Jocko Podcast - 489: A Man Can Be Made To Do Exactly Anything. The Dark Truth About Brainwashing.

Episode Date: May 7, 2025

>Join Jocko Underground< Jocko Podcast 489 explores the power of thought control, the vulnerability of the human mind, and historical brainwashing techniques. Jocko and Echo discuss a declassif...ied 1956 CIA document on psychological manipulation, drawing from Korean War POW cases and Soviet tactics to show how beliefs and values can be deeply altered. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Jocko Podcast number 489 with Echo Charles and me. Jocko Willink. Good evening, Echo. Good evening. So, how much do you control your own thoughts? Let me ask you that question. Me? You know, you're trying to, you're trying to form your mind, form your brain in a certain way, right?
Starting point is 00:00:19 Well, let me ask you this. When you're making a cake or you're making a loaf of bread, do you think that the ingredients matter? Yeah. Like what you put into the bread is going to make it taste a certain way. So we have to be careful with what we put in there. And we have to be careful with what we put into our brains. But how much do you actually pay attention to that? What do you think?
Starting point is 00:00:47 You paying close attention to what you put in your brain? Me? Yeah. Yeah. Echo Charles. Yes, sir. You're paying attention. I believe that I am.
Starting point is 00:00:54 How about that? Good. Let me tell you that. if you're not careful, you can be manipulated. And do you think you can be manipulated? Me? Yes. Yes. You think you're so good.
Starting point is 00:01:08 But you can be manipulated to your core. Your beliefs can be changed. Your values can be changed. What you believe to be the truth can be changed and made false. And what you believe to be false can be changed and made true in your head. Now, usually when I start thinking about that right there, I start thinking, okay, well, that seems a little bit extreme. And most people start to think, well, no, you know, I got my beliefs. I got my values.
Starting point is 00:01:36 Yeah, yeah. But I think it's very important to understand how malleable our minds are as human beings. And today we're going to just dive into, I think, a very good description and example of how malleable our minds are. And this is a CIA document that was written in 1956. It's called brainwashing from a psychological viewpoint. And obviously the time frame in 1956, it's based on, much of it is based on prisoners of war from the Korean War and also on reports that were coming out of the Soviet Union. And their prison camps and their gulags.
Starting point is 00:02:25 And it is very enlightening to recognize how malleable our brains are. In fact, when you look at, you can look at like the life in communist North Korea versus the life in South Korea. And you've seen those, that wide variation when you look at those two countries, right? Real obvious which one seems better right seems like the South Korea is a much better way to go Seems like yeah right well it's been that way for a long time And during that war and I don't quote me on these numbers But there was a lot of prisoners of war taken by coalition forces by the south by the United States by the by us And something like 60,000 of them
Starting point is 00:03:23 Didn't want to go back home because that's part of the Geneva Convention or the laws of war is that when the war is over, you get to go back to your country, you know, if you're a prisoner of war. Well, about 60,000 of them were like, no, no, no, no, no, no, we're good. We're good. We'll stay right here.
Starting point is 00:03:38 Yeah, we'll stay here now. 50,000 of them went back, something like that. Well, what's a little bit harder to believe, so you can see that clearly it was real obvious to anyone that was even in a prison camp under the coalition, under the Western coalition, the Democratic coalition,
Starting point is 00:04:00 they were like, oh yeah, this is a better deal. Even though I'm in a prison camp, this is better. Well, of all the people that were captured in the north, there's like 20 Americans. That said, I'm not going back. I'll stay. So that's one of the things that kind of sparked my interest a long time ago, is thinking, wow,
Starting point is 00:04:24 you've got people that clearly are from Illinois or North Carolina or California or Texas. They grew up there for 18, 20, 25, 30 years. They lived in freedom. And they got up to a prison camp in North Korea. And we're somehow convinced, oh, you know what? I'm going to stick it out here. That's the power of what the CIA called brainwashing.
Starting point is 00:04:55 So let's get into it. it. Again, the book is called brainwashing from a psychological viewpoint. It's written in February 1956. And it was approved for a release in 1999. So it's classified. It was classified secret back in the day. But the opening quote, here's the opening quote. It says, and pay close attention. It says, we know now that men can be made to do exactly anything. It is all a question of finding the right means. If we only take enough trouble and go sufficiently slowly, we can make him kill his aged parents and eat them in a stew. Steele.
Starting point is 00:05:41 End quote. Now, that's from a book called Verdun, written in 1939 by a guy named Jules Romains, but that's what the CIA is saying. If you have enough time and you enact the right measures, you can make. someone do anything. You can make a man do anything you want them to do, including eating, killing their own parents and eating them in a stew.
Starting point is 00:06:10 So this is why it's very important that we protect our mind and we pay attention to what we're taking into our mind because there's powerful sources out there that are trying to manipulate it. Sorry, here's the foreword. Brainwashing as a term was originated by a reporter who is interviewing Chinese refugees.
Starting point is 00:06:30 It has gained a worldwide currency and has been applied to a, wide range of techniques, mass education of communistic country or citizens, though control in Soviet and satellite countries, techniques of eliciting information as well as intensive, individualized re-education of beliefs of a few selected individuals. Such uncritical use of the term has done nothing to reduce the impact on the public and officialdom generally of the confessions of such men as Cardinal Medeency and especially of the results of treatment of prisoners of war by Chinese communists. So this guy, Cardinal Mizente,
Starting point is 00:07:18 he was a Hungarian guy. He was a Catholic. And when the communist took over, he was forced to make like confessions to his crimes and whatnot. So they use him as an example in here. So it says the term it itself, the term brainwashing, the term itself is anxiety producing. It's connotation of special oriental knowledge of drugs, hypnosis, and other exotic and devious means of controlling human behavior creates credulately among the uninformed, meaning that it makes us willing to accept like this mysterious thing that can control us. A more prosaic view is that the techniques used in producing confessions and conversion versions are readily understandable in terms of ordinary psychological principles and have been used,
Starting point is 00:08:09 especially by police states, for centuries. So when this term came about, it was like, oh my gosh, this is this new thing and the communists have this figured out the drugs and hypnosis and all these weird things if they're getting mind control. And what this document says is like, no, actually it's not a big mystery. It's ordinary psychological principles that had been being used for a long time. And as we start talking about, we're going to start to recognize something. It is now clear that the Russian methods of obtaining information and confessions have been developed by MVD.
Starting point is 00:08:49 So the MVD was like their ministry of internal affairs. And I'm not going to try and say the Russian words for it. But the MVD, it was in charge of like law enforcement. It was in charge of prisons. It was also in charge of things like traffic safety, and it was in charge of the gulags. It was in charge of internal migration, like moving around. So it had a huge amount of control over the country.
Starting point is 00:09:14 And their method of obtaining information and confessions have been developed and earlier versions of this organization over the century, but especially during the last 35 years of systemic effort to elicit information or confessions. The Chinese have their own tradition of tolerance for brutality. They are influenced by the Russians, but place more emphasis on converting the prisoner to communistic beliefs, at times behaving as typical eager beaver revolutionaries. In some, the methods are police methods developed by trial and error to suit the needs of the
Starting point is 00:09:52 police state. No scientist, no drugs, no hypnosis, no new psychological principles have as yet been involved. So you had two different things that was going on. You had the Russians that were trying to get confessions. And they were trying to get confessions for propaganda. But the Chinese were trying to straight up like convert you into their belief system. Early in the review of the diverse information cataloged under the term brainwashing, even in serious scientific articles, it became evident there was a need for a better coordination of the work on this topic and more work directed at specific problems and issues. It was therefore concluded that this limited effort was best devoted to, one, clarifying the concepts connoted by the term brainwashing, and two,
Starting point is 00:10:42 relating these to such basic psychological principles as learning, perception, and motivation, and three, specifically discussing the brainwashed person as an involuntary reeducated person. This is like horrifying, isn't it? Yes, it is. That you can be changed. Yeah. And it goes right into it. All people are being read, reeducated continuously.
Starting point is 00:11:13 Yeah. I mean, if that, that is so true today with that damn phone that's in your pocket. Yeah. That's ready to just re-educate you. As soon as you get 30 seconds of time, you're going to go a little bit of re-education. Yeah. From your social media. Yeah, but just, just.
Starting point is 00:11:30 And it feels like. It feels like everyone would kind of know that if you present it to them. Like, hey, you realize this, you know, given what that means and so you realize this going on, most people would be like, yeah, but not as much to me kind of a thing. But at the same time, it makes you think of what are the things that are capable of reeducating you, you know? And you're like, holy shit, they're everywhere. And one of the things that I think, as I was reading this document is, okay, like if I said, okay, echo Charles, I'm going to take you, I want to put you into a prison camp and we're going to go through what I'm going to do to you.
Starting point is 00:12:01 you're going to come out the other side with a change personality. Everyone would accept that, right? Well, most people go, oh, yeah, you know, I could see how my beliefs could get changed. Some people are like, no, I'm firm in my beliefs. You couldn't change me. But that's a small percentage of people we could probably convince them. But what we don't know is what are the long-term effects of what we're living in right now? You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:12:25 It's like, you know, they put red dye number five in drinks, right? And for a long time, it's like, oh, well, we don't really. you know, it's just going to make the liquid turn red. But there's bad health effects over time where you go, oh, actually, this is really bad for you. That's where we're at right now with social media, with staring at screens, with the music that you're listening to. Like, how much did the music that you're listening to get into your head? Because for me, I always kind of separated the lyrics of the music that I was listening to. If it was a good lyric that I agreed with, I'd bring it all.
Starting point is 00:13:01 board and it would be what's that bias confirmation bias right like I think discipline is cool so when I hear Henry Rollins singing about discipline I'm putting that into my register yeah yeah letting it in but when I hear some other song that I like the song but I don't like what they're singing about I could just let it go no factor yeah so but but is that always true right and how much control you have and if you're not paying attention to it where does it impact you so we are constantly being read reeducated all the time it feels like just shoot it's all different levels too so like even just the fact that you're conscious of like hey I I take on board lyrics of the
Starting point is 00:13:51 song into my own like value system or whatever you're taking it on to versus some I don't just the fact that you're conscious of making that differentiation is is kind of part of the process in a big way. So, you know, some people, I mean, I'm assuming some people, they don't even make that distinction. They're just like, oh, no, I like listening to it. And I'll sing along with their lyrics or whatever. Maybe, yeah, I listen to what they're saying, but like, I don't, the decision is not
Starting point is 00:14:16 consciously made to take it on board versus reject it, you know, kind of a thing. And then that may influence them or that that will make the music that they listen to, whatever it may be, influence them in a very specific way versus you. It influences you in. It still influences you. in a different way. So you'm saying? So now you have this filter that kind of makes the music land on your brain just in a
Starting point is 00:14:39 different pattern in a different way versus this way over here. And maybe, you know, my conscious choice was like I want to be that way. And also I think people are, they have some kind of inherent like taste in music. Or there's when I heard like hardcore. music for the first time. I was like, oh yeah, this is what I've been looking for. Here it is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:05 I was, oh, this is, yeah. When I heard Black Sabbath for the first time, I was like, oh, yeah, this is what I, this is this is what I, this is the music that is in my head. You know, yeah. Whereas other music, it was like, oh, well, I, I, I'm, you know, I was like a Beatles fan when I was a little kid. And, you know, I really like the Beatles. I mean, the Beatles is the Beatles.
Starting point is 00:15:24 But it's, but it was like it was not quite delivering what I wanted, but I didn't know it yet. Right. Right, right. But then when I heard heavier music, I was said to myself, oh, this is what I've wanted to hear. Yeah. But then there's, you can take that to an extent where there's music that now that's even harder than that,
Starting point is 00:15:43 which I don't really like. So. Yeah, so it's like it has to kind of thread the needle of that perfect, like, zone. Like Beatles, you were getting some good stuff, but not quite enough. And then. Have you ever heard the things where they say what such and such a band sounds like to someone that's never heard them before? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:59 Yeah. There's that, too. Well, I've listened to that. I've seen videos like that. And it's a song that I've heard many, many times. But watching someone listen to it for the first time makes me hear it a different way. Which is weird, which kind of is another one of those ingredients where it's like, probably you don't know how stuff is landing on you to the full extent that it is, you know?
Starting point is 00:16:18 Yeah, music is can be so persuasive. Even, you know, if you're in your mood. Yeah. Yeah. Like you can get fired up for music. You can get all kinds of things. And so what are you putting in your head? Like we like we can all admit that if we hear a freaking kick-ass song,
Starting point is 00:16:36 it will elevate our mood, right? Yeah. We either good like good party song or or a good like heavy metal like rock and roll workout song. Like we know that it can change our mood. So now when you start thinking about what that does over time. Yeah. And what you're so we know it, we know it'll have an immediate reaction, but what is it doing over time?
Starting point is 00:16:57 and yeah that's let me ask you this about music in general so this dawned upon me a few years ago where do you ever like when you hear a new song that you really like a new one they really like do you play it over and over again
Starting point is 00:17:18 like on repeat or you just like oh put that on the playlist and hell yeah it's part of the a little bit of both it has to be a really good song for me to go wait a second yeah because when you hear a song for the first time, you're not, you don't quite have it, but there'll be like one little thing that'll catch you. And then you listen to it again and it starts to build.
Starting point is 00:17:35 So you have to kind of listen to a song for me, I don't know about you. For me, generally speaking, I have to listen to a song maybe three or four times before I go, oh yeah, I get this song. See, mine is the exact opposite. Where to me, you know how people will be like, oh, you know how some people,
Starting point is 00:17:52 they just love music. We'll flip music, you know, they just love the idea of music. And then within that, there's certain music that they like better than others for sure, but they love music, right? So I realize to myself, this is where I'm currently at where I do love music, but in this, in a real contrasty way. Because there's certain types of music and certain songs that I would literally rather listen to nothing. Like turn the thing off completely. And then there's certain songs that, yeah, the moment I hear, there's a specific songs that I can think of that are.
Starting point is 00:18:26 When I first heard it, I just put it on repeat for like weeks, just that song to the point where now is that different from what I said. I don't know. Okay. No, you said you had to listen to a three or four times. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Like all this stuff like, yeah, I mean, yeah, I guess randomly. That's way more rare to me where I'll be like, wait, this song is actually sounding good. So you listen to one song on repeat for weeks. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:49 It's almost like I like this song more than the person intended on me liking this song because I'll literally reject the rest of the song that I like. on my playlist or whatever for this song for like weeks. Yeah. And what's the last song that happened with? Oh. Actually, what's currently, actually it's not on repeat anymore,
Starting point is 00:19:09 but it's on kind of repeat with some other ones. There's a song called Loading by Central C. It's a British rapper. Okay. Dude. Loading. Okay. And bro,
Starting point is 00:19:21 I listen to it on the way down here today. Nice. Every single day. Okay. On repeat that. Yeah. I don't know that would be your jam, but it's good. What, uh, what emotional trigger?
Starting point is 00:19:31 What emotion does it get you in? That particular one? Yeah. I don't know, just, I don't know. That's like a real general one. Okay. So it's not like, you know, some songs that make you feel like sad and you like feeling sad. You know, that's true.
Starting point is 00:19:44 And then some makes you feel fired up and aggressive, you know, and you like, it's like that. But this one's a real general, like, it's kind of a kind of a faster pace one. But it's like, it's not like aggressive and angry or nothing. It's just, I don't know. know good times I guess but it's not even good times that that you know like good times is like little party songs or something like loading yeah what's it about I don't know himself whatever any of these rap songs you know just himself what he's about you know what is uh how he is you know young guy or whatever just some fun rap songs okay he has a couple of them that are good but that one
Starting point is 00:20:19 particular for sure and so you're saying that you will go and get into one song for an extended a period of time. Yeah. It's almost like certain kind of music I like more than the normal, you know, like abnormally a lot. And then some might just straight up hate. Like I'd rather listen to literal silence than play these songs. And there's a lot of those too.
Starting point is 00:20:41 But to get back to the subject here, what we're talking about is we know, both of us know 100% that just a music, musical sounds will impact the way we feel. And then we could go a little bit further and go, maybe they impact how we're thinking. Yes. And I do, no, you're absolutely right. And if you pay attention, so especially, okay, you like blues or, okay, so there's blues, the kind of the genre or whatever, but then there's like sad songs. Okay.
Starting point is 00:21:12 Right, which not necessarily are blues, but you know, like sad love songs, break up songs. Like, you know, like there's songs that are sad, songs that are happy, some songs that are regressive, some are violent, you know, all this stuff. Some that have principles, you know, like all this stuff. some sad songs are really good and they make you feel like sad yeah right okay so here's one to look into
Starting point is 00:21:31 black guy country singer I think his name is Dax maybe no I just discovered this like two weeks ago maybe and he has a song called Lonely Dirt Road I think if I'm not mistaken something along the lines sounds like a country song
Starting point is 00:21:46 yeah yeah black guy like you look at him you're like oh you wouldn't think but it's country so any good song like it's looking pretty solid. And then, but it's, it's really like, and this is what the song is about too. It's like, you know how like as a, you know, as a man, as a provider, as the leader of
Starting point is 00:22:03 the family or whatever, you have no time to feel sorry for yourself. You know, because you've got to work to do and all this stuff or whatever, but at the same time, this is just what it's kind of about where sometimes you do kind of feel sorry for yourself a little bit, but you can't let nobody see that, you know? So it's kind of like this lonely dirt road
Starting point is 00:22:19 is the part where you can get all that out kind of an idea, right? So it's like, okay, you know, it's a good song, but you listen to the lyrics and you start like, you start forcing the dots to be created, you know, like, oh yeah, I feel that too. Even though when you really like, no, I don't, I don't feel that. But when you're into the song, you're kind of like, yeah, man, I feel this guy. I feel this guy's struggle. Like it's kind of my struggle too a little bit.
Starting point is 00:22:42 You kind of get how much you feel it. That depends on the day. But I'm just saying it has literally has that influence. He can, he's singing about a situation that you can literally not be in. Yeah. But you feel like you're kind of. that situation too sometimes you know so how much is that how much of that is going on such good examples of the maliability of the mind and you remember red dawn yeah hell yeah so when he when the dad's like in
Starting point is 00:23:06 the internment camp and there's just loud speakers playing yeah and they're just going off on communist propaganda yeah i like that scene and you know you know some people like you'd fight against that for a long time but then you think well man if well how long does it take you know all right so again all people are being reeducated continually continuously new information changes one's beliefs everyone has experienced some degree of conflict that ensues when new information is not consistent with a prior belief especially a basic one concerned with such problems as religion uh sex more maurees and political ideology This is a normal experience. Most individuals are able to resolve the conflict by one means or another.
Starting point is 00:23:55 Many do so by integrating the new with the old. So, okay, that's just kind of laying out that, yeah, we have new ideas. And we go, oh, yeah, I've never really heard that before. I didn't think about it's a good point. And you kind of integrate them in. You find a way to make them fit or they don't fit and you kind of reject them. The experience of being brainwashed in our sense differs in that the inconsistent information is forced upon him under relatively controlled conditions after the possibility of critical judgment has been
Starting point is 00:24:27 reduced or removed by such measures as production of excessive fatigue, isolation, deprivation of various sorts, and sometimes physical torture. When reduced to extreme dependency and confusion, the individual is ready to react favorable to any person or idea which promises to end his painfully confused state. At this point, the re-education begins as described in the analysis of control pressures. So again, so important to think about this, not just in the idea of being in a prison camp, but when you take people and they're tired because they're working all the time or they're isolated because their girlfriend dumped them or their boyfriend dumped them, there's deprivation of various sorts.
Starting point is 00:25:17 Like you can't afford this, you can't afford that. You get in those states, all of a sudden, your mind, you can't, your judgment fades. And all of a sudden, these new ideas are coming in. And before you'd be like, oh, new idea, but I have this old idea and we'll integrate it or we'll be able to defend it. But if your judgments eroded, and now of a sudden your mind becomes open, which as you know, as you know, I'm very positive towards the open mind. But here we have a brain that is being forced open and all judgment removed. So it can kind of be feel like having an open mind on. purpose is so you can be open to new beneficial things. But forced open is kind of like,
Starting point is 00:25:56 now you're open to just things. And this goes to military boot camp, right? Because what are they doing in military boot camp? Oh, sleep deprivation, making you tired, depriving you of certain things, isolating you. Physical torture? No, but are you doing, you know, PT? Are you getting dropped down to do? So you have that stuff happening there. And it's the same thing. And it's the same thing. any you know when you start looking at like cult scenarios this is I mean obviously any cult scenarios it's like make the people tired isolate them from their family uh put them in situations that are uncomfortable like that's exactly what's happening there rather cults they actually target people who don't have a strong family structure so that's way
Starting point is 00:26:41 easier to isolate yeah yeah yeah well you're in the in the military is that way they call it indoctrination don't they call it indoctrination they do call it indoctrination they do call it And actually, so when I was in boot camp, they asked me something about boot camp. We had to fill out probably like an early form of like a critique to make sure that abuse wasn't happening or something like that. You know what I mean? Like an early form of that. And the question, one of the questions was like, you know, how has your boot camp and experience been so far? And I wrote, I think the brainwashing is working well.
Starting point is 00:27:19 Yeah. And I guess it couldn't have been too much of a, of like a critique moment, an anonymous critique because the, the, the, whatever they're called the chiefs that were running, the recruit chiefs that were running the program for us. What the hell were they called? How can I not remember that? The RDCs? Well, it was a while ago. Yeah, it was a while ago. Anyways, the chiefs that are running it that are like the drill instructors for Navy boot camp, they read mine.
Starting point is 00:27:51 They were reading a few of them like oh yes your problem and they go oh and this guy thinks he's being brainwashed I'll tell you what you know something like that I was kind of like oh that's kind of funny that they read this out but you're you said it wasn't torture and I agree with that even though I haven't been through book who can't know this but but it did provide many experiences that you one might want some relief from and which is that's really what torture is right I just want relief this whole purpose of torture in a way right true Unless just sadistic, I guess. Yeah. Going on, how individuals will react to attempts to elicit information to confess falsely to brainwashing as we have defined. It depends on the intelligence, personality, and experience of the individual and on the knowledge and willingness of the captors to persist in techniques aimed at deliberately destroying the integration of a personality. With such willingness, there appears little doubt that an individual can be brought psychologically to the point where in, voluntary reeducation will take place.
Starting point is 00:28:58 Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's interesting, right? Now, look, when you join the military, you've got to have some level of, you know, let's say patriotism, right? You've got to have some level of patriotism. You're not, I mean, I would hope. You're going to have some level of patriotism.
Starting point is 00:29:12 I'm like, oh, I think the nation, let's talk about the American military. Some part of you goes, yeah, America is a country worth serving it's worth sacrificing for their form to join it. So I believe that's what makes it a little bit more of an indoctrination as opposed to brainwashing. Now, if you were to take someone that was from America, but you wanted them to go and serve in a opposing country, you'd have to brainwash them.
Starting point is 00:29:42 Because you'd want them to think that America's bad. Right, right. But they believe that America's good. Yeah. Yeah. But it's a pretty disturbing thought when they say that there's little doubt that an individual can be brought psychologically to the point where involuntary reeducation will take place. Continuing on, up to now, police methods developed by trial and error have not fully exploited the psychological basis for the results thus far obtained, nor have all restraints in treatment of prisoners been cast aside. Note, too, that the restraints referred to need not concern direct physical torture.
Starting point is 00:30:15 it is not necessary to use direct physical means to reduce a person to a state where involuntary reeducation can take place. Yeah. Don't even need to torture you. Brainwashing conceived as involuntary reeducation then represents one extreme of a continuum of treatment by and resistance to captors. At the other end of this scale is active voluntary collaboration with the enemy. In between are varying degrees of brutality and subtlety of treatment and degrees of resistance there too. So we can get the full outcome where you're just full on collaborating or you can get, I'm going to resist. That's the other end of the spectrum.
Starting point is 00:31:01 And then there's varying degrees of brutality to make it happen. Clearly, policies concerning treatment of repatriated captives will depend on where the individual is placed on this scale at one end. there is the legal jurisdiction for treason at the other psychiatric treatment. So if you get released, you might be, they're calling you a treasonous person because you collaborated, but it's like, wait a second, this dude got tortured and got brainwashed. The view presented therein has several implications. First, the public should be given information which will dispel the mystery, which appears to have surrounded the concept of brainwashing.
Starting point is 00:31:38 Second, those responsible for establishing policy for returned prisoners have as a first problem, the determination on the scale between involuntary reeducation and voluntary collaboration, a particular individual stands. Third, the human organism need not be a complete pawn of his environment until extreme conditions are created. Man is adaptive and with some knowledge of what to expect from his captors and an understanding of his own reactions, he can develop means of resisting. He can be helped in this by prior knowledge of the treatment he can expect and his own reactions to it. And again, not to dive too far into this,
Starting point is 00:32:18 we've covered it before, but, you know, the one thing that happened in the Korean War was guys broke. And going into the Korean War, the word was, hey, you don't rank, you give name, rank serial number, that's it. If you give up more than that, you're a traitor. And sure enough, they could break anybody.
Starting point is 00:32:36 And so everyone felt like traitors. And so they made adjustments to the code of conduct. And we've covered that with some of the POWs. that we've had on here that were from the Vietnam War. Going back to this fourth, the truly brainwashed is a psychiatric, not a legal problem. His treatment should be therapeutic, not punitive. Recovery can be anticipated since the brainwashed person
Starting point is 00:32:59 placed in his normal environment will tend to revert to his prior belief. That was positive to hear. You get back to your normal environment. You'll hopefully get back to your previously existing beliefs. Fifth, brainwashing can be successfully accomplished on the basis of present knowledge by anyone sufficiently interested in inquiring and understanding of the psychological principles involved.
Starting point is 00:33:19 The shit ain't hard. That's what they're saying there. Six, it is possible that the best long-range defense against brainwashing is to make it politically disadvantageous for a country to permit its use. They're like saying, hey, there's no real good way to resist it. The best way is just to make it a bad thing to do, which is crazy. Fast forward a little bit, scope and aim. The purpose of this study is to increase understanding of the best.
Starting point is 00:33:42 brainwashing process. There will probably well over a thousand classified and unclassified documents, articles and books directly related to Soviet and satellite techniques of interrogation and brainwashing. Approximately one-third of the available classified and unclassified sources were examined to provide the findings of this study. By far, the greatest proportion of this material has come from prisoner of war sources of World War II and the Korean conflict. Considerable additional material has come from refugees, intelligence sources, and civilian nationals who have been released from incarceration behind the Iron Curtain. So it's a very important. So it's interesting about that is World War II POWs. Now you had what happened over in the Pacific.
Starting point is 00:34:19 It's one of the earliest books we covered was the forgotten Highlander, right? Who was in the Japanese prison camp, just awful. And then you had, obviously, on the European front, prisoners of war, but that was different in terms of the brainwashing that they did and that the communists were doing. This might be a side note, but kind of the more, um, My brain is like going deep on It's rabbit hole brainwashing the You know how these expressions like you know expression the sum of the five guys you hang out with is you or whatever And they also on top of it the idea that we've talked about many times where it's like hey if you hang out with with a certain kind of group
Starting point is 00:35:04 Like you kind of end up being like that group even if you're not like that in the beginning now It's kind of like oh this just you know if people hang around or even listen to this or whatever and you talk about jiu-jitsu all the time that's why people start joining jiu-jitsu slowly you know kind of a thing we're doing jitzer yeah it's like how much of that is like just going on right your friends are brainwashing you right everyone's kind of and i guess technically it's not the washing part well then again it is though that's what that was the statement that was made we are all continuously being re-educated yeah re-educated yeah i mean re-educated is a nice way of saying brainwashed straight up yeah it's just i mean at the end of the day it's like is it for good
Starting point is 00:35:39 or bad yeah i think that's intentional the key thing is like brainwashing you for my benefit is different than brainwashing you for your benefit. Yeah. Right? Because I think it's kind of good if I brainwashed you to start training in jiu-jitsu and lifting and clean, right? Yeah. Yeah. It's all good. Yeah. Fast forward. This, this study is, oh, by the way, this is just a PDF. You can get it online. The CIA has it on their freaking website. That's where I got it from. The CIA, like, they have it posted. Part of the full mother proponent. This study is written from the viewpoint of professional psychology
Starting point is 00:36:10 as a systematic approach, this has not been done before, although many previous analysis have, of course, made use of some of the psychological ideas. The present approach attempts to make full use of the current psychological principles in explaining the process of brainwashing. Fast for a little bit. Statement of the problem,
Starting point is 00:36:28 Western usage of the term brainwashing has caused it to be applied from time to time to each of the following situations, and they go through all these different ones. Individual group indoctrination of the masses behind the iron curtain, which is, always an interesting one when you see entire groups of people believing the same thing or at least
Starting point is 00:36:46 largely believing the same thing. Indoctrination of key personnel inside communists controlled countries to maintain their political reliability. In the interrogation process by which positive information of intelligence value is obtained from individuals, that's kind of a different aspect of it. For group indoctrination of prisoners of war besides an attempt to obtain defections and demoralized military personnel, this process appears to have been used as a selective device to ascertain which progressive or opportunists might subsequently be amenable to more intensive process as defined below. So meaning like, oh, I can check and see how everybody responds to this light level of brainwashing
Starting point is 00:37:26 and then I'm going to identify some people that are ready for this. Number five, the intensive individual process during which individuals are deprived of their critical faculties and subsequently come to believe as true that which, prior to the brainwashing, they would have designated as false. I'm going to change your mind. The fact that the term brainwashing has been applied to so many situations has caused a great deal of confusion in attempting to learn more about it and attempting to develop sound practices and policies for coping with it.
Starting point is 00:37:56 As we shall explain more fully in this study, we find the term brainwashing to be most useful when it is applied strictly to denote the involuntary re-education of an individual during which a change is developed in the perceptual and intellectual organization of his personality. It's like a freaking straight up change so that he will, one, accept as true certain ideological principles, which he would not have accepted as true prior to the change and or to admit that certain events have a true and factual basis, which he could not have, which he would not have admitted formally. these false beliefs may be transitory. In fact, there is a good reason to believe that false beliefs resulting from brainwashing
Starting point is 00:38:41 will break down spontaneously when the individual has been removed for a period of time from the oppressive controls. So that's brainwashing. It should be noted that brainwashing so defined does not emphasize what happens to the individual, but what happens within him. The change represents a more or less complete reeducation of his value system. This change is brought about in a rigidly controlled environment using pressures designed to create and sharpen internal conflict within the individual. The individual is forced to resort to problem-solving behavior and the net effect is to the brainwashed state.
Starting point is 00:39:21 Two simultaneous processes are present. The first is characterized by a progressive deterioration and demobilization of the individual's critical and judging. capacities. So that's the first thing you do. How can we get rid of your ability to make decisions and judge things? I'm going to diminish that. In a true sense, the individual loses all sense of perspective. The second process is the learning of beliefs he would have previously rejected as he seeks to gain some structure for his crumbling personality. The criteria of success of brainwashing are one, the observed conviction and sincerity with which the individual expresses he changed ideology and beliefs concerning palpable events. Two, the length of time
Starting point is 00:40:12 his changed beliefs are maintained after the individual has been removed from the control environment. And three, the amount of surprise and confusion that accompanies his discovery that he has been brainwashed during his subsequent recovery. And here's a, you were mentioned indoctrination, indoctrination, and even education can lead to false beliefs. These processes are most effective when the individual has gaps in his knowledge or his understanding of the meaning of certain events is sufficiently tenuous that he has little difficulty in accepting a new and different interpretation. Brainwashing, however, involves the re-education of well-established beliefs and implies
Starting point is 00:40:55 that the individual resisted the re-education. it is this very resistance with its internal conflict we maintain is the very core of brainwashing. So if you don't really have beliefs and I just like put beliefs into your head that they just consider that indoctrination and reeducation. But when you have beliefs and I take those beliefs away and add contrary beliefs, that's brainwashing. You wash them away. Damn. And here we are just talking about just. changing people beliefs and re-educating them and we're getting re-educated all the time.
Starting point is 00:41:31 Yeah. It's, you know, this is the internet rabbit hole. Mm-hmm. Is, is like the most productive re-education camp in the ever existed. Right? Yes. And the way the algorithm will feed you, like, it will take you down there. It's re-educating.
Starting point is 00:41:50 It's brainwashing you because you watched one video. And then you, it would feed you another one. Yeah. And then it doesn't go, hey, hey, the guy watched a video about, you know, pro whatever. And now we need to show an anti-whatever. No. It's like you clicked on pro. We'll give you another pro.
Starting point is 00:42:09 We'll give you another pro. We'll just going to keep taking you down there. Yeah. And you'd be, if you pay attention, it's kind of alarming. Not kind of. Very alarming as to all the different things that they can influence you with. So all the way down to like, okay. Okay, let's say kids, right?
Starting point is 00:42:28 Especially these ones that are like kind of ambiguous, you know, where it's like, okay. What, ambiguous kids? No, kids are, raising kids is like there's not, basically, if there's not just one way to do it, you know? Oh, yeah. Like, so, you know, health, fitness, kids, you know, all this stuff. So if you even have one, like basically I could, it stands the reason that the algorithm could convince you, effectively convince you that all kids are bad, all of them. So they need to be punished, right? So let's say, I don't know, there's many different philosophies, right?
Starting point is 00:42:59 Where it's like no punishment is kind of this last resort thing that should never happen and, you know, whatever, right? Let's say you're on that thing. You believe in it's working for you. Let's say, like effective, successful children, they're teenagers on their way to call, whatever, you know. Maybe some young ones, you know, as well. And then you get fed this stuff and then the more you see it, the more it can kind of sort of slowly convince you that, no, no, no, they need more punishment. otherwise this and this and this and then you're like oh wait I never thought about that part of it than it feeds you another one and another one and they start depriving you of the effectiveness of what
Starting point is 00:43:33 you've been doing meanwhile so it's like reshaping kind of the way you see it just a little bit for sure and then now you bring it to your real life and you have that on your mind and how does that affect your behavior just a little bit you know and then over time it's like boom just that one teeny tiny little thing but the point is but it kind applies to everything like everything okay you ever watch these ones you know everyone Once in a while, I don't know, my alcohol will feed me this every once in a while where like just real like rare accidents. You know, kind of like somebody's like walking their dog on the side like in a city and then a tire flies out of door and it kills them. You know or whatever or almost kills them or whatever, right? These real rare accidents, probably kind of makes me nervous a little bit like.
Starting point is 00:44:15 Probably getting it by a tire or something like that or one of these things. It's like it's like a reminder that quote it can happen, right? But it doesn't really feel this desire to understand really the probability necessarily. That part is irrelevant, you know what I'm saying? Because the more that you see it, the more it feels like, oh, this is happening everywhere. You see what I'm saying? So it kind of just changes your mind of the whole thing. Now you're all nervous in my case.
Starting point is 00:44:40 Watched out for those tires. The problem. Yeah. No doubt about it. Everywhere. In the process of securing information of intelligence value, the procedures used, by communists, although admittedly harsh, do not appear to differ substantially from those customarily used in eliciting military information. The systematic demoralization of captives does not appear to be a
Starting point is 00:45:04 major objective. And so they're using the same thing. Like if I was trying to get information from you before brainwashing was a thing, I'm trying to get information from you. Cool. I'd, you know, keep you from sleeping, deprive you from food, keep you isolated. I'm going to get information from you. So they're saying the setup there is kind of the same thing. And understanding of brainwashing is important in several contexts, some among which are the following. Intelligence might be more fully protected if military and other personnel subject to capture could understand brainwashing and could be trained as well as possible to cope with it. So they're saying, oh, you might be able to outlast it a little bit. Might not be able to.
Starting point is 00:45:41 Dealing properly with brainwashed individuals depends heavily on understanding their condition. For the truly brainwashed psychiatric. Treatment is an order for the deliberate defector legal processes are appropriate. So they're still worried like, you know, Echo's just going to get in there and just be soft and just give up information. He's a collaborator. We're going to punish him. So how do they work it then? It's like, is there a certain threshold that you've got to meet as far as resistance goes?
Starting point is 00:46:07 That's what this is about. Yeah. That's what this is about? So what's the threshold? It doesn't get into the actual threshold. But, you know, when you talk, you know, talking to the POWs that were tortured, it was like you resisted as much. as you could. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:20 And then you couldn't resist anymore, you gave them as little information as possible. Yeah, bro, because you don't have to think about it for a long time to understand, bro, people are going to break at different points. So one guy who's, like,
Starting point is 00:46:30 what's the difference? Like, where's the line? There's no line. You got to write, what, in the rule book or the laws or whatever. It's like,
Starting point is 00:46:36 hey, you gotta last seven days. You gotta. And if you last six days, no crime. If you last seven, no crime. No,
Starting point is 00:46:44 that's not what they're doing. That's not what they're doing. How do you determine it, that's what I'm saying. That's why the rules were like resist as much as you can. When you have to break, give them as little information as you can. That's what we're doing. And it was a code of honor.
Starting point is 00:46:57 Yeah. It was like a code of honor. Like, hey. And that's why some guys when they'd break, they'd feel all dejected. And like they let everyone down. And somebody would be like, hey, dude, you lasted longer than me. You know, we all, everyone's got a breaking point. They're going to find it.
Starting point is 00:47:15 The propaganda value of false. Confessions has been great and the fear producing impact of brainwashing in the public mind is a matter worth considerable concern Public understanding of the process should help considerably So that's a good thing they wanted to say like oh that dude just brainwashed You know what I mean like you see an American on TV saying America's terrible and communism is is great They go oh that guy's just brainwashed. Don't worry about it. You know what I mean? It's kind of a good good little move by the CIA Yeah, and and it's true. That's what I was gonna say. Yeah, it's true. Yeah, sure there's a hundred percent that's not true. But imagine when you're when people didn't understand what brainwashing is,
Starting point is 00:47:51 and you'd see an American airman that's saying, yes, I dropped chemical bombs. We didn't drop any chemical bombs. Oh, he's been brainwashed. Okay, we get it. A clear understanding of the process is important if governmental agencies are to make rapid progress toward further research and understanding and to develop consistent policies to meet the problems of brainwashing. So again, this is like what you're saying. Like, we didn't even understand what the hell was happening. And all of a sudden, It was like, Echo gave up information, send him to court martial. It's like, no, Echo gave up information, or Echo made a confession because he was brainwashed. So we had to figure that out.
Starting point is 00:48:28 And, yeah, you know, did you watch the show adolescence? Yeah, the one, the first one. You only watched the first one? And then what, you didn't like it? Correct. Not enough to keep watching. Kind of the underlying theme is that is basically about brainwashing, right? Because you got the underlying theme is that the kid is being brainwashed or reeducated or influenced by influencers and by social media.
Starting point is 00:49:02 And that's why he commits this crime. And it's kind of the similar thing that they're saying here is like, oh, we got this problem that we don't really know how to deal with yet. And now we're trying to learn about it. Mm-hmm. So in adolescence is like a presentation of it for, I don't know if there's been too much, I don't know if there's many other movies about it. Not that it's a movie. It's a series.
Starting point is 00:49:28 Right. I think it's on Netflix. I really like the actor Stephen Graham. He's, uh, he, and he's just a great actor. Wait, which one is Stephen Graham? The dad. The dad. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:40 He's in Snatch. Tommy. Yeah. And he's in, This is England. And this is England. 86 and this is England 88 and this is England 90 which are epic programs
Starting point is 00:49:51 but that that's what they're one of the things they're presenting in that show is that like oh there's this thing happening and we need to pay attention to it you know you got to pay attention to what your kids are seeing all the time and you know that I think
Starting point is 00:50:07 you know they kind of chose the in cell extremity yeah sure but there's countless extreme movements that you could find that you could utilize for oh we could have done it about this extremity or that extremity they they chose the uh the one of like the in cell what's the pill that you take when you don't like women anymore um there's red pill and black pill so i think the well there's redpool bluebell black pill and purple pill that's the whole all of them okay but red pill is like you're now aware
Starting point is 00:50:44 of human nature or the women's human nature, blah, blah, blah, whatever. That's red pill. That's red pill. What's black pill? Black pill is like, now you're angry and then it's like full destruction. Full destruction of women and everyone. Okay. So that show is essentially then would be like a black pill scenario.
Starting point is 00:51:02 Yeah. Red pill usually, well, not usually, but red pill. Black pill is what do you call pre? You get red pilled first and then you get black pill? Yeah, yeah. And then what's the other? Black pill is like a form of giving up like nihilism. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:51:16 And then blue pill. That's you're in the matrix plugged in. Does anyone get blue-pilled? Because you have people get red-pilled? Yeah. You get blue-pilled when you fall in love with a girl. According to the doctrine. Okay.
Starting point is 00:51:32 You're blue-pilled when you fall in love with a girl. And you just, you become a simp and like listen to her, you know, traditional, you know, like contemporary, traditional, beta husband, I guess, maybe. That's a blue pill. Like, oh, yeah. Okay, there's one more pill that we're missing. Missing. You got red, blue, black.
Starting point is 00:51:51 What was the last one? Purple. Okay, what's purple? Purple is like, it's all kind of true, you know. What's all? Like blue pill is, there's room for blue pill behavior and values. And there's value to them in a practical sense. And then red pill that still exists as well.
Starting point is 00:52:06 So you're kind of aware of that as well, you know? So you're kind of in the, you're an in-betweener, essentially. Okay. The red pill guys really frown on all. pills except for the red. From what I understand, I don't know. Do they found on black pill? Yeah, because you gave up and you're like, even though it feels like anyway, like every
Starting point is 00:52:24 once in a while I'll come across these things when they talk about the pills, it feels like they kind of understand the black bill. They kind of understand. Oh, like, hey, man, look what's happening to our guys, you know, they're, you know, they get it. Kind of a thing. So I'm right in saying that the movie or the show adolescence is about that niche little extremism of black pill
Starting point is 00:52:45 like this guy couldn't get his girl couldn't the girl didn't like him or whatever so he killed her yeah so I haven't seen the whole series yeah but if if in fact it kind of had the vibe of him just giving up on the whole girl thing in one way or another and then that caused him to kill then yeah but it could be
Starting point is 00:53:05 I don't know maybe what might be called extreme red pill like where it's like I'm aware of the female nature so I'm angry about it I'm going to kill. Yeah, maybe that's a black pill scenario. I don't know. I'd have to see the thing.
Starting point is 00:53:17 So that idea that you could, and one of the things, because I've watched some interviews about it, but one of the things that Stephen Graham said is he didn't want the parents. He wanted the parents to be normal. Like mom and dad still together, normal working job, had a house,
Starting point is 00:53:35 no, like they had food. It's a good, it's like a normal background. He didn't want it to be like, oh, well, the dad's an alcoholic.
Starting point is 00:53:43 the mom beat him or whatever the case may be. It was like, nope, this is normal. And therefore, to make it more evident that this kid was reeducated. Right. And that's basically what we're looking at a document from 1956 saying, oh, yeah, you got to be aware of this stuff. And then that show says, oh, yeah, got to be aware of this stuff. And there's, like I said, there's a lot of different extremisms that you could get into on the interwebs. You know?
Starting point is 00:54:11 I mean, obviously the big one that we've seen a lot of is, you know, Islamic extremism where people are converted to extreme Islam through the interwebs. That's, I would say, probably the most prominent one. But there's a bunch of them. So they're looking at it. They're showing it and they're saying, hey, you better be aware of this. Just like, that's what this is. That's what this document is for.
Starting point is 00:54:41 All right. The concept of brainwashing is frightening, just like it's frightening in that show. Mothers and sons who go into the military, mothers of sons who go into military service against the Soviets, Soviets or the Chinese, must concern themselves with the fact, not only that their sons may be killed or wounded, but that their mental processes may be distorted if they are captured. Just as knowledge that the Soviets have thermonuclear weapons has dampened the national feeling of security, so brainwashing has created the belief that our opponents are mysteriously formidable. is like your your son goes away to war and he gets captured and he gets brainwashed and he comes back different you know when I was a kid there was people that got involved in various cults and the parents would send get them captured and get them deprogrammed have you heard of that yeah deep programmed yeah deprogram like there was a couple prominent cults that are out there you can see him pretty pretty prominently. And I knew kids that started going down those roads and their parents sent
Starting point is 00:55:47 and had them kidnapped and taken and deprogrammed. So I guess, you know, I was trying to think of what your reaction would be like if you're a parent and your kid gets all of a sudden is a totally different human. Which, by the way, that happens. Like your kid gets into like heavy metal music and all of a sudden they got long hair and they're freaking, you know, screaming and yelling. Like that is your parent. You're like, wait, what's going on? Or they get into, gangster rap music and you're trying to you know steer them in the right direction in life and all the sudden they're out like getting their gangster rap attitude on yeah well i feel like in real life if someone's that influenced by music where they're like squared away and then they become i think you're
Starting point is 00:56:30 about to what okay bear with in real life in real life yeah dude you're talking about 12 year old 13 year old 14-year-old kids. Yeah. These kids are very Influensible. Here's what I would say. Hang in, I don't know. I'm totally talking out of school.
Starting point is 00:56:46 But I don't know. This is what I feel. There's a data point. If someone's not a gangster person and they listen to gangster rap and they become like for real gangster person, you know, carrying a gun and starting trouble robbing or whatever they, gangster people do, I would venture to suspect. that there's other things going wrong or something that's empty or not there.
Starting point is 00:57:15 I don't know. It doesn't feel, then again, I'm drawing upon my very specific experience with music and gangster rap, by the way, where, man,
Starting point is 00:57:26 I just can't get there. I can't get there to be like, oh, I want to go do dangerous, destructive thing, even as a 12-year-old, which I was listening to Gangster Rap at that time too,
Starting point is 00:57:34 not fully, not just gangster rap, you know, so let me ask you this question. Because you weren't where I thought you might go, but not quite. If a kid starts listening to gangster rap, they're talking about dealing drugs and carrying a gun, right? Sure. And that kid is influenced by that and he decides, okay, I'm going to try and find a gun.
Starting point is 00:57:55 I'm going to start looking to sell drugs, right? Yeah. We're agreeing that that can happen. Yeah. Well, I say, I put it this with my whole point of what I said is like there's other parts of his life that are empty. Right. And are unfulfilled or whatever. then that kind of stuff takes old.
Starting point is 00:58:10 So I think if like you just come from a quote unquote normal family, pretty balanced, no like neglect, no, nothing like that. Everything's like kind of squared away. I'm not saying tip top, but squared away. Okay. But the probability of you being in. That's a big ask by the way. I can dig that for sure. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:58:26 Yeah. So really to be like, oh, it was the gangster rap that did it. Well, it's like, I don't know if that's completely correct. Okay. Let me pose this question then. if that gangster rap music was filled with, or take whatever drug, you know, Grateful Dead, you know, doing drugs,
Starting point is 00:58:46 like that was a huge part of that. Like whatever scene you wanna take, which is negative, if that influence was replaced by something positive, you know, like Jason Wilson with the cave and taking those kids and bringing them in and teaching martial arts and teaching them about discipline and teaching about faith and all of a sudden these kids
Starting point is 00:59:06 that could be going down the wrong, path and influence in the wrong direction, all of a sudden they're influenced in the right direction. Yeah. So I think that would be considered brainwashing, right? But maybe not because we're just educating them in a positive way that's going to be helpful to them. Yeah. Reeducation.
Starting point is 00:59:24 Yeah. Yeah. And I don't know how this lands on this whole back and forth. We have. But, you know, constructive, like constructive is always harder than destructive. Destructive usually, usually has to do with something that's kind of, um, effortless a lot of times or something that's like quick like over the short term kind of a dynamic so yeah if you have something empty in your life to construct something in there that's positive
Starting point is 00:59:52 is going to take like repetitive over time yeah and effort by the way and then when it's destructed it it almost feels like you fall into it almost yeah well i i will always say that building is He's building is much more difficult than breaking down. Yeah. And so, you know, we've talked about this before. Remember flipping over the chessboard? Yeah. It's like, yeah, you get to a certain point in the game where you're like,
Starting point is 01:00:14 I don't wanna play this game, you flip over the chessboard. That's way easier than going, all right, I'm gonna learn the game, gonna get good at it. And people do that with life. Right. People go, oh, you know what? This game that everyone's playing of being squared away, of being responsible, of trying to earn money, trying to save money, trying to do the right things, trying to treat
Starting point is 01:00:30 people to respect. That's a hard game to play. Yeah. And they look at it at a certain point and go, you know what, it's easier just to flip over the chessboard and just not do any of it. Some people are just unaware of the game and it's just, they're just going to kind of muddle along in life. But some people actively just flip it over and say, yeah, I'm out.
Starting point is 01:00:44 So yes, I agree. It is easier to be part of something that is destructive than it is to be part of something that builds. It's not just a little bit easier. It is way easier to be, it's way easier to sit in the back of the classroom and say school is dumb than it is to sit in the front of the classroom and study and work hard. It's way easier to sit in the back of the classroom. That was me, dude, sitting in the back of the classroom,
Starting point is 01:01:07 like school is stupid, I'm going to the military. You know what I mean? Just like a total rock. But it's harder to sit in the front of the classroom. And now it doesn't appear that way at the time. Because the person that's sitting in the front of the classroom, they're getting like privileges. They're getting like, oh, yeah, you're getting respect.
Starting point is 01:01:24 And the person in the back of the classroom, he's kind of like, the hard. You're like, well, I'm not buying into the system. It's easier. It appears harder to be like, oh, I'm not playing. playing that game, screw the teacher, all that. It seems like that's the harder thing to do, but it's actually easier.
Starting point is 01:01:39 And many of our little decisions that we make when we're 13, 14, 15 years old is like, I'm doing the hard thing. I'm not just going to listen to what my parents say. It's like, oh, yeah, that seems like the harder thing to do because it seems like it'd be easier to play the game a little bit, but it's actually easier to be, oh, I'm not doing that. Screw this. And so that's kind of where we end up diverging our pathways in life. And that's why for me, going in the military was so beneficial because all of a sudden it was like, you're going to be massively influenced.
Starting point is 01:02:10 Here are the rules you're going to operate within. And you volunteered for the rules, by the way. And we're going to pay you money and you're going to be part of this team. And you're going to get, you're going to be a constructive member of society, which is a huge step up. You know what I mean? From being an idiot. So here you go. You're going to be a constructive member of society.
Starting point is 01:02:31 you're going to move forward. And that seems like the harder thing to do. But it's like it's actually in some ways easier. Because, hey, get me in the program, man. I joined you in the military. It's like, hey, you got a clean slate. Do what you're supposed to do. And you're going to be able to progress in life.
Starting point is 01:02:50 Yeah, yeah. The military and some constructive programs that are like rigid and thought out or whatever. Oh, yeah, it makes it a lot easier. It was just easier in a different way, though. So if you, the, like I said, said, like you've said, to do the wrong thing tends to be easier. Yeah. Like, because it's, because it's like effortless.
Starting point is 01:03:09 You're not like, I don't know. I mean, maybe it's some metaphysical thing. I don't know, but to fall down the hill is easier than to climb the hill. You know, it's like everything is like, it's just harder. But yeah, it's like, I guess we get it in our little rebellious minds almost in a way where it's like, oh, wait, I'm not going to follow the herd, the sheep. It's, it's harder to make my own path. Which is sort of. of sort of some major rationalization going on there.
Starting point is 01:03:34 Yeah. Dude, I'm not going to freaking follow the herd. Yeah. It's like, oh, you mean you're not going to work and get a good job? Yeah, be strong, successful. Yeah. Yeah. All these people working out freaking, you know, playing sports.
Starting point is 01:03:48 Screw those guys. Yeah. A bunch of jocks. It's like, oh, okay. So what are you going to do instead? Yeah. Yeah. So I think that getting the positive education and positive influence on kids is so that that's why I'm very
Starting point is 01:04:01 excited about the way the warrior kid because that is a very positive movement in a very positive way to look okay cool okay what am I to do eat clean study workout treat people with respect earn try and earn money like those are all things that I think are very they're they're such a good path yeah it's such a good path to be on and it's so easy to not be on that path so easy to not be on that path yeah but your life's going to be a lot harder if you're not on it it's really good and I don't want to obviously I'm not going to give anything but but it's we'll just go with the books then because the movie's very reflective books and connected us but it touches on things like in a in a specific way because like you have like this you know this protagonist that has to
Starting point is 01:04:46 you know you know basically go through the what what do you call you the hero's journey you know go through his little arc he starts weekend and then at the end he wins whatever he's a hero so like you know there's a little there's not little but there's movies like that where you get all inspired and I want to do this I like, for example, Rocky, right? That's one where it's like, boom, he develops himself. He's this great boxer. He defeats the guy in the end, right?
Starting point is 01:05:10 And everyone gets fired up. I'm going to go box. I'm going to go work out. He didn't beat the guy in the end. But I'm thinking Rocky 4 for some reason. Eventually he beats the guy the end. Yeah, yeah. So, you know, and it's this big thing.
Starting point is 01:05:20 And it's like, oh, he kind of motivates you to train and making training look good and cool and all the, and real influential, right, positive like things. But it's kind of just, it's kind of. narrow, not in a bad way, just for the story. And it makes a story great for sure. But where the worry kid is like there's all these different elements that are part of that journey that like, um, that, you know, the guy goes on. And so it kind of glorifies a bunch of things.
Starting point is 01:05:44 And those, I mean, not a whole bunch, but like just a handful of things that are all beneficial and hard in real life. But it inspires you to want to like do it. Yeah. So yeah. It's different like that. Plus you're in the movie. Oh yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:56 I am in the movie. Yes. Very influential. All right. Uh, next. We now, we now, we turn now. to a more detailed explanation of just what happens to the mind and body of the demoralized and disorganized person who can properly be described as brainwashed and to a consideration of how
Starting point is 01:06:11 this state can be brought about you're just vulnerable when you're demoralized and disorganized you're vulnerable we shall describe the general processes evolved in changing the behavior and the beliefs of an individual when his environment can be fully controlled these processes are complex and they involve the basic principles of learning, perception, motivation, and physiological deprivation. Communist control techniques. Understanding brainwashing as a phenomenon, a phenomenon which culminates in a false confession delivered with conviction and humility to antisocial intent and specific criminal acts requires both a knowledge of communist control techniques and an analysis of their impact
Starting point is 01:06:52 upon the normal personality. This section describes the battery of pressures applied to the person. prisoner and his behavioral reactions to these control pressures in the following section. An attempt is made to analyze the psychological impact of these assaults upon the personality during the course of brainwashing. This reminds me I was talking to Andy Snump one time and he was an instructor in second phase at Buds and he did pool comp on the guys where you have in the bottom and they take your airway. And he was just describing how well he knew what the students were going to do based on the
Starting point is 01:07:28 pressure that he put on them. Like, if he saw this reaction, he would know, oh, this guy's run low on air. If I do this, he's going to bolt. Or if I do this, he's going to panic. Or if I do this, he's going to calm down. And he just, you know, he was talking about the movements of their fingers, like watching their hands. And if they started to do this particular movement, he knew that they were going to try
Starting point is 01:07:47 and bolt to the surface. And he had to be ready for it. So this reminds me of that where these, because if you remember earlier in the, in this document, it says that these people weren't like psychologists. They're just freaking prison guards and interrogators that were like, how do we break these people? And eventually go, oh, hey, put them in there a little bit longer. Right. Hey, don't let him see it.
Starting point is 01:08:07 And let cook him a little bit more, you know, or whatever the case may be. Remember? Or not remember, but you know the idea of a good cop, bad cop. Oh, yeah. I wonder if they just trial and aired their way through that as well, you know? Yeah. Because it, I mean, that's really what that is, interrogation. And how long would it take to figure that out?
Starting point is 01:08:27 It'd be like if you and I were freaking partners as cops, you know, I'd be like, dude, you were able to get him to talk. And you were like, well, I'd just ask him a few questions. And you were like rough with them. And I'd like, oh, yeah, cool. That looks, seems like it works. Yeah. Good cop, bad cop all day. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:43 I think good cop, bad cop would work on me 100% even if I knew it was good. Because like, you know, I don't know, people are more so like I like, I like talk like fucking talking to people. You know, like sometimes to my. Anyway. So, like, so like if someone wants to talk about some cool stuff, you know, like, I'm always down to like talk about it, you know, kind of a thing. And so like, yeah, someone's being mean and real like anti, like sociable, like not nice to me and like mean or whatever. And I'm like, fuck, bro, I don't hang out with this guy. Right.
Starting point is 01:09:11 This guy sucks. You know, and this is just a program running in the back. I know I'm committed, what do you call accused of a crime or they understand that part of it. But that program is always running where I'm like, I don't like this guy. I don't like how he's talking to me and all this stuff. Meanwhile, if he rolls it. If he rolls in, I get it. You guys think I did this crime, but like, we're kind of broying out a little bit.
Starting point is 01:09:30 And, bro, maybe I attribute I give trust, maybe. I don't know. Maybe it's that. Like, I kind of give trust too easy if they're nice, you know, kind of a thing. Because, I don't know. I guess there's something really special about a nice person. And then you contrast it to develop that need that I always have for, like, someone be nice to me or whatever or nice back to me or whatever.
Starting point is 01:09:51 And so now I have this deficit that this bad cop. He's been jamming me up with. And then here comes freaking kind of my bro in a way. And where it's kind of like this weird like illusion that it's not me and my bro against like this dick guy. We relate on that level, you know? Yeah. I'll just give it right up. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:08 Well, it starts off talking about the suspect and they have, you know, kind of talk through what the suspect is. And, you know, the implications of this are significant in a nation in which in which the state owns all property. whenever anyone works for the state and where everyone works for the state and where the only approved opinions may be held a person who has accidentally broken or lost some of the people's property who has made a mistake who has not worked hard enough who has talked to a foreigner who has merely expressed that what he inferred was an innocent opinion may be ipso facto guilty of a crime against the state so if you're just like a little bit lazy that's a crime against the state yeah you see you see you're just like a little bit lazy that's crime against the state yeah you see you see you're you know what I'm saying? Yep. So they kind of talk about that. Then they talk about the accumulation of evidence. According to communist ideology,
Starting point is 01:10:59 no one may be arrested unless there is evidence that he is a criminal. According to the practice of the MVD, this means that when an individual falls under the suspicion of the MVD officer, this officer must accumulate, quote, evidence that the individual is a, quote, criminal and take this evidence to the state prosecutor who must then issue a warrant before the arrest is to be carried out. This is the old show me a man. I'll show you the crime.
Starting point is 01:11:25 And they use statements. They use informants to get this information. They talk to their friends. They talk to their associates. And they do surveillance. And then they find out what you're doing wrong, dude. Members of the MVD compete with each other in trying to turn up suspects and secure their conviction. So you get that going for you, which is just a freaking nightmare.
Starting point is 01:11:47 They talk a little bit. Fast forward. Talk about the arrest procedures. According to communist theory, men should be arrested in such a manner. to not cause them embarrassment. And the police should carry out arrest in a manner which does not unduly disturb the population. You know what that?
Starting point is 01:12:00 What does that? Those sound kind of nice, don't they? It's like, according to communist theory, men should be arrested in a manner such to not cause them embarrassment and not disturb the population. So that sounds pretty good. It sounds like, oh, they're being fair, right? What does it actually mean?
Starting point is 01:12:16 Nighttime arrest. So the midnight knock on the door has become a standard episode. the police are well aware the fact of the unintended that the intended victim forewarned by his previous surveillance and the changing attitude of his friends is further terrified by the thought
Starting point is 01:12:34 that he may be awakened from his sleep and taken away. So it sounds like super positive but it ain't. Talk about the detent and there's more information in this document but the detention prison in most of the large cities
Starting point is 01:12:47 of the Soviet Union the MVD operates detention prisons these prisons contain only persons under investigation whose cases have not been settled. These places are apparently very clean. They have medical facilities and they have an exercise yard. The typical cells a small cubicle, 10 feet by 6 feet, containing a single bunk and a slop jar, no other furnishings.
Starting point is 01:13:15 And it goes on to say that the typical cells, of course, be, such typical cells, of course, will not be found in all prisons, especially not those which are older improvised, but the general aspect of the bareness and complete lack of access to the outside world is characteristic. So you're going to get you in total lockdown. That's what happens. And then you get to the regimen within the detention prison. The arresting officers usually do not give the prisoner the reason for his arrest beyond
Starting point is 01:13:39 that in the warrant which they read to him. They usually search him and also search the place in which he lives. They then take him directly to the prison. Here he's asked a few questions about his identity and personal valuables and his outer clothing are taken from him. These are carefully cataloged and put away. He may or may not be given a prison uniform. He is usually examined by a prison physician shortly after his incarceration. The entire introduction to the detention prison is brief and carried on without explanation.
Starting point is 01:14:07 I read all that just to get to that point. It's like, we're not even telling you why you're here, dude. And we're not telling you anything that's going to happen. When a few hours after his arrest, the prisoner finds himself locked up with an assel. prisoners within detention cells follow a rigid regimen With some variations this regimen is standard throughout the Soviet Union has been adopted by nearly all communist countries The rigidity of the regimen may be relaxed or tightened by the direction of the interrogator And then it goes into this indefinite period he's totally isolated from other people
Starting point is 01:14:37 He's not allowed to talk or communicate with anyone else including other prisoners Fast forward a little bit the hours and routine of the prisoner are rigidly organized he's awakened early in the morning and given a short period in which to wash himself. His food is brought to him. He has a short fixed time in which to eat it. The standard diet is just adequate to maintain nutrition. Fast forward a little bit. At all times, except when eating, except when he is eating, sleeping, exercising, or being interrogated,
Starting point is 01:15:02 the prisoner is left strictly alone in his cell. He has nothing to do, nothing to read, no one to talk to. Under the strictest regimen, he may have to sit or stand in his cell in a fixed position all day. He may sleep only at hours prescribed for sleep. Then he must go to bed promptly when told him. must lie in a fixed position upon his back with his hands outside the blanket bank blanket if he deviates from this position the guard outside will awaken him and make him resume it the light in the cell burns constantly he must sleep with his face constantly toward it just like little things to just jack you up so the that that um not telling you yeah anything like what's going on so it's like leaving this mental void because we live this in everyday life as torment by the way Where I don't know.
Starting point is 01:15:49 You're okay, like what's the easy one? Okay. A, you know, you're at work. And your direct supervisor says, hey, the boss wants to see you in his office right now. Oh, why? Don't know. Or I can't tell you. Whatever.
Starting point is 01:16:05 Either way, we don't have the info. It's almost like our brains like really don't have a good time. Really go into like these. Panic mode. Yeah, these dark places. And so I kind of learned a little bit about that. because the human imagination is like super vast, right? So, and then of course we-
Starting point is 01:16:21 Wait, where'd you learn a little about this? I don't know, internet. Oh, okay. So the, so it's like vast. So you know how like we always think negative versus positive, right? Like, and I don't mean like we're negative people. I'm not saying that, but I'm just saying like, it's easier to spot a problem than something that's going correctly. You know how like that whole phenomenon like in a person, you know, like it's easier to find mistakes.
Starting point is 01:16:43 It's a, you know, like loss aversion. That's another thing where it's like, hey, we, we, We over index on what we would lose rather than an under index on what we'd gain. It's like this, all this stuff that were like programmed towards the negative for survival mechanism or whatever. So when there's a gap in knowledge, it's like we got to, we need something to hang on to that's positive or relief or whatever. Otherwise, bro, our brain, and this is what causes the torment, our brain just goes into imagination mode and it's all negative. And you'd be surprised how much horror you can imagine. you see in your brain.
Starting point is 01:17:17 So now it's like you could, you know, your brain can go to like a bad situation. Then it can go to the worst case scenario real quick. What am I fired? What is there a definite? Like, and again, the more torment or the more time that goes on, the more torment. See what I'm saying?
Starting point is 01:17:31 So your brain just gets allowed to just grow and grow and grow in that negativity in that dark space, you know? So now you're just, it's more torture than like, you just want to know. Like, we all know this. We've all felt this where it's like, bro, I would rather you just like fire me,
Starting point is 01:17:44 freaking yell at me. Yeah. Yeah. Telling me in front of everybody, I don't care. Just tell me what's going on. See what I'm saying? I just want to know, you know, kind of a thing. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:51 Because we don't like that torment of the unknown, you know? And that's why they're very effective with this. Yeah, bro. So your brain is like almost like it has to latch onto something. It's just struggling, thirsting, hungering to latch on to something. Good, bad, freaking whatever. So boom, that's, there's your, what do you call, what you call, you're opening your brain up. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:11 There it is right there. Vulnerable. The first thing you put in there, you're just going to. latch on to it now. Is what I'm saying? Fast forward a little bit. This regiment within the detention cell is in itself a most potent weapon in the hands of the MVD. It has been developed and refined over a period of many years and is used literally on thousands of prisoners.
Starting point is 01:18:35 It is highly effective in breaking the will of prisoners so much so that the MVD officers are convinced that there is literally no man who cannot be brought to do their bidding. Talks about the effects of this thing. A major aspect of prison experiences isolation. Man is a social animal. He does not live alone from birth to death. He lives in the company of his fellow man. His relations are with other people. And especially with those closest to him are most important to him,
Starting point is 01:19:05 are almost as important as him as food and drink. When a man is totally isolated, he's removed from all interpersonal relations, which are so important to him and taken out of the social roles, which stains him. His internal as well as his external life is disrupted. exposed for the first time to total isolation in an MVD prison. He develops a predictable group of symptoms,
Starting point is 01:19:24 which might almost be called a disease syndrome. The initial appearance, then he starts to talk about like what it looks like. Because I remember talking about Andy Stumpf, like seeing, oh, this guy doesn't have much air left. Here's what he's going to do. Here's what they see. Initial appearance, bewilderment.
Starting point is 01:19:40 Then he becomes, after a few hours, confused and dejected. And then within a short time, most prisoners become alert and begin to take an interest in their environment. fast forward a little bit, then they start to get anxiety, then they start to make demands. They demand to know why they're being held and protests that they're innocent. If they're foreign nationals, they may insist upon seeing their consular officers. Some take a you can't do this to me attitude. Some pass through a brief period of shouting, threatening and demanding.
Starting point is 01:20:10 Try to frattenize with the guards. And then fast forward a little bit after a few days, it becomes apparent to the prisoner that his activity avails him nothing. And that he will be punished or reprimanded for even the smallest breaches of his routine They just know what they're going to do yeah that's brutal Fast forward a little bit he becomes increasingly anxious Restless is when his sleep is disturbed the period of anxiety hyperactivity and apparent adjustment to the isolate Isolation routine usually continues for one to three weeks as it continues the prisoner becomes Increasingly dejected independent he gradually gives up all spontaneous activity within his cell and loses
Starting point is 01:20:48 all care about his personal appearance and actions. Finally, he sits and stares with a vacant expression, perhaps endlessly twisting a button on his coat. He allows himself to become dirty and disheveled. They know that this is what's going to happen. It's weird, you know, as often I always talk about that dichotomy is that human beings are so unique and at the same time, they all the same. Fast forward, but he goes through the motions of his prison routine automatically as if he were in a daze.
Starting point is 01:21:22 The slop jar is no longer an offense to him. At this point, the prisoners seem to lose any restraints of ordinary behavior. He may soil himself. He weeps, mutters and prays aloud to himself. He follows the orders of the guards with the docility of a trained animal. Indeed, the guards say that prisoners are reduced to animals. It is estimated that the average case it takes from four to six weeks of rigid total isolation. to produce this phenomenon.
Starting point is 01:21:49 That's disturbing. Four to six weeks, bro, and you don't give a shit about anything. His fast forward, his sleep is disturbed by nightmares. He ultimately reaches a stage of depression in which he ceases to care about his personal appearance and behavior and pays a little attention to his surroundings. In this stage, the prisoner may have illusory experiences.
Starting point is 01:22:07 A distant sound in the corridor sounds like someone calling his name. The rattle of a footstep may be interrupted as a key in the lock opening the cell. God may speak to him in his prayers. He may see his wife standing beside him. His need for human companionship and his desire to talk to anyone about anything becomes a gnawing appetite like the hunger of a starving man. Also, the newly arrested prisoner does not know how long he'll be confined. How will he be punished? What will he be charged with?
Starting point is 01:22:38 That's the same mystery that you were just talking about. Another simple and effective type of pressure is that of maintaining the temperature of the cell at a level, which is either too hot or too cold for comfort. a continuous heat at the level of which constant sweating is necessary in order to maintain body temperature is inverating and fatigue producing sustained cold is uncomfortable uncomfortable and poorly tolerated still another pressure to is to reduce food ration to the point to which the prisoner experience constant hunger so that hunger thing is like that's kind of it right that's kind the key, the gateway, the whole, like, thing to brainwash someone in a way when you think about it. Is it just hunger?
Starting point is 01:23:25 No, it's all this stuff. So it's not like hunger hunger. It's like a sort of hunger, right, to create this hunger. So let's say, I don't know, let's say you're to have a basic need of somebody, right? Oh, you're talking hunger in the broad sense. Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. Hunger for food. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:23:41 Hunger for companionship. Hunger for knowledge. Hunger for understanding. Hunger for cleanliness. Yeah, yes. Safety of like, and I think that idea goes so deep, even into our subconscious sometimes. Like even, so let's say how, let's say not in an interrogation situation. You can effectively create any type of hunger you want, like a hunger for X, Y, Z.
Starting point is 01:24:05 So let's say you don't have many friends, we'll say. Okay. Right. So you have kind of a hunger for friends, whether you're, whether you're, uh, um, you know, whether you're aware of it or not, kind of a thing. But let's say you have, let's say you have just kind of a little bit, something that's actually tolerable. I could present things to you that make having friends very,
Starting point is 01:24:29 we'll call it appetizing to kind of give you the feeling of hunger for the friends. So like, you know, let's say, okay, let's go back to food then, right? So you know how like a food commercial, you know, or a soft drink commercial? Like it'll be like an appetizing commercial, like sizzling right off the thing. Like it'll be appetizing. You know, so you don't even necessarily have to be okay. So you ever watch the show diners, drive-ins, and dives? Have you heard of that? Okay. So it's basically this guy goes around and visits little restaurants that are diners drive-ins or dives or whatever. These little restaurants, cool little boutique restaurants kind of. And they show the ingredients that go in and how you cook it and it comes out and all the patrons of the place is like, oh my gosh, so delicious. And it's a very appetizing show. Make you hungry. 100%. And you don't even have to be hungry when you start watching it, probably by the end, you're you're kind of hungry even though you just ate.
Starting point is 01:25:18 It's like that. It's a very effective show in doing that, right? So what it does is you don't have the hunger, but it creates this appetizing environment. So now it creates this kind of perception of hunger. So you can do that in all different kind of ways. So if you have just a, let's say you have two friends, right? And then you can present overtime a scenario where now having more than two friends,
Starting point is 01:25:43 we'll say a bunch of friends is very, very appetizing. And a lot of ways it's, like or to diminish your current state. It's the same kind of thing. It's just inverse a little bit where it would be like, hey, if you only have two friends, it's kind of like you have to start asking yourself, like, why do you only have two friends?
Starting point is 01:25:57 You know, like that kind of stuff. And over time, you're kind of like, wait a second, I need, I need more than two friends. Then at a strategic point, you can present like, hey, under these circumstances, you can get two friends. And since you have that hunger, you'd be willing to do more things for it. So I'm saying?
Starting point is 01:26:14 You're correct. And you know who your friends? is going to be? The state. The good guy interrogator. That's about to roll in. Exactly right. Nailed it.
Starting point is 01:26:23 So, and that goes for any kind of like thing where you need relief from or fulfill, you know, like. Well, that's the whole setup. Right. Every one of these deprivations is so they can offer it to end. Yeah. If you cooperate. Here's the, here's the kind of sinister part right there that landed on.
Starting point is 01:26:40 This whole damn thing is sinister. Yeah. Yeah. But this one was kind of especially since because it's kind of understated, whereas the temperature being a little bit too cold or a little bit too hot. Just a little bit because let's face it, that's tolerable. But it just slowly gets less and less tolerable, right? And then when the relief comes, the relief is less obvious until, and then when it comes,
Starting point is 01:27:00 you're like, it impacts you more than you might think. Like you ever, you ever spent a day and you just, for whatever reason, just didn't eat or didn't drink water or something like that and didn't realize you were thirsty or hungry. And then, like, for some reason, you eat like something super like bonnet, like nuts. or something, you're like, these are the best nuts in the world. You know what I'm saying? So it's kind of that phenomenon in a way. So it gets it catches you off guard.
Starting point is 01:27:24 And you'd be like, bro, why am I freaking loving these nuts? What nuts my feet? Why is nuts my feet? Why are you loving these nuts? Sorry, bro, you set yourself up. I couldn't resist that. I apologize to the world. You were correct about that whole discourse right there.
Starting point is 01:27:39 But that, okay, so actually here's a better example. This happened to me where I was like thirsty or whatever. I guess I didn't drink water that day or maybe. maybe, you know, whatever. And then I drank some milk randomly. And I was like, bro, this milk is like, this is the best milk I ever had in my life. Because you don't think of milk as something to quench your thirst, you know?
Starting point is 01:27:57 But I'm drinking this milk like it's freaking the last milk in the freaking planet. And I was thinking myself, why am I freaking just enjoying this milk right now? I was like, bra, because I didn't really, because I'm probably dehydrated in a small way. Not like, oh, I'm just freaking out of training jiu jihitsu or something where I need water. If I drink milk after, it's like it doesn't.
Starting point is 01:28:16 land as much. See what I'm saying? But just that little, when it catches you off guard, it hits you harder. See what I'm saying? Okay, man. Bro, I'm telling you, the same idea. This is the same concept is like if you're ready for a punch in the face or if you're in an environment we're getting punched in the face as like normal, you're going to
Starting point is 01:28:32 handle that punch. But if you're like at the post office and the guy across the kind of punches you in your face, you can be like you're going to be impacted by it more. See what I'm saying? Dude, do you think they'll have the torture in here where they have to listen to you for a long period of time? I'm telling you, this is how it works. I'm telling you, right?
Starting point is 01:28:54 I mean, straight up. Bro, I'm telling you, if you're saying, you're going to see where these things are coming from. Especially the catching you off guard thing, I'm telling you. Yeah. All right, please continue. Thank you for that, by the way, that information. Ah, the effects of isolation, anxiety, fatigue, lack of sleep,
Starting point is 01:29:11 uncomfortable temperatures, chronic hunger produced disturbances of mood, attitudes and behavior in nearly all prisoners, the living organism cannot entirely withstand such assaults. Now they talk about the interrogator. The interrogator of prisoners is a tiring and emotionally trying procedure. No formal training in psychology, psychiatry, pharmacological, pharmacology, physiological, or physiology is included in the curriculum. So these trainers are just like, they're just dudes.
Starting point is 01:29:45 These are probably the worst people. trainees do receive information from experienced police officers on how to prepare a dossier, how to size up a man, how to estimate what sort of methods use in breaking him. But the instructors draw entirely upon police experiences. They have a contempt for theoretical psychiatry and psychology. They're just like, these are bad people. When the job list comes out and like, what do you want to do? You're like, yo, I want to interrogate freaking prisoners.
Starting point is 01:30:16 power trip to the nth degree. The interrogation itself, here's one line from the interrogation itself. It's not up to me to tell you what your crimes are. It's up to you to tell me. Statements which lead to a perplexed prisoner to rack his brain for an answer. Interrogations almost always carried out at night,
Starting point is 01:30:38 possibly because the physical and psychological effect of night interrogations produces added pressure upon the prisoner. He is deprived of sleep, in place in the state of added uncertainty by never knowing when he will be awakened and questioned. Typically, he will be awakened suddenly by a guard shortly after he has dropped off to sleep without explanation. He is taken from a cell and down several corridors in small barren interrogation room and equipped
Starting point is 01:30:59 with a desk and a chair for the interrogator and a stool for the prisoner. The lighting is arranged that the prisoner can be placed in a bright light while the interrogator sits in relative darkness. Fast forward, the interrogator adjusts his attitude toward the prisoner, according to his estimate of the kind of man he is facing. If the dossier indicates that the prisoner is a timid and fearful man, the interrogator may adopt a fierce and threatening demeanor. If the prisoner is thought to be proud and sensitive, the interrogator may be insulting and degrading. If the prisoner has been a man of prestige and importance and in private life, the interrogator may call him by his first name, treat him as an inferior and reprimand him and remind him that he's lost all rank and privilege.
Starting point is 01:31:36 If it is known that the prisoner has been unfaithful to his wife or has committed some crimes such as his embezzlement, the interrogator may blackmail him, by threatening exposure or punishment unless he cooperates, all these and many other tricks may be employed. So again, I just keep thinking to Andy Stump, just knowing what to do to break people underwater. Because I think Andy Stump, he was a Bud's instructor for like three years and he only passed, like, between two and four people
Starting point is 01:32:00 the entire time. Almost invariably, the interrogator takes the attitude that the prisoner is guilty and acts as though all his crimes. are known. It goes through this. The first interrogation sessions are nearly always concerned
Starting point is 01:32:20 with a complete review of the entire life experience of the prisoner. Dude, I think you could make the... I think you've made the interrogator quit. Thank you for that. The interrogator wishes to know about a prisoner's background. The reviews of the prisoner's life may occupy several interrogation sessions.
Starting point is 01:32:45 Like a lot. It has several purposes. First is purposes to complete the prisoner's dossier. It's so fitting, dude. Imagine that. You just turn the tables on the interrogator and just break it by not stop talking. That's how I feel today, dude. I feel it in my heart.
Starting point is 01:33:08 The thing is you're kind of right. And it's a thing too. So you ever. I'm trying to go. Exhibit A. I think, I don't know. was a joke or not, but it was like a girl who got kidnapped and then she convinced them to let her go. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:25 Actually, I think it was a joke because the girl wouldn't shut up. Yeah. But yeah, I think, but I think in a way, it's like it's like the table's being turned though. Yeah. Where it's like, hey, if the girl who got kidnapped starts to kind of play almost in a way the good cop to the kidnapper. Like, oh, the guy's like, oh, wait a second. You know, like he's, she turns the tables on him in a way where now she's brainwashing him, giving him a little bit of what he's already hungry for or whatever. Is I'm saying?
Starting point is 01:33:54 Yeah. That happens. It's been happening a lot lately. The prisoner taken from a cell after a long period of isolation, safety, and despair usually looks upon the first interrogation as a welcome break. This is what you were getting at. The mere opportunity to talk to someone is intensely gratifying. Usually is much taken aback by the fact that his crimes are not specified.
Starting point is 01:34:14 And his guilt is assumed. They're getting treated right out of the gate like you're just guilty. And then there's pressures applied by the interrogator. This was your recommendation. Relatively friendly attitude is how they started off. And then after a while, the interrogator becomes hostile, begins to apply pressure. Some of the pressures which can be applied simply by altering the routine with which the cell has been described. Continuous and repetitive interrogation.
Starting point is 01:34:41 They make them stand throughout the interrogation. many men can withstand pain of long standing, but sooner or later, all men succumb to the circulatory failure it produces. Fluid in the legs. Adema, blisters. Delirious state, disorientation, fear, delusions, and visual hallucinations. Periods of longstanding are usually interrupted from time to time by interrogation periods during which the interrogator demands and threatens while pointing out to the prisoner that it would be easy for him to. end his misery by merely cooperating. And that's the whole thing that you just set up.
Starting point is 01:35:18 You get him hungry in a multitude of different ways. And now you've got him standing, blisters, edema, muscle failure, like total disaster. And you can end all this. All you have to do is just cooperate. It's a general policy that the interrogator must obtain the written permission from his of his superiors before using extreme coercive measures.
Starting point is 01:35:41 Generally speaking, when interrogator strikes prisoner in anger, he does so unofficially. The act is usually an expression of his exasperation and evidence that he himself is under emotional strain. So they've talked a little bit about that. And then there's the friendly approach. You know, we get the good cop and go through all what that looks like. And of course, the interrogation friendly and rewarding behavior can last for several days.
Starting point is 01:36:06 You're just keeping the person like guessing, right? Who am I going to get today? It's straight up good cop, bad cop. As soon as the interrogator decides that no new information is being yield, the regimen of constant pressure and hostile interrogation is resumed. So you're nice to him until you're like, oh, he doesn't have anything else to give me. Then you go hard again. Throughout the entire interrogation period,
Starting point is 01:36:26 the prisoner is under some form of medical surveillance. And this is because the unintended death of a prisoner during interrogation procedure is regarded as serious error on the part of the prison officials. Yeah, that makes sense. It's been said that the interrogator approaches the prisoner with the, assumption that he is guilty. However, the interrogators not know what specific crimes the man may have committed. In fact, it's quite clear that most of the people arrested by the MVD have not really committed any specific serious crimes at all. Experiences taught them that if they put enough pressure
Starting point is 01:36:57 upon the prisoner sooner or later, they will get him to confess to acts which can be interpreted as a major crime. Much of the activity of the interrogator can be looked upon as the process of persuasion. Yeah, I guess that's a way of putting it lightly. The interrogator approaches the prisoner with the knowledge that the man is actually a criminal by communist definition. For example, according to communist theory, acts that are, acts are judged by their objective effects rather than by the motives of those who committed them. Thus, if a prisoner through an honest mistake has damaged a piece of machinery belonging to the state, he is a wrecker. Doesn't matter what your intent was. Ultimately, under constant pressure and persuasion, a prisoner usually agrees to some
Starting point is 01:37:38 statement to the effect of by communist laws I am a spy and they they break this whole thing down I'm not going to go into it but they break this whole thing down of how they get you to confess eventually and even with what I just by communist laws I'm a spy well guess what you said in there I'm a spy so they're going to get you little by little to make statements The reaction of the prisoner to the interrogation, the way in which a prisoner reacts to the whole process of interrogation is to a great extent dependent upon the manner of man he is, his preexisting attitudes and beliefs, and the circumstances surrounding his arrest and imprisonment. All prisoners have this in common. They have been isolated and been under unremitting pressure in an atmosphere of hostility and uncertainty. The prisoner invariably feels that something must be done to find a way out.
Starting point is 01:38:35 Death is denied him. Ultimately, he finds himself faced with a choice of continuing interminable under intolerable pressures of his captors or accepting the way out, which the interrogator offers. So they just keep that pressure, keep that pressure. And eventually they get you to break. And then once they get you to break, we get into the trial. and now you get now you're taking the person that has confessed the crime when the prisoners finally reached the point of admitting his crimes and the interrogator have agreed upon a protocol satisfactory to both them he experiences a profound sense of relief so now you're kind of happy you're allowed to and they make you even more happy they allow you to sleep they give you better meals and some exercise and then they'll have this show trial confession which will be made publicly and the real acts will be sort of, you know, defined as criminal. So you admit these things and it's like, oh yeah, you admit these things. So clearly you're a criminal and it gets
Starting point is 01:39:51 gnarly. The punishment, according to communist theory, the purpose of prison system is to rehabilitate criminals through wholesome work, productive activity and education. For this purpose, prisoners are transported to Siberia or the Arctic, where you're going to, Most of them spend their terms working in mines and construction projects under brutal and primitive conditions. Those who are fortunate enough to receive any education during this procedure are educated by further indoctrination with communist ideas. And then they do in comparison. And I kind of brushed up against this comparison in the beginning, the Russians versus the Chinese. In China, at the moment at least, this is in 1956.
Starting point is 01:40:31 The period of detention is greatly prolonged. The Chinese make extensive use of group interaction among people. prisoners in obtaining information in applying pressures and in carrying out indoctrination. The goal of the Chinese detention and interrogation procedure is primarily that of ensuring that the prisoner will develop a relatively long-lasting change in his attitudes and overt behavior that will be sustained after his release so that he will not again constitute a danger to the communist state. So again, the Russians are looking for a confession for propaganda.
Starting point is 01:41:01 The Chinese are looking to change what you believe. Physical torture of the traditional sort is more common. Manacles and leg chains are frequently used. Detention facilities are more primitive. The Soviet objective is one of securing a confession in a relatively short time. The Chinese objective is that of indoctrination of converting the victim to communism and the process may be prolonged for years. Brainwashing is but one of many techniques used. Frequent lectures and constant and intensive social pressures are also prominent elements.
Starting point is 01:41:34 some persons who have emerged from Chinese prisons have been made have been characterized by amazingly altered political beliefs and immediate loyalty to communism they have indeed been described as the most thoroughly brainwashed of all while the story of the Chinese indoctrination is an interesting and impressive one we believe that is the interest of clear thinking to confine our use of the term brainwashing to the systematic breakdown of the personality which is deliberately brought about for the purpose of securing false confessions. I think that they say that. I mean, to me, it's much more horrific to think that you actually now believe in communism
Starting point is 01:42:11 as opposed to you made a coerced confession. I don't know why they say that. Maybe that's because they needed to defeat propaganda. And if you make a confession, then I'm like, oh, don't worry, he's just, he's just brainwashed. But if you really truly believe it, it's like, well, is he really brainwashed or is there something to it? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:42:31 I'm not 100% sure why they. Break it down like that the process of brainwashing is essentially one in which two paths are being followed One is the demoralizing process the result of which is to reduce the victim's critical facilities or faculties to the point We no longer discriminates between true and false logical and illogical and again these are the kind of things where You know this can happen to you in life, right? You can be in a moment in life where you're so demoralized and things aren't you know when somebody tells you, hey, if you work hard, it'll pay off, then you work hard, it doesn't pay off. You're demoralized. And what you think is true turns out to not be true.
Starting point is 01:43:14 And that's the kind of thing where people are exposed. They're vulnerable to this brainwashing, especially when you lose your job, even though you're working hard, and now you're pissed off, and now you jump online, and now you're looking at, you know, videos and watching reels. It's starting to land a little bit too much. Well, you think, actually, when you think about it, even a little bit that that is going on to most people in a lot of ways where, I mean, not to some crazy degree, but when you think about, which part is going on?
Starting point is 01:43:46 Brainwashing and the whole de moralization process and like that whole thing. I mean, it almost stands the reason that pretty much anyone, you know, like, let's say you see a homeless guy on your freaking corner or whatever. It's almost like it stands the reason that he went through that process too, where it's like, hey, especially when you map out something, you think, oh, yeah, I'm going to get this certain payoff or whatever, and it doesn't come, or it doesn't come yet or whatever. And then, yeah, you slowly get demoralized.
Starting point is 01:44:14 And then you have this, we'll call it a hunger for something else. It gets filled with the first thing available, or you're hanging around the wrong people or both or whatever. And then, now you're off to the race on that path. Now you're a, and then you get that small payoff and you want it again. You forget about that original path that you were kind of on. See what I'm saying? that demoralization process has taken hold.
Starting point is 01:44:37 So essentially, you get brainwashed into your position. Well, what you're talking about too is the second part here. It says the other is the reorganizing process in which he is required to construct his confession, elaborate, defend it, and believe it. These are two processes which are going on all the time through the initial softening up usually proceeds the intensive interrogation and the initial construct of confession. And then they go through this like a hypothetical schedule of brainwashing and the softening up. That's what they call it.
Starting point is 01:45:16 Unpalpable food, regimented exercise and use of toilet facilities. Isn't it weird how you think of like just taking away privileges from people and just you can only go to the bathroom when I say? Withholding of reading materials, deprivation of tobacco, strict regulation and conditions of position of sleep. And then we get into the following emotional states are created within the individual during the systemic course of brainwashing. One, a feeling of helplessness in attempting to deal with the impersonal machinery of control.
Starting point is 01:45:47 That's every day, right? If you're not, if you look around the world, like what machinery of the world is there that you have no control over? Right? There's a lot. A lot. Initial reaction of surprise, feeling of uncertainty about what was required.
Starting point is 01:46:03 family. That's another thing that we can experience. Like, what what do I gotta do to win, man? What do we gotta do to get ahead? A developing feeling of dependence upon the interrogator. It's when you start watching those videos and you're like, I'm gonna watch this again, dude. A sense of doubt and a loss of objectivity,
Starting point is 01:46:21 feelings of guilt. Isn't it weird how much social media is kind of like going to make you feel guilty? Yeah. Guilty and scared, I think, in a lot of ways. Not scared, scared, but just, A little bit of a questioning attitude toward his own value system. A feeling of potential breakdown, i.e. that he might go insane.
Starting point is 01:46:45 A need to defend his acquired principles and a final sense of belonging. So that's why those cults and extremist movements. That's it right there. That's how they get it. That's how it happens. that's where it comes into play. And they break down each one of these things in pretty good detail.
Starting point is 01:47:16 Each one of those has its own, you know, how do you really make those things happen? How do you really make the person feel guilty? How do you really make them question their own values? Like it breaks down how they're making these things, how they make them happen. Yeah, there's this, like, strong element. of like the idea of rejection and then acceptance so like you know people have the fear of rejection
Starting point is 01:47:47 i think that goes way deeper and it's way more uh we're way more sensitive to it than i think a lot times we admit like i guess that's like why people are scared of public speaking a lot of the time the fear of rejection like making a mistake in front of everyone now everyone saw my mistake and you know it's like a form of rejection that you're experiencing and then when you have a chronic rejection, perception of rejection. It's like acceptance is the most massive, like, trick and fulfillment there is in that case, you know? Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 01:48:23 That's what Colts do, right? That's what Colts do and that's, you know, Colts are a form of brainwash, but that's exactly what they do. You take, and like you pointed out, you take these people that are already, maybe they don't have the closest family ties, maybe they're not in a good situation where they're living and they're just super vulnerable.
Starting point is 01:48:42 They're looking for acceptance. They're looking to be part of something. That's what gangs do too, right? Like, oh, you're, you don't have any friends? Cool. We're not just friends. We're brothers. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:53 Let's go. Meanwhile, in your mind, the world is rejecting you. I am not a part of anything. Meanwhile, I'm looking at my neighbors. They got this nice family. I'm looking at the, you know, the football team over there, you know, they seem like this team, but I can't play for it. I suck or whatever.
Starting point is 01:49:08 right I'm rejected by the football team by the world like my environment is is currently rejecting me and then yeah you get somebody it was like hey come come hang with us you know that probably feels good you know hello extremists yeah what up what are we doing yeah what are we doing yep oh you you kind of look like me that's what I need over here you don't want you can be one of us you are one of us you are born one of us you've watched higher learning remember that show that movie higher learning hmm When the guy, there's like, they go to college and there's all these different groups. There's like kind of the Black Pantherish group has Ice Cube in it.
Starting point is 01:49:46 Omar Epps is in there. And then has, what's that guy's name, Michael Rappaport. He's in there and he's this guy where he's directionless. He's constantly getting like kind of rejected in one way or another. He's from Idaho, you know, kind of this kind of, not act like social, what do you call? Socially awkward type dude. Yeah. And he's reading.
Starting point is 01:50:04 And then just this mysterious figure like Rose. up to him and it's like, hey man, what's up? What are you reading? He's like, tells him the book. He's a good book, man. Like full, like some acceptance. And he's like, yeah, man, you know, like he's kind of weary, like, what's up with this guy, you know? And he's like, no, no. And he's like, hey, I'm not gay, man, get off me or something like this, right? Like, don't do it. And he's like, first off, I'm not gay. He's like, no, I'm just wanted to see if you wanted to come hang with us. That's all. And he's like, kind of confused. He's like, wait a second, this guy's because he's so used to the rejection. And he's like, probably this guy's kind of accepting.
Starting point is 01:50:38 in me, you know? So he kind of goes with him. And then turns out it's like this white supremacist group and he just buys right in. And he ends up like killing some people and all this stuff or whatever. Was it based on? I don't know that it was based on like a true story. I don't think it was based on a true story. But a lot of these
Starting point is 01:50:55 elements, it's a comedian though, right? Yeah, I think he's a funny. Yeah, yeah. But no, but isn't he like a comedian? Yeah. Yeah. But it is not a comedic role at all. It was like one of his earlier. I was waiting for the punchline. No, no, no. No, no. It's a serious one. But it's a serious one. But it's You can tell it's kind of a caricature of all these little separate elements that can happen in college campuses at the time. Full, a lot of exaggeration because there's like, you know, like they're the like sniper shooting type scenarios where you get, you know, it's like that.
Starting point is 01:51:25 It ends up like that. But it does kind of highlight all the different elements of college, you know, and they kind of make it exaggerated or whatever. That's it. But anyway, it does play on that right there. The world is rejecting you. And you'd be surprised where you can get accepted into and buy into, you know, when you're in that situation. It shows that. The last little section I wanted to cover here is, because I think it's very, it's a good little system that they used.
Starting point is 01:51:56 So check this out. Incessant questioning of this type tends to arouse doubts based upon irrational guilt feelings. The prisoner begins to question the very fundamentals of his own value system. One brainwash priest reported that after, interrogation, he really began to feel intense guilt about the very missionary work which he had devoted his entire life to. Constantly, the prisoner must fight off potential breakdown. He finds that his mind, he finds his mind is going blank for longer and longer periods of time. He cannot think constructively. If he is to maintain any semblance of psychological integrity, he must bring to an
Starting point is 01:52:32 end this state of interminable internal conflict. He signifies a willingness to write a confession. So they finally get this dude to, you know, like, all right, you're going to write a And by the way, that's interesting. You could see like you take this priest who had done missionary work and they make him feel like that was bad. Right? Like this is how 180 your mind can be manipulated. You believe for your whole life you're raised as a Christian and you're going to go out. You're going to help people.
Starting point is 01:53:01 And then you now think that what you did is bad. Like what were you doing trying to manipulate these poor people that were over in this other country? It's like powerful. So now we get to this confession writing part. And it says, no matter what the prisoner writes in his confession, the interrogator is not satisfied. The interrogator questions every sentence, every phrase of the confession. He begins to edit while working with the prisoner. The prisoner is forced to argue against every change, every demand for increased self-incrimination.
Starting point is 01:53:39 So, you know, like you wrote like, oh, I stole the bread. And then I'm like, dude, you need to write, I stole five loaves of bread. And you're like, oh, I didn't steal five. You need, yes, you did. We have evidence. We have this little back and forth. This is the very essence of brainwashing. The prisoner has begun to argue for maintaining statements that he would not have accepted
Starting point is 01:54:04 prior to the commencement of brainwashing. So you're like, I didn't steal five loaves of bread. I told you. only stole two but you see what I'm saying? Every time that he gives in on a point to the interrogator, he must rewrite his whole confession. Still, the interrogator is not satisfied.
Starting point is 01:54:20 In a desperate attempt to maintain some semblance of integrity and to avoid further brainwashing, the prisoner must begin to argue that what he has already confessed is true. You're like, no, I told you it was only two lobes. He begins to accept as his own. the statements he has written. Yeah, that makes sense.
Starting point is 01:54:43 Because I'm just trying to get you to break. Like, just write a confession. And you're like, you know, I'll give you food. I'll let you sleep. I'll turn up the temperature and you can sit down. And you're like, fine, I stole the bread. And I'm like, cool.
Starting point is 01:54:55 But no, how many, you stole five loaves. And you're like, no, you didn't. Well, you least sold two. Okay, fine. And you can see you just escalate this and escalate this. Yeah, because he draws that contrast between like, okay I said I did the one and then wait now you're saying five
Starting point is 01:55:12 like five is like wait I'm not gonna confess to the hey look I'll confess to the one I'm the five is dumb in fact the five becomes so dumb in my head that brought just break get off the whole five loaves thing bro you know brag oh hey look I can do two it's almost like a negotiation process except for at the end you're arguing that it's true that you only stole one
Starting point is 01:55:32 that's like the key component and it says subtly step by step he is identified with a new value system. The prisoner uses many of the interrogators earlier arguments to bustress his own position. This is the key component here. He believes what he has stated. So now you believe what you said.
Starting point is 01:55:55 An interesting point is raised by the behavior of returned prisoners of war who had been brainwashed during the Korean conflict. Some of these individuals stood court martial. Others were vilified in the press. What a freaking nightmare. One wonders why they did not say I was brainwashed. I believed at the time what I said over the radio in their own defense.
Starting point is 01:56:15 Apparently they could not explain clearly what had happened to them. One wonders if this inability to communicate their experiences related to a most interesting psychiatric finding that is virtually impossible for a recovered schizophrenic to tell what a psychotic state is like. All that he can say is that is unimaginably. horribly horrible similarly some of the brainwashed have characterized their own experience as indescribable which to me that little statement there is like we are being brainwashed and of course we don't know it do you have you had people if you had friends like let's say during uh the covid time frame
Starting point is 01:57:04 where like people will their their values changed like drastically Yeah. They, and you'd be like, well, you didn't used to think that way. And they couldn't understand that you saw this radical change that had taken place. Did you see some of that? I was pretty sheltered during the COVID times. So no, I did not see that, but, oh, yeah, you know, you see it online or whatever. You know, two people going back and forth all this stuff.
Starting point is 01:57:30 But, no, not in my real life, but that I'm an exception. Yeah. I mean, that's, that's one example to me of people that you go, dude, like, we're, you. You didn't used to think like that. Yeah. And now you're saying that. Yeah. Like, are you sure this is kind of, are you sure about that?
Starting point is 01:57:48 Yeah. Yeah. So we'll close us out. There's a little section called Aftermath. And this is just to reemphasize what I just said. The victim literally forgets many of the events that occurred during the brainwashing process. Yeah. So we literally don't know who we were, which is very scary.
Starting point is 01:58:14 Very scary. I could see it, though. I could totally see it. And if you can, if you just kind of look around, you can see evidence of like how this is all just very, very like. For sure. But obvious almost. But I think that's the biggest warning is that you won't feel this happening. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:58:29 So, right? Yeah. Oh, yeah. It'll sneak into your mind and change you. And look, we're not against change. if you're adapting better viewpoints and your growth in your perspective, hey, that's great. But just be careful and be suspicious and question things and question what you're hearing, question what you see, and question what you think, and just employ critical thinking, right?
Starting point is 01:58:55 And I think it's good to know the persuasion tactics. Like when you watch a YouTube video, you should understand that they're trying to persuade you. I don't care what, I don't care what YouTube video. there's probably 5% of YouTube videos that aren't trying to persuade you in one way or the other. They aren't trying to make, like to put together just a raw informational video would be very, very difficult. So just about everything that you're seeing, just about everything that you're absorbing, just everything, the thing that you're reading, they're trying to persuade you. And at a minimum, they're trying to make you think different. And like I said, sometimes that's good.
Starting point is 01:59:33 Sometimes people trying to open your eyes to see some new reality. great just be careful just be careful because it's happening stay strong stay strong stay strong speaking of staying strong real quick this will help let's go I think I'm certain this will help and it's in the spirit of recognizing that this can happen even in a way that you might not expect so there's these little exercise you might have seen these but this is kind of like a big evidence to show. Okay, so if I were to ask you or anyone be like, hey, I'm holding something in my hand,
Starting point is 02:00:16 do you see this thing right here? Yes. And we see it. And you say, okay, what if I put something right in front of your face? Do you think it's possible that you just wouldn't see it? If I put it right in front of your face, you just physically would not see it,
Starting point is 02:00:29 even though it's literally in front of your eyes. Seems like there's cases where that could happen, but it seems unlikely. It doesn't land on you like obvious, right? Okay. So there's these little exercises. You might have seen this like a video. Just the gorilla one?
Starting point is 02:00:43 The gorilla one. Exactly. I was actually going to say, well, there's that video where you watch the people passing the basketball. Oh, yeah. Miss the gorilla. So that's kind of the story of your whole brain. And in, yeah, straight up.
Starting point is 02:00:52 That's the story of your brain. It's like it has this. It needs. It has that. It's paying attention to it. It has this and that. This and that. Certain things it just accepts as it is.
Starting point is 02:01:01 So I'm saying? And it's all wonky. Like, we don't know. A lot of that is just some big dark area, you know, that we don't really know varying degrees of knowledge. We'll say but just like that video you don't realize that literally a gorilla like if someone said hey if I put a gorilla right in front of your face We don't see gorillas every day put it right in front of your face would you see it or would you literally not see it? You'd be like no, it's pretty I don't can't imagine a situation where if you didn't see that video
Starting point is 02:01:26 Can't imagine a situation where I wouldn't see it. The video is you get told count the number of passes between these five people that are holding a basketball how many times they pass it to each other Boom and then you watch the video and you count them and you go So the video's over and they go, how many passes? And you go, 17. And they say, did you see the gorilla walk through the center of the circle? People passed in the ball. There was no gorilla. And then they go watch it again.
Starting point is 02:01:51 And you go rewind, watch the exact same video. And sure enough, um, you go to walk right through there. Exactly. You missed it. Yeah. So you see. Have you ever seen the thing where it says, where you read a word and depending on which word you read, it sounds like you heard it?
Starting point is 02:02:08 Yeah. Someone's saying it was like green needles or something like that yeah yeah I just saw that one that one that one is crazy It is crazy that you will you will hear what you read and it's the exact same noise Yeah, but depending on what you're thinking you'll hear whatever it is you're thinking right so it's freaking wild So that one you hear a recording that's kind of distorted but not really you know But here's the thing it is distorted when you don't read anything to you're like I don't hear anything I don't hear either of them, but then if you play, if you read, because it has the two sides of the screen, right? If you read the one on the left side, that distorted signal sound says that word in your ears.
Starting point is 02:02:49 Versus the other side says that word just depends on which one you're looking at. So that one, bro, I rewind that one so many times. It was like, no, I'm going to, I'm going to beat the system. I'm like, bro, I couldn't beat it. But if you don't look at any of them, you're like, it just doesn't sound like anything. See, Brian, that's the whole point right there Where it's like, bro, how much of this is just your brain Just freaking jumping from thing to thing
Starting point is 02:03:12 And missing this and accepting this And all of a sudden your reality is literally different Than what you might fully 100% expect Brat's going on every day Yep, I don't know Yeah, that's why I think you've got to be really careful About, you know, what you're putting in there What ingredients you're adding to the bread
Starting point is 02:03:28 Yeah Because you don't want that bread to go bad You don't want it to be junk So just be careful Careful. Pay attention. Keep an open mind, but damn, be careful what you let in there, right? Don't be letting the bad stuff in there. It's freaking gnarly. Right on. Stay strong mentally. With that, we're going to stay strong physically as well. Which means what you did you lift yet today? No, not yet.
Starting point is 02:03:53 You were saying when we got here, actually, you did tell me that you didn't live today because you said your mental acuity is lower when you have not exercised before we record. accurate it was and this was your first time picking up on that even though I literally wrote about that in the book Discipline equals Freedom Field Manual the answer is no and not to split hairs here but I said after I lift I feel like my brain has like more circulation so my mental acuity even though I didn't use that word is higher I didn't say it's lower when I don't I said it's higher when I do but I mean we saw evidence of low brain activity today no we did but you know thank you though for your opinion nonetheless it's
Starting point is 02:04:35 It's true. Yeah. And it's true acutely and chronically, by the way. So the more you exercise, the more you, even like something as low intensity as like walking, help circulation to your whole body. You call that road work. Roadwork. Roadwork is more of a general term. But nonetheless, yes, you're correct.
Starting point is 02:04:56 So you're going to go lift later. I already lifted today. Feel good. Glad I did. I much rather would have lifted already. Yeah, that's pretty much the feeling I always get. Although sometimes you're like fired up to go lift. Sometimes what bums me out is when I'm,
Starting point is 02:05:11 I'm supposed to go to bed at night, but I'm kind of fired up to lift in the morning. Do you think I should go lift then? No, no, it depends. Depends on one. Just go do something, go to some arms or something? Well, I'm always going to advocate for doing arms for the most part, but, you know, I don't know. Programming is very complex and different, you know, for everybody. So whatever you dig.
Starting point is 02:05:32 Yeah, do it. See, hey, do it, see how it feels. So we're lifting, we're training, you need fuel. So we recommend jacofuil. Go to joccofuel.com and get protein, get energy, get hydration, get immunity, get greens. By the way, our greens are legit. They taste good.
Starting point is 02:05:54 Get joint warfare, super cruel, all the things that are going to help you stay on the path physically and mentally. Check it out. We're at Walmart, Wawat, Vitamin Shop, GNC, military commissaries. Afees, Hennifer, dash stores, Wakefern, ShopRite, H.E.B. down in Texas, crushing. Meyer in the Midwest, crushing. Wegmans. I think we got pallets on the floor in Wegmans right now. Harris Teeter. Down in Florida Publix, people were posting pictures of just grocery carts filled with Jocko Fuel. So much appreciated. That's awesome. We're making good stuff to keep you
Starting point is 02:06:30 on the path. Lifetime fitness. Shields. Small gyms everywhere. And if you don't have Jockofuel at your gym or at your chiropractic office or at your hair salon or at your gymnastics gym or wherever you're at. Email JFCSail's at joccovuehl.com and we will get you taken care of. Also check out originuisa.com. We're talking a lot about Chinese communism today. We do not support Chinese communism. We do not support slavery. We do not support internment camps.
Starting point is 02:07:11 We don't support that type of activity. That's why we have origin USA. You don't have to get your, you don't have to get your t-shirt made by a slave. You don't have to get your t-shirt made in a, in a factory that makes, oh, we make, in the Chinese factory, they make t-shirts and the destruction of the environment.
Starting point is 02:07:34 They make them both there. You don't have to participate in that. You go to OriginUSA.com. You can get boots. You can get jeans. You can get T-shirts. You can get hoodies. You can get Jiu-T-T-T-Gis.
Starting point is 02:07:43 Did I say J-J-J-Tegis? You can get J-Gis. Rash Guards, hunt gear. You can get everything that you need. Training gear for life. All made 100% in America by freedom with American-made materials. Go to OriginUSA.com and support America. There's no tariffs on this gear.
Starting point is 02:08:02 No tariffs on the material. It's not. There's none. Why it's made America? Terror free. Let's go. If you know, I've noticed Pete's been putting out some footwear hype. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:08:16 Like they're going to be doing more. Some of those shoes that, I don't know if they're out yet or what, but some of those shoes is like kind of more like the casual ones. Those are kind of my speed. Those look freaking sick. Yeah, we're going to have some, it looks like we're getting close to having some, what do you call them? I believe the term is a lifestyle shoes.
Starting point is 02:08:34 Okay. Yeah, but by and by that I mean sneakers. Yeah. I mean the kind of sneakers that you could skateboard in. Yeah, yeah. You know, which should kind of let you know what we're coming with. So we're working on it, man. Luckily, some of these soul manufacturers that make the, the soles of shoes,
Starting point is 02:08:54 they've brought some of their equipment back to America. Oh, yeah. And so now, because we can't look, we hold the line. Yeah. We're not making it unless it's American made. So now that we have some of these American. sole manufacturers bringing back to America their machines. Now we can make some sneakers here in America.
Starting point is 02:09:13 So there we go. Let's go. OriginUSA.com. Check it out. Oh, yeah. Also a store called jocco store. Jocco store.com. This is like, you know, when you're representing on the path, right?
Starting point is 02:09:23 We're staying strong. We're staying active, staying capable, right? Keeping the discipline so that we may have freedom. Mm-hmm. You're saying? Anyway, you're representing discipline equals freedom. your shirts and hoodies we got some socks I know it built a lot of hype on the socks and you so once have me by the way did you give me my freaking what your
Starting point is 02:09:45 shirt yeah shirts yeah hey they're coming I promise told you by the end of the month that's one one I can determine and yeah you got it how about this I'll send them to you today how about that is that cool okay okay unless unless for everyone else this one equals freedom the idea of good right sometimes we want to represent this is where you can get it so yeah jacco store A lot of good stuff on there. Check it out. Some hats on there as well.
Starting point is 02:10:08 Failed to mention that before. Also, the short locker, which is a new design. Same deal. Just a woman equals freedom. A little bit outside the box as far as it designs, thinking. But good, nonetheless, people seem to like. Are the HuliGolf.com collab polo shirts on there yet? No.
Starting point is 02:10:29 We're still working on it? They're still in transit. The whole process is processing. But yeah, be on the lookout for that. There's an email list, sign up if you want to be updated to like, you know, the new, new stuff. That's a good one. It's true. Well, I don't just send out emails for every little thing.
Starting point is 02:10:44 That's the thing. So I'm not spamming. It's just like worthy of messaging. And, you know, you get it. Anyway, back to Short Locker. This new design every month. Subscription scenario on there, click on Shirt Locker, see some of the past design, see what that's all about. It's pretty cool.
Starting point is 02:10:58 People see them to like it. Anyway, everything is on jocco store.com. Also check out primalbeef.com. And Colorado Craftbeef.com, you need steak. Look, we love milk, 100%. Yeah, 100. Freaking great dessert. Taste delicious.
Starting point is 02:11:12 Gives you protein. The ready to drinks, 30 gram protein. The powder's 22 grams per scoop. So, like, you can get your protein there, but you need some of that steak too. So go to Coloradocraftbeef.com or Primalbeef.com. Get steak. Get jerky. Get beef sticks.
Starting point is 02:11:27 Get whatever you need. Burgers, hot dogs. Get it. Awesome people. Awesome stakes. Also, subscribe to the podcast. Also check out Jockle Underground. Also, check out our YouTube channel.
Starting point is 02:11:40 Also, I've written some books. Miha wrote a book. Yep. Miha wrote a book. The book is called Modern Submission Grapling. One of my training partners, Miha, put it together. Very thorough. Very, it gives you good context and structure to build your game around.
Starting point is 02:12:04 In other words, have you heard of like the ecological systems of training where you don't get taught anything? You just try something. You try something in a certain environment until you figure it out. So that's like a theory. I think there's some components to that theory makes sense. But I also believe that having learned many things in my life, it's good to be able to put information into a structure with context. and one thing that is very powerful about Maha's book is it will help you take information of Jiu-Jitsu
Starting point is 02:12:39 and put it into a structure with context so you'll be able to adapt it more easily. So check out Mihon's book. Also, I've written a bunch of books. I haven't written any Jiu-Jitsu books. Well, I guess Warrior Kids kind of a Jitsu books. You might want to check those out for kids. We got a bunch of books, leadership, kids' books.
Starting point is 02:12:56 Check them out if you want to. Also, we have a leadership consultancy, Eschelon Front. We just got done with the muster down in, what is it, San Antonio? The next one is in Orlando in December. So it's going to sell out. If you want to come down there, come and check it out.
Starting point is 02:13:11 We have a couple of slots open left on the council, which is up in northeast Washington State. It's a very small group of leaders that show up there. And we get very granular solving the problems inside your organization, inside your team, inside your life, quite frankly. So if you want to do any of these things, or you have a business and you need
Starting point is 02:13:37 leadership help inside your organization because you have some kind of problem, which all problems are leadership problems, we can help you with those as well. So for leadership, go to ashlandfront.com. Come to one of our events or bring us into your company. Also, we have an online training academy, Extreme Ownership.com.
Starting point is 02:13:56 These principles that we teach, you must learn in order to lead and in order to travel through the world and make progress, we will help you. We'll give you the skills that you need. Go to Extreme Ownership.com. Also, if you want to help service members active and retired, you want to help their families,
Starting point is 02:14:12 you want to help Gold Star families, check out Mark Lee's mom, Mama Lee. She's got an incredible charity organization that just does an outstanding job helping our veterans. If you want to donate or you want to get involved, go to America's Mighty Warriors.org. Also check out Heroes and Horses.org. And finally, Jimmy May's organization beyond the brotherhood.org.
Starting point is 02:14:36 And if you want to connect with us, you go to jocco.com or you can check us out on social media. Just be careful because there's an algorithm there. And it's going to brainwash you. Fill your mind with a bunch of shit that you don't need. So don't let that happen. But you can check in with us real quick. I'm at jocco, Willink. Echoes at Echo Charles.
Starting point is 02:14:56 Just check in real quick and then get out. We don't want you in there. We don't want you scrolling. We don't want you getting brainwashed. We want you out living. That's what we want. And thanks to our service members, men and women, around the globe, sacrificing every day to protect our right, to think free, to speak free, and to act free. Thank you for what you do every day.
Starting point is 02:15:24 Also, thanks to our police, law enforcement, firefighters, paramedics, EMTs, dispatchers, correctional officers, border patrol, secret service, as well as all other first responders, thank you for protecting us. us here at home. And to everyone else out there, the quote that kicked off this book said, man can be made to do exactly anything. We'll just make sure that you're the one that is in charge of your mind and you're the one that is deciding exactly what it is you want to do. Stay aware, stay alert and keep your mind free. Until next time, this is Echo and Jocko. Out.

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