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Ever since I took the obligatory Psych course that had the Stanford Experiment as part of the course, I have had niggling doubts about the conclusions. I never thought that “just anybody” “without specific reason” would turn into a monster under most conditions. It turns out that the guards did have an instruction and an incentive to get brutal with the prisoners. The replayed experiment seemed much more reasonable and concurring with my observations of people everywhere. Do you think that WWII had much influence on the experimental design of the original Stanford Experiment? I do.
That's a good point!
Its not easy to map out all the influences on oneself, so that real knowledge can be revealed, especially if you're in an academic setting...
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Do you think that WWII had much influence on the experimental design of the original Stanford Experiment?
the evil master psychologists are really good at manipulating people's minds. the occult thought-shapers are equipped with knowledge that goes back thousands of years. the average person's mind is shaped by examples from history and even local news that sound reasonable on the surface, get reinforced by media/friends/public, but fail to hold true when scrutinized closely. Asch Conformity experiment (u are of course familiar): https://youtu.be/TYIh4MkcfJA
anyways, we have to become master psychologists ourselves, perfect the true message in private, and propagate the message (as memes) unto the public.
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I was thinking of the recency of WWII and the “Nazis” that are the boogeymen of that era. Milgram was another experimenter who tried to figure out why everyday people would turn into “genocidal maniacs”. Again, the results were non-reproducible in that form. I am aware of the occultists’ grip on populations that are still somnambulists. Unfortunately, there are a lot of NPCs out there walking around.
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the mind control is strong.
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Yes, and the minds are very weak due to continuous attacks by the educational institutes.
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