Hare Krishna devotee.
- |> In other words, the people went into an alpha state for security because they
- |> didn't want to confront the reality before them. In alpha, they were highly
- |> suggestible so they responded to the suggestion of taking the book; the moment
- |> they took the book, they felt guilty and responded to the second suggestion:
- |> give money. We are all conditioned that if someone gives us something, we have
- |> to give them something in return--in that case, it was money. While watching
- |> this hustler, I was close enough to notice that many of the people he stopped
- |> exhibited an outward sign of alpha--their eyes were actually dilated.
- |>
- |>
- |> Subliminal Programming
- |>
- |> Subliminals are hidden suggestions that only your subconscious perceives.
- |> They can be audio, hidden behind music, or visual, airbrushed into a picture,
- |> flashed on a screen so fast that you don't consciously see them, or cleverly
- |> incorporated into a picture or design.
- |>
- |> Most audio subliminal reprogramming tapes offer verbal suggestions
- |> recorded at a low volume. I question the efficacy of this technique--if
- |> subliminals are not perceptible, they cannot be effective, and subliminals
- |> recorded below the audible threshold are therefore useless. The oldest audio
- |> subliminal technique uses a voice that follows the volume of the music so
- |> subliminals are impossible to detect without a parametric equalizer. But this
- |> technique is patented and, when I wanted to develop my own line of subliminal
- |> audiocassettes, negotiations with the patent holder proved to be
- |> unsatisfactory. My attorney obtained copies of the patents which I gave to
- |> some talented Hollywood sound engineers, asking them to create a new
- |> technique. They found a way to psycho-acoustically modify and synthesize the
- |> suggestions so that they are projected in the same chord and frequency as the
- |> music, thus giving them the effect of being part of the music. But we found
- |> that in using this technique, there is no way to reduce various frequencies to
- |> detect the subliminals. In other words, although the suggestions are being
- |> heard by the subconscious mind, they cannot be monitored with even the most
- |> sophisticated equipment.
- |>
- |> If we were able to come up with this technique as easily as we did, I can
- |> only imagine how sophisticated the technology has become, with unlimited
- |> government or advertising funding. And I shudder to think about the propaganda
- |> and commercial manipulation that we are exposed to on a daily basis. There is
- |> simply no way to know what is behind the music you hear. It may even be
- |> possible to hide a second voice behind the voice to which you are listening.
- |>
- |> The series by Wilson Bryan Key, Ph.D., on subliminals in advertising and
- |> political campaigns well documents the misuse in many areas, especially
- |> printed advertising in newspapers, magazines, and posters.
- |>
- |> The big question about subliminals is: do they work? And I guarantee y
- ou
- |> they do. Not only from the response of those who have used my tapes, but from
- |> the results of such programs as the subliminals behind the music in department
- |> stores. Supposedly, the only message is instructions to not steal: one East
- |> Coast department store chain reported a 37 percent reduction in thefts in the
- |> first nine months of testing.
- |>
- |> A 1984 article in the technical newsletter, "Brain-Mind Bulletin," states
- |> that as much as 99 percent of our cognitive activity may be "non-conscious,"
- |> according to the director of the Laboratory for Cognitive Psychophysiology at
- |> the University of Illinois. The lengthy report ends with the statement, "these
- |> findings support the use of subliminal approaches such as taped suggestions
- |> for weight loss and the therapeutic use of hypnosis and Neuro-Linguistic
- |> Programming."
- |>
- |>
- |> Mass Misuse
- |>
- |> I could relate many stories that support subliminal programming, but I'd
- |> rather use my time to make you aware of even more subtle uses of such
- |> programming.
- |>
- |> I have personally experienced sitting in a Los Angeles auditorium with
- |> over ten thousand people who were gathered to listen to a current charismatic
- |> figure. Twenty minutes after entering the auditorium, I became aware that I
- |> was going in and out of an altered state. Those accompanying me experienced
- |> the same thing. Since it is our business, we were aware of what was happening,
- |> but those around us were not. By careful observation, what appeared to be
- |> spontaneous demonstrations were, in fact, artful manipulations. The only way I
- |> could figure that the eyes-open trance had been induced was that a 6- to
- |> 7-cycle-per-second vibration was being piped into the room behind the air
- |> conditioner sound. That particular vibration generates alpha, which would
- |> render the audience highly susceptible. Ten to 25 percent of the population is
- |> capable of a somnambulistic level of altered states of consciousness; for
- |> these people, the suggestions of the speaker, if non-threatening, could
- |> potentially be accepted as "commands."
- |>
- |>
- |> Vibrato
- |>
- |> This leads to the mention of VIBRATO. Vibrato is the tremulous effect
- |> imparted in some vocal or instrumental music, and the cycle-per-second range
- |> causes people to go into an altered state of consciousness. At one period of
- |> English history, singers whose voices contained pronounced vibrato were not
- |> allowed to perform publicly because listeners would go into an altered state
- |> and have fantasies, often sexual in nature.
- |>
- |> People who attend opera or enjoy listening to singers like Mario Lanza are
- |> familiar with this altered state induced by the performers.
- |>
- |>
- |> ELFs
- |>
- |> Now, let's carry this awareness a little farther. There are also inaudible
- |> ELFs (extra-low frequency waves). These are electromagnetic in nature. One of
- |> the primary uses of ELFs is to communicate with our submarines. Dr. Andrija
- |> Puharich, a highly respected researcher, in an attempt to warn U.S. officials
- |> about Russian use of ELFs, set up an experiment. Volunteers were wired so
- |> their brain waves could be measured on an EEG. They were sealed in a metal
- |> room that could not be penetrated by a normal signal.
- |>
- |> Puharich then beamed ELF waves at the volunteers. ELFs go right through
- |> the earth and, of course, right through metal walls. Those inside couldn't
- |> know if the signal was or was not being sent. And Puharich watched the
- |> reactions on the technical equipment: 30 percent of those inside the room were
- |> taken over by the ELF signal in six to ten seconds.
- |>
- |> When I say "taken over," I mean that their behavior followed the changes
- |> anticipated at very precise frequencies. Waves below 6 cycles per second
- |> caused the subjects to become very emotionally upset, and even disrupted
- |> bodily functions. At 8.2 cycles, they felt very high . . . an elevated
- |> feeling, as though they had been in masterful meditation, learned over a
- |> period of years. Eleven to 11.3 cycles induced waves of depressed agitation
- |> leading to riotous behavior.
- |>
- |>
- |> The Neurophone
- |>
- |> Dr. Patrick Flanagan is a personal friend of mine. In the early 1960s, as
- |> a teenager, Pat was listed as one of the top scientists in the world by "Life"
- |> magazine. Among his many inventions was a device he called the Neurophone--an
- |> electronic instrument that can successfully program suggestions directly
- |> through contact with the skin. When he attempted to patent the device, the
- |> government demanded that he prove it worked. When he did, the National
- |> Security Agency confiscated the neurophone. It took Pat two years of legal
- |> battle to get his invention back.
- |>
- |> In using the device, you don't hear or see a thing; it is applied to the
- |> skin, which Pat claims is the source of special senses. The skin contains
- more
- |> sensors for heat, touch, pain, vibration, and electrical fields than any other
- |> part of the human anatomy.
- |>
- |> In one of his recent tests, Pat conducted two identical seminars for a
- |> military audience--one seminar one night and one the next night, because the
- |> size of the room was not large enough to accommodate all of them at one time.
- |> When the first group proved to be very cool and unwilling to respond, Patrick
- |> spent the next day making a special tape to play at the second seminar. The
- |> tape instructed the audience to be extremely warm and responsive and for their
- |> hands to become "tingly." The tape was played through the neurophone, which
- |> was connected to a wire he placed along the ceiling of the room. There were no
- |> speakers, so no sound could be heard, yet the message was successfully
- |> transmitted from that wire directly into the brains of the audience. They
- were
- |> warm and receptive, their hands tingled and they responded, according to
- |> programming, in other ways that I cannot mention here.
- |>
- |> The more we find out about how human beings work through today's highly
- |> advanced technological research, the more we learn to control human beings.
- |> And what probably scares me the most is that the medium for takeover is
- |> already in place! The television set in your living room and bedroom is doing a
- |> lot more than just entertaining you.
- |>
- |> Before I continue, let me point out something else about an altered state
- |> of consciousness. When you go into an altered state, you transfer into right
- |> brain, which results in the internal release of the body's own opiates:
- |> enkephalins and Beta-endorphins, chemically almost identical to opium. In
- |> other words, it feels good . . . and you want to come back for more.
- |>
- |> Recent tests by researcher Herbert Krugman showed that, while viewers were
- |> watching TV, right-brain activity outnumbered left-brain activity by a ratio
- |> of two to one. Put more simply, the viewers were in an altered state . . . in
- |> trance more often than not. They were getting their Beta-endorphin "fix."
- |>
- |> To measure attention spans, psychophysiologist Thomas Mulholland of the
- |> Veterans Hospital in Bedford, Massachusetts, attached young viewers to an EEG
- |> machine that was wired to shut the TV set off whenever the children's brains
- |> produced a majority of alpha waves. Although the children were told to
- |> concentrate, only a few could keep the set on for more than 30 seconds!
- |>
- |> Most viewers are already hypnotized. To deepen the trance is easy. One
- |> simple way is to place a blank, black frame every 32 frames in the film that
- |> is being projected. This creates a 45-beat-per-minute pulsation perceived only
- |> by the subconscious mind--the ideal pace to generate deep hypnosis.
- |>
- |> The commercials or suggestions presented following this alpha-inducing
- |> broadcast are much more likely to be accepted by the viewer. The high
- |> percentage of the viewing audience that has somnambulistic-depth ability could
- |> very well accept the suggestions as commands--as long as those commands did
- |> not ask the viewer to do something contrary to his morals, religion, or
- |> self-preservation.
- |>
- |> The medium for takeover is here. By the age of 16, children have spent
- |> 10,000 to 15,000 hours watching television--that is more time than they spend
- |> in school! In the average home, the TV set is on for six hours and 44 minutes
- |> per day--an increase of nine minutes from last year and three times the
- |> average rate of increase during the 1970s.
- |>
- |> It obviously isn't getting better . . . we are rapidly moving into an
- |> alpha-level world--very possibly the Orwellian world of "1984"--placid,
- |> glassy-eyed, and responding obediently to instructions.
- |>
- |> A research project by Jacob Jacoby, a Purdue University psychologist,
- |> found that of 2,700 people tested, 90 percent misunderstood even such simple
- |> viewing fare as commercials and "Barnaby Jones." Only minutes after watching,
- |> the typical viewer missed 23 to 36 percent of the questions about what he or
- |> she had seen. Of course they did--they were going in and out of trance! If you
- |> go into a deep trance, you must be instructed to remember--otherwise you
- |> automatically forget.
- |>
- |> I have just touched the tip of the iceberg. When you start to combine
- |> subliminal messages behind the music, subliminal visuals projected on the
- |> screen, hypnotically produced visual effects, sustained musical beats at a
- |> trance-inducing pace . . . you have extremely effective brainwashing. Every
- |> hour that you spend watching the TV set you become more conditioned. And, in
- |> case you thought there was a law against any of these things, guess again.
- |> There isn't! There are a lot of powerful people who obviously prefer thing
- |>
- |> It obviously isn't getting better . . . we are rapidly moving into an
- |> alpha-level world--very possibly the Orwellian world of "1984"--placid,
- |> glassy-eyed, and responding obediently to instructions.
- |>
- |> A research project by Jacob Jacoby, a Purdue University psychologist,
- |> found that of 2,700 people tested, 90 percent misunderstood even such simple
- |> viewing fare as commercials and "Barnaby Jones." Only minutes after watching,
- |> the typical viewer missed 23 to 36 percent of the questions about what he or
- |> she had seen. Of course they did--they were going in and out of trance! If you
- |> go into a deep trance, you must be instructed to remember--otherwise you
- |> automatically forget.
- |>
- |> I have just touched the tip of the iceberg. When you start to combine
- |> subliminal messages behind the music, subliminal visuals projected on the
- |> screen, hypnotically produced visual effects, sustained musical beats at a
- |> trance-inducing pace . . . you have extremely effective brainwashing. Every
- |> hour that you spend watching the TV set you become more conditioned. And, in
- |> case you thought there was a law against any of these things, guess again.
- |> There isn't! There are a lot of powerful people who obviously prefer things
- |> exactly the way they are. Maybe they have plans for you?
- |> --
- |> John Robinson Only criminals, tyrants, and cowards have
- |> robinson@ac.dal.ca reason to fear the armed, honest citizen.
- |> DOD #0069
-