How does mind control work?:
A technical overview of mind control tactics
¿Cómo Trabaja el Control Mental? : Una apreciación global técnica de las
tácticas del Control Mental
Terminology note: Today Mind control or brainwashing in academia is commonly
referred to as coercive persuasion, coercive psychological systems or coercive
influence. The short description below comes from Dr. Margaret Singer professor
emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley the acknowledged leading
authority in the world on mind control and cults. This document, in substance,
was presented to the U.S. Supreme Court as an educational Appendix on coercive
psychological systems in the case Wollersheim v. Church of Scientology 89-1367
and 89-1361. The Wollersheim case was being considered related to issues
involving abuse in this area.
Coercion is defined as, "to restrain or constrain by force..." Legally it often
implies the use of PHYSICAL FORCE or physical or legal threat. This traditional
concept of coercion is far better understood than the technological concepts of
"coercive persuasion" which are effective restraining, impairing, or compelling
through the gradual application of PSYCHOLOGICAL FORCES.
A coercive persuasion program is a behavioral change technology applied to cause
the "learning" and "adoption" of a set of behaviors or an ideology under certain
conditions. It is distinguished from other forms of benign social learning or
peaceful persuasion by the conditions under which it is conducted and by the
techniques of environmental and interpersonal manipulation employed to suppress
particular behaviors and to train others. Over time, coercive persuasion, a
psychological force akin in some ways to our legal concepts of undue influence,
can be even MORE effective than pain, torture, drugs, and use of physical force
and legal threats.
The Korean War "Manchurian Candidate" misconception of the need for
suggestibility-increasing drugs, and physical pain and torture, to effect
thought reform, is generally associated with the old concepts and models of
brainwashing. Today, they are not necessary for a coercive persuasion program to
be effective. With drugs, physical pain, torture, or even a physically coercive
threat, you can often temporarily make someone do something against their will.
You can even make them do something they hate or they really did not like or
want to do at the time. They do it, but their attitude is not changed.
This is much different and far less devastating than that which you are able to
achieve with the improvements of coercive persuasion. With coercive persuasion
you can change people's attitudes without their knowledge and volition. You can
create new "attitudes" where they will do things willingly which they formerly
may have detested, things which previously only torture, physical pain, or drugs
could have coerced them to do.
The advances in the extreme anxiety and emotional stress production technologies
found in coercive persuasion supersede old style coercion that focuses on pain,
torture, drugs, or threat in that these older systems do not change attitude so
that subjects follow orders "willingly." Coercive persuasion changes both
attitude AND behavior, not JUST behavior.
THE PURPOSES AND TACTICS OF COERCIVE PERSUASION
Coercive persuasion or thought reform as it is sometimes known, is best
understood as a coordinated system of graduated coercive influence and behavior
control designed to deceptively and surreptitiously manipulate and influence
individuals, usually in a group setting, in order for the originators of the
program to profit in some way, normally financially or politically.
The essential strategy used by those operating such programs is to
systematically select, sequence and coordinate numerous coercive persuasion
tactics over CONTINUOUS PERIODS OF TIME. There are seven main tactic types found
in various combinations in a coercive persuasion program. A coercive persuasion
program can still be quite effective without the presence of ALL seven of these
tactic types.
TACTIC 1. The individual is prepared for thought reform through increased
suggestibility and/or "softening up," specifically through hypnotic or other
suggestibility-increasing techniques such as: A. Extended audio, visual, verbal,
or tactile fixation drills; B. Excessive exact repetition of routine activities;
C. Decreased sleep; D. Nutritional restriction.
TACTIC 2. Using rewards and punishments, efforts are made to establish
considerable control over a person's social environment, time, and sources of
social support. Social isolation is promoted. Contact with family and friends is
abridged, as is contact with persons who do not share group-approved attitudes.
Economic and other dependence on the group is fostered. (In the forerunner to
coercive persuasion, brainwashing, this was rather easy to achieve through
simple imprisonment.)
TACTIC 3. Disconfirming information and nonsupporting opinions are prohibited in
group communication. Rules exist about permissible topics to discuss with
outsiders. Communication is highly controlled. An "in-group" language is usually
constructed.
TACTIC 4. Frequent and intense attempts are made to cause a person to
re-evaluate the most central aspects of his or her experience of self and prior
conduct in negative ways. Efforts are designed to destabilize and undermine the
subject's basic consciousness, reality awareness, world view, emotional control,
and defense mechanisms as well as getting them to reinterpret their life's
history, and adopt a new version of causality.
TACTIC 5. Intense and frequent attempts are made to undermine a person's
confidence in himself and his judgment, creating a sense of powerlessness.
TACTIC 6. Nonphysical punishments are used such as intense humiliation, loss of
privilege, social isolation, social status changes, intense guilt, anxiety,
manipulation and other techniques for creating strong aversive emotional
arousals, etc.
TACTIC 7. Certain secular psychological threats [force] are used or are present:
That failure to adopt the approved attitude, belief, or consequent behavior will
lead to severe punishment or dire consequence, (e.g. physical or mental illness,
the reappearance of a prior physical illness, drug dependence, economic
collapse, social failure, divorce, disintegration, failure to find a mate,
etc.).
Another set of criteria has to do with defining other common elements of mind
control systems. If most of Robert Jay Lifton's eight point model of thought
reform is being used in a cultic organization, it is most likely a dangerous and
destructive cult. These eight points follow:
Robert Jay Lifton's Eight Point Model of Thought Reform
1. ENVIRONMENT CONTROL. Limitation of many/all forms of communication with those
outside the group. Books, magazines, letters and visits with friends and family
are taboo. "Come out and be separate!"
2. MYSTICAL MANIPULATION. The potential convert to the group becomes convinced
of the higher purpose and special calling of the
group through a profound encounter / experience, for example, through an alleged
miracle or prophetic word of those in the group.
3. DEMAND FOR PURITY. An explicit goal of the group is to bring about some kind
of change, whether it be on a global, social, or
personal level. "Perfection is possible if one stays with the group and is
committed."
4. CULT OF CONFESSION. The unhealthy practice of self disclosure to members in
the group. Often in the context of a public gathering in the group, admitting
past sins and imperfections, even doubts about the group and critical thoughts
about the integrity of the leaders.
5. SACRED SCIENCE. The group's perspective is absolutely true and completely
adequate to explain EVERYTHING. The doctrine is not subject to amendments or
question. ABSOLUTE conformity to the doctrine is required.
6. LOADED LANGUAGE. A new vocabulary emerges within the context of the group.
Group members "think" within the very abstract
and narrow parameters of the group's doctrine. The terminology sufficiently
stops members from thinking critically by reinforcing a "black and white"
mentality. Loaded terms and clichés prejudice thinking.
7. DOCTRINE OVER PERSON. Pre-group experience and group experience are narrowly
and decisively interpreted through the absolute doctrine, even when experience
contradicts the doctrine.
8. DISPENSING OF EXISTENCE. Salvation is possible only in the group. Those who
leave the group are doomed.
COERCIVE PERSUASION IS NOT PEACEFUL PERSUASION
Programs identified with the above-listed seven tactics have in common the
elements of attempting to greatly modify a person's self-concept, perceptions of
reality, and interpersonal relations. When successful in inducing these changes,
coercive thought reform programs also, among other things, create the potential
forces necessary for exercising undue influence over a person's independent
decision-making ability, and even for turning the individual into a deployable
agent for the organization's benefit without the individual's meaningful
knowledge or consent.
Coercive persuasion programs are effective because individuals experiencing the
deliberately planned severe stresses they generate can only reduce the pressures
by accepting the system or adopting the behaviors being promulgated by the
purveyors of the coercion program. The relationship between the person and the
coercive persuasion tactics are DYNAMIC in that while the force of the
pressures, rewards, and punishments brought to bear on the person are
considerable, they do not lead to a stable, meaningfully SELF-CHOSEN
reorganization of beliefs or attitudes. Rather, they lead to a sort of coerced
compliance and a situationally required elaborate rationalization, for the new
conduct.
Once again, in order to maintain the new attitudes or "decisions," sustain the
rationalization, and continue to unduly influence a person's behavior over time,
coercive tactics must be more or less CONTINUOUSLY applied. A fiery, "hell and
damnation" guilt-ridden sermon from the pulpit or several hours with a
high-pressure salesman or other single instances of the so-called peaceful
persuasions do not constitute the "necessary chords and orchestration" of a
SEQUENCED, continuous, COORDINATED, and carefully selected PROGRAM of
surreptitious coercion, as found in a comprehensive program of "coercive
persuasion."
Truly peaceful religious persuasion practices would never attempt to force,
compel and dominate the free wills or minds of its members through coercive
behavioral techniques or covert hypnotism. They would have no difficulty
coexisting peacefully with U.S. laws meant to protect the public from such
practices.
Looking like peaceful persuasion is precisely what makes coercive persuasion
less likely to attract attention or to mobilize opposition. It is also part of
what makes it such a devastating control technology. Victims of coercive
persuasion have: no signs of physical abuse, convincing rationalizations for the
radical or abrupt changes in their behavior, a convincing "sincerity, and they
have been changed so gradually that they don't oppose it because they usually
aren't even aware of it.
Deciding if coercive persuasion was used requires case-by-case careful analysis
of all the influence techniques used and how they were applied. By focusing on
the medium of delivery and process used, not the message, and on the critical
differences, not the coincidental similarities, which system was used becomes
clear. The Influence Continuum helps make the difference between peaceful
persuasion and coercive persuasion easier to distinguish.
VARIABLES
Not all tactics used in a coercive persuasion type environment will always be
coercive. Some tactics of an innocuous or cloaking nature will be mixed in.
Not all individuals exposed to coercive persuasion or thought reform programs
are effectively coerced into becoming participants.
How individual suggestibility, psychological and physiological strengths,
weakness, and differences react with the degree of severity, continuity, and
comprehensiveness in which the various tactics and content of a coercive
persuasion program are applied, determine the program's effectiveness and/or the
degree of severity of damage caused to its victims.
For example, in United States v. Lee 455 U.S. 252, 257-258 (1982), the
California Supreme Court found that
"when a person is subjected to coercive persuasion without his knowledge or
consent... [he may] develop serious and sometimes irreversible physical and
psychiatric disorders, up to and including schizophrenia, self-mutilation, and
suicide."
WHAT ARE THE CRITERIA OF A COERCIVE PERSUASION PROGRAM?
A). Determine if the subject individual held enough knowledge and volitional
capacity to make the decision to change his or her ideas or beliefs.
B). Determine whether that individual did, in fact, adopt, affirm, or reject
those ideas or beliefs on his own.
C). Then, if necessary, all that should be examined is the behavioral processes
used, not ideological content. One needs to examine only the behavioral
processes used in their "conversion." Each alleged coercive persuasion situation
should be reviewed on a case-by-case basis. The characteristics of coercive
persuasion programs are severe, well-understood, and they are not accidental.
COERCIVE PERSUASION IS NOT VOLUNTARY, PEACEFUL, RELIGIOUS PRACTICE OR CENTRAL TO
ANY BONA FIDE RELIGION.
Coercive persuasion is not a religious practice, it is a control technology. It
is not a belief or ideology, it is a technological process.
As a PROCESS, it can be examined by experts on its technology COMPLETELY
SEPARATE from any idea or belief content, similar to examining the technical
process of hypnotic induction distinct from the meaning or value of the
post-hypnotic suggestions.
Examining PROCESSES in this manner can not violate First Amendment religious
protections.
Coercive persuasion is antithetical to the First Amendment. It is the unfair
manipulation of other's biological and psychological weaknesses and
susceptibilities. It is a psychological FORCE technology, not of a free society,
but of a criminal or totalitarian society. It is certainly not a spiritual or
religious technology.
Any organization using coercive persuasion on its members as a CENTRAL practice
that also claims to be a religion is turning the SANCTUARY of the First
Amendment into a fortress for psychological assault. It is a contradiction of
terms and should be "disestablished."
Coercive persuasion is a subtle, compelling psychological force which attacks an
even more fundamental and important freedom than our "freedom of religion." ITS
REPREHENSIBILITY AND DANGER IS THAT IT ATTACKS OUR SELF-DETERMINISM AND FREE
WILL, OUR MOST FUNDAMENTAL CONSTITUTIONAL FREEDOMS.