132 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
132 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
The message for today is an explanation of a very interesting phenomeno in
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social psychology, Cognitive Dissonance. The reason it's important that those
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valuing their liberty understand this phenomenon is that by use of situations
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employing cognitive dissonance, an individual's attitudes and opinions can be
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manipulated by others, even without his being aware of the process; and as
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I'll show, the government and social activist groups understand and use this
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technique to good effect. By understanding how it works, you can largely
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immunize your mental processes against this sort of manipulation.
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Cognition is the process of conscious perception. Dissonance is conflict.
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Cognitive dissonance is a state of one's perceptions being put into a state
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of conflict, which must be resolved to regain feelings of calm and harmony.
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A point that must be under stood about the functioning of the human mind is
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that attitudes influence actions (no surprise there), but also that actions
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influence attitudes. If a person is overtly forced to perform some action, he
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may be distressed, but he will not be put into a state of cognitive
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dissonance, because the coercion involved is clearly apparent to him. If this
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same individual is, however, subtly coerced into performing some action
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contrary to his inclinations, the source of the coercion, in fact the coercion
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itself, is not apparent to him. The conflict between his conscious attitutudes
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and his (apparently) inexplicable actions cause the all important dissonance.
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This mental conflict must somehow be resolved for the subject to alleviate
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this conflict. The solution to this dilemma is, very reliably for a naiive
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subject, to alter his attitudes so that they no longer conflict with his
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actions.
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This may become more clear by relating a classic experiment in social
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psychology. As background it should be mentioned that part of the experience
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of being a college freshman is to be offered a few dollars to participate in
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mild psychological experiments. Ads are posted all over campus on a routine
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basis, and some of these "experiments" may consist of nothing more than
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opinion polls (perhaps combined with mysterious but meaningless tests such as
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word-association or short term recall tests in the presence of blinking lights
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or buzzing noises). By means of such phony "tests" the homework for real
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experiments can be performed.
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In this classic experiment, the homework consisted of determining, to good
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precision, the statistical breakdown among freshmen regarding their opinions
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on the desirability of decriminalizing marijuana. The test group of subjects
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was divided into two groups and separated to create a control situation. The
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two groups were told that their task was to write an essay, the control group
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was given a meaningless, emotionally neutral topic to write about. The test
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group was told to write an essay about why marijuana should not be
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decriminalized. (Note that at the time, the early 70's, this was an
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emotionally charged issue, and this opinion was contrary to the opinions of
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the majority of the students.) It was also announced that due to budget cuts,
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the pay for this "experiment" had been reduced to the token amount of one
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dollar. They were told that since this was undoubtedly a disappointment to
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them and contrary to their expectations, that in all fairness anyone who felt
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cheated could get up and leave right then, no one would hold it against them,
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and the dollar would be paid anyway. Naturally, no one left, as social
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pressure in such a situation would dictate. This was the subtle coercion
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involved. Everybody had, in effect, been coerced into writing an essay
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contrary to his opinion, but certainly not for the money because there wasn't
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much, and they didn't have to write it anyway, they could have walked out.
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But they wrote the essay anyway. "Why?", their unconscious thought processes
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asked. The way out of the dilemma was to alter their opinions to fit the essay
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they had written. Note that they were not asked their opinion on the issue
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before getting the essay assignment, so they weren't honor-bound to keep their
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stories consistent with what they might have said if so questioned beforehand.
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After the essays, both groups (the test group and the control group) were
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anonymously surveyed on their "real" (in fact, after-test) opinions on the
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topic. Sure enough, the group with the meaningless essay responded about as
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statistically expected, but the test group expressed opinions much more
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opposed to decriminalization than they, statistically, should have. By being
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subtly coerced into expressing a particular opinion, they had been heavily
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influenced in favor of that opinion. As a final check, other groups of
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students, well paid to write their essays, displayed no alteration in their
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opinions, as the reason for their writing the essays was obvious, the money
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they were paid to do it.
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We can see the same sort of mechanism at work, for instance, in that most
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rigorous mind-control regimen in the free western cultures, military bootcamp.
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The technique is to present the subjects with a difficult task, say, crossing
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an obstacle course in a short time, or better yet, a frightening one such as
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making their first parachute jump. The troops are lined up in a very public,
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large group, and told that if anybody had cold feet, he can back out now, and
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no one will think the less of him for it. Of course, that last is total
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nonsense, and everybody there knows it. The one who backs out will, by doing
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so, be publicly humiliated, and looked down upon by all his buddies. No one
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backs down. Afterwards, the troops, after being scared half out of their minds
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by the jump, cannot believe they would do such a crazy, dangerous thing simply
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to avoid a little embarrasment (which, of course, is exactly what they did
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it), so they alter their attitudes to fit their actions. They decide that
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they're rough and tough and they really like jumping out of airplanes.
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Another example, this one in civilian life, should show how the same
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principle can be applied to entire populations without the concentrated
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manipulation apparent in the military example above. In the 60's and early
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70's, many school districts were forcibly desegregated by federal
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court-ordered bussing. Both blacks and whites opposed this, as neither group
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wanted its children shipped twenty miles away from home every day to attend
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school. Rather than engage in armed confrontations and police-state type
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tactics to overcome the parent's objections by force, which would just have
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hardened opposition to the already unpopular plan, federal officials, using
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the principle of cognitive dissonance and the advice of psychologists well
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versed in the technique, got subtle. They announced the bussing, but, to avoid
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widespread noncooperation, they announced that anyone who was strongly opposed
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to the idea could have his children exempted, and allowed to remain in his
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neighborhood school. The kicker was that, when parents attempted to do so,
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they encountered a deliberately contrived paperwork tangle of forms and
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applications which had to be filled out to get their child exempted. The
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system was designed so that several trips to various offices in different
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parts of town were required to complete the process. Naturally, few parents
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went to the great amount of effort necessary to get all the way through this
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process.
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They did not, however, realize that the paper tangle was the subtle
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coercion component of a cognitive dissonance-based scheme. Therefore they
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didn't explain their failure to keep their kids from being bussed by saying
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that it was too much trouble to fill out a few forms, (which was, in fact,
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exactly the case), but rather resolved the conflict by deciding that bussing
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for purposes of desegregation wasn't a bad thing after all. Through subtle
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coercion, thousands of members of the population were manipulated away from a
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very firmly held prior opinion. When the Communist Chinese did this to our
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GI's in North Korea, we called it brainwashing. When we do it to our own
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population at home, we call it social policy.
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The good news is that once you understand the process, you can spot the
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subtle coercions being applied to you, do what's required of you, and avoid
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the trap by correctly attributing your actions to that subtle coercion. In
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this way, you can become virtually immune to the technique, so your mind
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remains your own. Understanding the technique will also allow you to
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understand the cause of your friends' and relatives' changes of opinion to
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conformity with what the puppetmasters want them to think, even though they
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don't.
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The bad news is that, as government and other molders of opinion become
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more skilled in the use of this method, they will succeed with most of the
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population. The numbers who've been psychologically innoculated against this
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form of control (hopefully including you, if you understand and remember this
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explanation), or just too strong willed (read pig-headed) to be influenced,
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will be a dwindling minority. Your survival in the future may well depend on
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your ability both to resist such mental manipulations, and to understand their
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effects well enough to pretend convincingly to have been influenced just like
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everybody else. Once social control reaches a critical point, the last few
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heretics are always hunted down and either killed (as in Nazi Germany) or
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enslaved through less subtle methods (as in the Soviet gulags).
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Stay aware, stay inconspicuous, and stay alive! Good Luck.
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