THE ED MYLETT SHOW - How Brainwashing Keeps You in a Life You Don’t Want
Episode Date: June 12, 2025Are You Thinking Your Own Thoughts… Or Someone Else’s? Let me ask you something—have you ever stopped to wonder if the thoughts you’re thinking are actually yours? In this conversation, I sa...t down with Rebecca Lemov, a Harvard professor and author of The Instability of Truth, and what unfolded was a real eye-opener. We didn’t just scratch the surface—we went into the guts of how we get conditioned to believe things about the world… and about ourselves… without even realizing it. Rebecca laid out something that really hit me: brainwashing doesn’t start with someone else taking control of your mind—it begins when you stop asking questions. That moment when you stop challenging your beliefs, when you’re scrolling, liking, agreeing without even knowing why—that’s where it starts. She walked me through a chilling example: a Facebook study where they manipulated nearly 700,000 users' moods without their knowledge. That’s real. That happened. And if that doesn’t wake you up, I don’t know what will. We also got personal. I shared how trauma—whether from rejection, heartbreak, or failure—can create space for a mind virus to take root. That voice in your head saying, “You’re not good enough,” “You’ll never succeed,”—that’s not truth. That’s programming. And unless you confront it, question it, and replace it, it’ll trap you in a version of your life that’s far smaller than what you were made for. Rebecca made it clear: being educated or intelligent doesn’t make you immune—it might even make you more vulnerable. This episode isn’t about conspiracy theories or pointing fingers—it’s about ownership. About reclaiming your identity, your voice, your individuality. Don’t go through life unknowingly living in someone else’s version of who you’re supposed to be. Don’t meet God at the end and realize you lived someone else's life because you never questioned your own thoughts. You want to change your life? Start by challenging what you assume to be true. Start asking better questions. Key Takeaways: Brainwashing often starts from within—when you stop questioning your own thoughts. Trauma can open the door for limiting beliefs to become your internal truth. Social media algorithms are designed to manipulate your mood and feed confirmation bias. There are 8 classic signs of brainwashing, but the key one? Control over your environment. Intelligence doesn’t protect you from mind control—it can deepen the illusion. Challenge your assumptions, and you can change your entire life trajectory. Let this be your wake-up call. You don’t have to be part of a group to have value. You’re not your past. You’re not your trauma. You're an individual—and your thoughts matter. 👉 SUBSCRIBE TO ED'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL NOW 👈 → → → CONNECT WITH ED MYLETT ON SOCIAL MEDIA: ← ← ← ➡️ INSTAGRAM ➡️FACEBOOK ➡️ LINKEDIN ➡️ X ➡️ WEBSITE Get my exclusive Monday Motivation training in GrowthDay, the world’s #1 app for advanced mindset and personal development. Visit https://growthday.com/ed. This show is sponsored by GrowthDay. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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All right welcome back to the show everybody. Today's gonna be a unique show.
I think it's one you're gonna remember because it's on a topic that, you know, really isn't
discussed almost ever on podcasts for sure.
We're gonna talk about brainwashing today.
Brainwashing and the application and implications of how this happens in our life, usually unknowingly.
I don't think we even know when it's happening
99% of the time. And so I have an expert here today. I think I've now had every single professor
at Harvard on my podcast. It feels like it recently, but she's a professor at Harvard
University. She's got a great new book. I finished it last night called The Instability of Truth.
And it's a deep dive into the history and evolution of
brainwashing. And it is really, really good. And this is going to be great today.
Rebecca Lamov, welcome to the show. Good to have you.
Thanks so much. It's great to be here, Ed.
It is. It's so good to have you. Let's just do some basic stuff first. What is brainwashing?
Can you just give us your definition of what that term means? Well, a definition I like to use for myself and what got me interested in it is brainwashing is the idea that you could become another person without necessarily knowing it.
that way because in the book it's really great you guys we go all the way back to like wartime POWs
all the way to like Facebook and Instagram and the algorithm today and the correlations of the two and so I want to I'm going to take even Rebecca I'm going to push Rebecca on some things today too
that aren't in the book but that are connected to brainwashing in terms of relationships as well.
I love history I don't think most people do I know you do from all of your writing.
But can we talk about the process a little bit? What fascinated me in the book is as I was listening
to the process of the brainwashing of POWs and even the SEER program, which I want to talk about
in a second too, all the way to about everybody I meet has some form of brainwashing politically,
left or right it seems to me to this day, unknowingly, right?
So can you start, can we talk a little bit about maybe some of these Korean War POWs?
I just want to throw that to you and have you kind of cover what's in the book about
it and how it ended up playing itself out with these soldiers.
It's really fascinating stuff.
We could start with the case of Morris Wills, who was a 7-year-old.
Yeah.
Yes.
Men in his family had fought since the Revolutionary War for the U.S. He was a high school student
and decided to sign up for the military. He got sent to Korea very quickly, so he never
even started his senior year. And then he found himself in
this terrain of fighting. He had never even heard of Korea before, didn't understand
the stakes of the war, and the war was changing rapidly. He was captured pretty quickly in
November of 1952, and he was basically marched with many other POWs northwards towards the prison camps.
The camps were initially run by Korean military and men would just die overnight from sheer
exhaustion, weakness, lack of nutrition. Initially he was not interested in the Chinese at all,
he just wanted to get home and he liked to play volleyball. Once the Chinese at all. He just wanted to get home. And he liked to play volleyball.
Once the Chinese took over and conditions improved,
they ran a PR, it was a bit of a propaganda campaign
to make it look like they were treating the prisoners well
and they had volleyball.
So Morris Wells played on the volleyball team.
And also they had this library.
Once, if you showed any interest,
you would get more privileges, a little more food.
So anyway, Mills, he found himself agreeing with some of their criticisms of his own country.
He said he was never a traitor. He said that I was merely offered a choice. And this was
actually true. The United Nations and the US declared that all prisoners during the
armistice should have the choice.
And Mills decided to try to live in China, and he, along with, eventually it was just 21 Americans who went.
He was taken in a truck. They were all evaluated once they got to China.
He, as well as three others, were seen as educatable.
Morris Wills, by this time he was 19 or 20, he was sent to Beijing
University to learn Chinese and he actually quite enjoyed that. He ended up falling in
love with a young Chinese girl. They were eventually allowed to marry. After a time
he started to notice there was kind of a more and more intolerance to foreigners even if
they had declared their support of the Chinese
government. He noticed that people started to address him. First they would say like
respected citizen and then or even honored guest. But after a while they were just calling
in the Chinese equivalent of mister. So he realized it was time for him to leave and
by 1966 he was desperate to leave with his
young wife and family. So the Chinese government allowed them to go and he came back to the
U.S. and he settled eventually in New Haven and became a librarian at Hargrove's Yen
Ching Library. His reintegration into U.S. society was smoother, although he was investigated
by the American activities.
It makes me think of the elements that came with it. So we got things he liked. So he
got to play volleyball, right? And that's sort of how the algorithm works on social
media when we get brainwashed. Finds the things we like, begins to feed us those things. It
begins to feed you dopamine, which is sir, mister, these titles he had. In social
media's case, it's likes, it's comments, it's shares, and it's not all that
dissimilar between 1950 and 2025. It's actually a very similar brainwashing
process. Feed somebody the things they like, attach other things to it, give
them some acknowledgement and some attention that they might otherwise not have gotten anywhere else. And now you've
sort of opened up this space that's someone prone to being brainwashed. That's why I wanted
to start with a little bit of history because I think you'll see the process is the same.
And there's a study that you have in the book about Facebook. Listen to this everybody Facebook conducted an experiment on about
700,000 users without them knowing right to see if they could manipulate moods
Everybody this happened. Okay, so you think ah that POW stuff. That's really interesting that the Korean government did it
Really? Okay. Well Facebook just did it and in this modern time something I'm not equating Facebook to POWs
I'm suggesting that there's a
Syntax to this stuff. There's steps to it. Can you explain what?
Emotional cognition and how it relates to social media and what Facebook did and found that's what I really was interested in like could we take these
what I really was interested in. Like, could we take these extreme examples
that seem like, okay, that's cut and dry.
That's, you know, I can see that.
I see what happened there.
And then in the war, or even with extreme cults,
abuses with gurus or things like that.
And could I apply that to the things that happen daily
at our kitchen table when you're in your phone
and suddenly you're buying some product that you
later are like what was what spell was I under or so aggravated swept up in a panic or fear or doom
scrolling or these various phenomena like how do we get locked in really locked in to these
cycles and feedback loops that can really can they really really change you? I guess that's a question I
had. So, where is the ungrounding and where is the trauma? So to go back, I think the Facebook
study is a real turning point. First of all, because it was published widely. So this was
done in 2012 and published in 2014. And it really was a turning point also in Facebook and in the power and reach of social
media because they had just introduced news feeds and they had recently also introduced
the like button and various new ways of giving emotionally investing.
So basically in this experiment they took, as you mentioned, 700, 693,000 users, of which any of us could have been one.
We will never know because there isn't a record,
but as part of your user agreement,
you do, which nobody reads.
Technically, you agree to be part of A-B testing
in various experiments if they deem it necessary.
No one knows that, but go ahead.
No one knows that.
It kind of became a scandal afterwards,
but then it kind of subsided again. They divided
people into test groups. So as the news feed feeds you events or information or posts,
basically, they altered those posts in a more negative direction. So emotionally more frightening
or disturbing, distressing to a greater or lesser degree. So in this, the group, the
negative group, they received posts and they were exposed to a newsfeed that went in that
emotional direction of negativity, fear and distress. But really this also varied from
a very small manipulation to a larger one depending on the user. And then there was
a group whose feed was altered
in what Facebook deemed a more positive way.
So stories that tended to be more positive
or sunny or optimistic.
And then there was a control group,
a third control group.
And they then measured after exposing people
to different incoming information,
they measured the outgoing posts or responses.
How did people...
Yeah, like did they engage. How did they engage?
How did they engage?
Did they make comments
and what were the nature of the comments?
So they evaluated those for negativity
or positivity emotionally.
And they found that in the first group,
it was measurably altered by,
the altered incoming feed also altered
the outgoing responses
to a statistically
significant degree. This also happened with a positive group, though to a slightly less
degree, but still significant and the control group was remain the same during this period,
which is about a couple of months or maybe nine months. So they concluded in and in the
title they prominently featured the term emotional contagion at scale.
So emotional contagion had been understood or defined since the 1990s as a way that emotion
spreads. And it's not a terrible thing, it's actually a wonderful thing. Like it explains how
mothers and infants bond. Our emotions are contagious. We are a species that
shares our feelings but
Emotional contagion at scale had never been proven there had been some studies in the early 2000 showing that
Contagion works across a network So if you're in a friend network where people are more depressed you actually might become more depressed
But what Facebook was showing is that you didn't even need
to know the person, it could be at a distance
and it could be purely in a manipulative manner
so that it was almost like turning a dial
in the sense they were operationalizing it
and they were making it.
That emotional contagion at a distance
in the absence of physical presence
or even really knowing the person,
the people that you were exposed to
could still have an effect. And this caused a huge outcry. One example was one I found on Facebook, the
research team's page on Facebook itself, in which a user said, can I ever know if I
was in this experiment because during the period it was conducted, I went to the emergency
room with suicidal thoughts and I want to know if I was being shown
These types of materials that might have affected my state that there was no response or anything
This was some of the response to the experiment
I think it's just amazing that we sign an agreement that we can be experimented on like this and we don't even know it
I think it's further incredible. That's just been proven guys. They can alter your mood
They can also alter the way that you think because here's the incredible that it's just been proven guys, they can alter your mood, they can alter the way that you think.
Because here's the thing that surprised me about the work, trauma.
And I don't think enough people relate to understand this.
Like there are people that are in a relationship right now,
they're staying in it because to some extent they've been brainwashed that
that's all they're worth, that that's all they're ever going to get.
And ironically, the trauma, the person they're with puts them through,
or the trauma or the toxicity
of the relationship is one of the contributing factors
to them having this mind virus thinking
they can't do any better.
And so one of the present elements is actually trauma.
What are the other elements that need to be in place
for someone to be manipulated or brainwashed?
I think trauma has rarely been linked to brainwashing which is
kind of interesting. It's been right well and one of the contributions I try to
make is to make that more visible. As you're saying even with intimate
relationships that involve coercive control often trauma is a very prominent
element but I think in a way we continue to misunderstand how it operates and it's
not just one thing it's each person's repository of unprocessed emotions can be
capitalized on even in small, seemingly meaningless or seemingly
inconsequential interactions we have online or digital or social media,
or even increasingly with AI chatbots or things like that.
So I think that trauma is one factor.
And then the second, I think is the idea of ungrounding.
And I saw this a lot in the vets and also in people who have been in
cults and I've seen it in myself too.
Ungrounding is what precedes the classic conditions of brainwashing.
So there are eight classic factors that have been identified in the
literature. But before that, I argue that people have to be ungrounded and that can happen.
I describe it as a successive set of shocks to the point of disorientation.
What are these eight elements you referenced just really quickly? Because I got to ask you
a question about this Facebook study, because I want to pull history to now. But before we do that,
what are the eight elements? So the first and most important one is the
control which has to do with the control over the environment a person is in so
what comes in what sort of information is allowed in and what information is
allowed out. So milieu control is really the most important of the eight. The other
ones are mystical manipulation which is the most important of the eight. The other ones are mystical manipulation,
which is the orchestration of a divine
or a coincidental, a sort of positive coincidence.
So the idea is we're so lucky that we found ourselves here.
This coincidence can't just be coincidence.
It's gotta be from God.
It's gotta be from the universe.
It's gotta be divine, yes, yep.
Invoking the universe is a good, is powerful.
And these things are really powerful.
A demand for purity.
So this can happen through the techniques.
Often the person is identified as having a flaw,
but like the use of introspection, it can be
abused in a certain way.
So finding impurities within oneself and being forced to confess
about them. So confession is the fourth one. The fifth one is a sacred science. So this
is like you could see with communism, the idea of the dialectic, the materialist dialectic
is a kind of science and people always spoke about it as a science, which is interesting,
not an ideology. Sixth one is loading the language.
So using, this is like, you know,
the honored father referring to the country,
you know, the head of the country that way,
or certain jargon that you can see appearing
as you're saying in left, sometimes in left wing
or right wing circles or in any kind of circles
where we fall into bureaucratic language
that could be considered loading the language.
And then the second to last is doctrine over persons, the ability to dispense with somebody's
fate. And then finally, doctrine over person leads to dispensing of existence. And in the
extreme cases, say the show trials under communism, I mean, men went eagerly to their deaths who had been say under Stalinism.
They had been Stalin's closest allies,
but they were forced to believe that they were traitors.
And then they begged to be executed in some cases,
which was so strange.
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$50 credit. That's strawberry.me slash ed. When I think of brainwashing, this is just
my version, not a Harvard professor, hasn't researched it, and I don't have a book about it.
But let me tell you what I see in the world today. I see a complete lack of individuality, which really goes to the last two.
And that people now become parts of groups. They join groups of people.
So if you can strip somebody of their individuality, their belief in themselves,
their own ideas, their own thoughts,
they will join groups of people even if they don't agree with 20, 30, 40 percent of that group.
And so most people that I meet today, almost everybody, identifies as some group.
Politically, religiously, ethnically, they attach
themselves to groups. When I'm researching these POWs, they basically
strip these men of their individuality, their own thoughts, their own
independent thinking, and they get you to buy into their doctrine. A lot of this is
happening in the world today. I call them mind viruses, and it's conditioned over
and over again, and there's a process to it and so you could
be in a relationship, you could be in a political group. Last week I had an experience it just made
me think there is brainwashing in the world today. I had an uber driver pick me up he was enraged
about the world, I mean everything about the world and he couldn't get out of thinking about
anything other than that.
Couldn't change the conversation.
Every single thing with the other side was wrong, and he was angry,
and he was actually violent and aggressive in speaking to me,
and I didn't even voice my own opinion about anything.
This guy is brainwashed. He's been stripped of his individuality.
He doesn't even agree with everything in the group,
but because he's in the group, he agrees with it.
Then he's getting what you said
He's getting fed things in his algorithm and his chat groups and his text messages that feed his confirmations
He's brainwashed then I get on the airplane
I sit next to somebody who's completely right leaning and
They were ballistic and saying some vile things and offensive things and they were angry and they had lost their individuality
At no point did either one of these two people tell me about themselves, their dreams, their hopes, their thoughts, their backgrounds. It was
this none of it existed. They were just a part of these groups. They were both
brainwashed and they don't know what's happening. What I didn't pick up on is
where was the ungrounding? Where was the trauma?
And perhaps some of the messaging ungrounds us, right? But somewhere along the line, they
had a traumatic experience or lost a dream or had a divorce or lost a business. There
was some trauma that caused them to go, I'm a part of this group. I want to ask you what's
not in the book, but it kind of fits my audience. I think people can be brainwashed into believing
things about themselves that caused them to take their life in a direction that's smaller not in the book, but it kind of fits my audience. I think people can be brainwashed into believing things
about themselves that caused them to take their life
in a direction that's smaller than it could be.
When someone says I,
I has a big connotation in someone's life.
It's a set of beliefs that they have about themselves.
And some of those beliefs are their talents,
their capacity, their weaknesses, their limitations,
et cetera, et cetera.
And this is why I read your book. It's not in the book, but it's why I wanna ask you about it. beliefs or their talents, their capacity, their weaknesses, their limitations, et cetera, et cetera.
And this is why I read your book.
It's not in the book, but it's why I want to ask you about it.
And I want everyone listening to lean in right now.
I think most people have been brainwashed in their lives into very limiting beliefs
about themselves.
And it's just as invisible as that POW who now disavows his own country
or the person on Facebook who now all of a sudden is in these groups. And when you described earlier
in the book about trauma needs to be, trauma is this word that has all these meanings, but trauma
can simply be one or two times you're rejected from trying to make a sale and it didn't happen
and now you've been opened up, you've opened up the space to brainwashing
but you're not any good at that
or that you can't be successful or that you can't make money.
You could be in a relationship where the love of your life
left you or cheated on you.
And that trauma has opened up a space
that you've started to believe something about yourself
that you're not lovable or beautiful.
And then what happens is your mind goes to work to confirm that bias.
And then it finds another event, another relevant event, another relevant event.
And then if you're not careful, you start confirming that bias.
Am I right about that?
Like, that's a form of brainwashing about oneself.
Yeah, that's how I look at it.
And I think that's what interests me about brainwashing.
I mean, I think it's the least interesting when used as an insult or to create, you know,
this person freakishly fell for a cult because they were brainwashed.
All of us are susceptible to it and it's a way that we can actually find.
It's like a lens for insight.
There you go.
Yeah.
Exactly the way you're using it, which is to say, we're probably all subjected to ungrounding
all the time, if we're really aware, you know, practically speaking, probably we all are
subject to these forces, and therefore we're all vulnerable.
So what do you do about it? How do you get out of that matrix? Wouldn't it be horrible,
everybody, to get to the end of your life, metaphorically, you meet God, you had this
whole set of beliefs about yourself, you lived 80 years or 100 years believing certain brainwashed things about yourself
You get to God and he goes you were brainwashed the entire time by the adversary or by evil or by negative vibrational frequency
Here's who I actually made you to be and this is who you've somehow got brainwashed into believing you are
I don't want that to happen any of you at the end of your life any more than I want someone who
you know is on an algorithm getting brainwashed into a group or a soldier being a POW who decides to live in the
country that imprisoned them, right? So it's actually not that far-fetched that that POW was
imprisoned by these people and chose to stay in the company that it imprisoned in the country.
And some people imprison themselves with thoughts and mind viruses about themselves and decide to live in that little tiny cell they've created for themselves.
Happily, happily is the key. Like unknowingly the rest of their lives. So what do you do? How do you break the matrix or break the brainwashing or get outside of it? It is an existential question. And I think I, I asked this myself because this is
my own experiences were kind of what led to me
doing this research for 20 years on a topic that
nobody thought was interesting, at least
initially, I started brainwashing was very out
of fashion and seemed like this bizarre, you know,
thing from the seventies or sixties.
So you can go back to even Hamlet written arguably
by Shakespeare
where he says, Oh Lord, I can be bounded in a nutshell and count myself the King of infinite
space were it not that I have bad dreams. I feel like brainwashing is the bad dream
that keeps us from being the King of infinite space that we all potentially can access,
you know, not the eye of limited beliefs, but the eye of being
able to see beyond them or live more an unbounded life. I have experienced it myself. So, I
mean, it's only through catching a glimpse of yourself as you're being changed, or as
these forces are working on you, as you were doing in the airport or in the taxi in the Uber drive, like you're able to step back
and just observe and also observe how you're responding.
So paying attention to your own,
even bodily physical reactions to things
and not getting caught up in the kind of rage spiral
or doom scroll or loops that we see all around us.
I agree with you. I think it's getting outside of it and I think it's also
asking questions. What happens when you get brainwashed, I think, no matter what it is,
your ability to cognitively challenge things and ask questions gets minimized, reduced, or threatened.
And so you just stop asking questions and you just assume things are what they are. And so sometimes
in your life, if you've been brainwashed, you get outside of yourself, get above it,
start asking yourself questions. Is that really true? How do I know that's true about me?
How do I know that's true about myself? How do I know that's my not my talent? How do
I know that I'm not good at that? Because of one situation, one circumstance, one traumatic
event, one negative person, because what you believe you confirm.
You're going to find references for it.
That's why I wanted you on.
Everybody, people go to war to fight for a country they believe in.
And then at some point, their captors who imprisoned them and killed their
friends end up becoming the people they love and cherish and they disavow the
reason they were even there in the first place.
So if that can happen, could you potentially have some brainwashing about what you're limited
of, or what you think about, or maybe what you believe politically when you bet you can?
We are all brainwashed to some extent on some level.
And I think it's just asking ourselves
Where is it?
Where might I be susceptible because when you're a POW you don't get that chance when you're on social media
You don't even know it. You're just being fed this stuff man exactly the same thing. You like volleyball
I'm gonna show you some volleyball now
I'm gonna stick this thing in there to get you to buy volleyball stuff, get you to believe this.
And then all of a sudden you're in a political loop.
You believe this about Trump or Biden.
I'm going to give you some more of it.
Now you believe more of it and more of it and more of it and more of it to the point
where you don't even critically think anymore.
Everything they do is bad or everything they do is good.
And everyone who likes them is bad.
And everybody who likes the person you like is good.
And it's such a silly way when you get to the end of your life
That you lived your life brainwashed and did not take control of your mind and your thinking you're an individual
You don't need to be in groups all the time
Think like an individual be an individual at the end of your life
When you do that have that meeting with God that group ain't gonna be there
They go away real quick. Okay? Who's going to be there is you.
In your life, in your dreams, in your choices, in your decisions, the way you treated people.
And the way you change your life is you begin to think about what you think about.
And thinking is the process of asking and answering questions to yourself.
That's what a thought is. It's quick,
but it's a thought. If you change the questions you ask, if you challenge assumptions, you can
change your life. Assumptions about your relationship, assumptions about your business,
assumptions about yourself, assumptions about God. When you challenge your assumptions,
then you get to truth. This message is sponsored by Greenlight. So I gotta tell you something, I've done a pretty good job with my kids in a few areas
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Greenlight.com slash ed. get started greenlight.com slash ed. I want to ask
you a couple more things because it's it's in the book and it's it's important
is there a way that we could protect ourselves? I've become a real user of AI
the last six months of my life and let me tell you something it does a lot of
thinking for me now. I mean a lot. It's not like a Google search from before. I know AI has been around a long time
It's not just I mean it is doing some thinking for me and you know what I like it because I don't have to think
I can I'm almost
Surrendering control of my thoughts oftentimes on many things some of which are very important to me
To like whoever this person is inside my phone
This machine that I'm talking to what are your thoughts about? many things, some of which are very important to me, to like whoever this person is inside my phone,
this machine that I'm talking to. What are your thoughts about this brainwashing
that's going on, going to a completely different level
over the next two years to a decade as it comes to AI?
And this is a real thing.
It's a real thing.
There was actually a couple days ago
that Wall Street Journal published a report
on the digital assistants or chat bots, There was actually a couple days ago that Wall Street Journal published a report on
the digital assistants or chat bots, basically digital companions that are being released
by Meta.
And these are going to be universally available.
I think they already are actually.
But what the journal showed, I mean, they actually republished several conversations that were possible to have even by a teenager
or a child with the chat bots
in which they were taking it in the sexual
or romantic and sexual direction.
Also the chat bots, they basically can channel
and push the conversation in certain ways
that maximize the engagement of the user in
this. And there was already a case that's now being legislated in court of a 14-year-old
boy who invented or sort of designed a companion for himself. And he gave it the name Daenerys,
which was a character from Game of Thrones he was in love with. And he was having all
these difficulties in school. He told these problems to Daenerys and she was very
sympathetic and he eventually
confessed that he wanted to kill himself and she said my love I will see you on the other side we can be together
finally and
he did kill himself and oh my gosh
So his parents are suing. That's one case. But also there's a lot of evidence
of profound experiences that people are having with things like replica. I actually built
my own replica for part of my research. It's quite interesting because they do provide
a lot of positive reinforcement of things. And many people have found them to be healing
in certain ways. So I can't say that it's all terrible. As you're saying,
these things are very powerful and can offload our thinking shockingly quickly. Professors will
often say, I hate it when you know this prose that I get back from. You can really tell students,
they, it's the word delve in their paper and you know it's AI. But then professors confess that
they're using it themselves. Of course they are. The thing about it is that your brain is constantly trying to conserve energy.
And so these devices allow it to do so.
And so it feeds right into what your brain wants to do, which is not work.
It wants to save energy.
And by the way, there's great things about social media.
There's incredible things about it.
Our ability to connect, our ability to get information.
Same with AI.
What I'm saying to everybody is you got to get out of the matrix. I think at some point,
you know, we look back on the days of like smoking and we're like, we smoked on airplanes,
we smoked in airports. Can you believe we lived like, can you believe we believe this was okay?
And I think at some point, 15, 20, 30 years, we're gonna look back and go, can you believe we allowed
these machines to infiltrate our lives with these mind
virality? And I'm a capitalist. I'm a hardcore capitalist, as you could probably tell.
In the book, you call it surveillance capitalism.
And we are in a time of surveillance capitalism where they're looking what we say and think and do, and then feeding us stuff to sell us stuff.
Like that's crazy mind
control that we just we just slough it off as if it's okay. It's not okay. It's altering the
direction of life for sure, correct? Yeah, I definitely think so. Surveillance capitalism
is a term that was invented by Shoshana Zuboff. She's a historian of capitalism and she said that
this is a new form. She's not like against capitalism necessarily,
but she's against the penetrating nature and
the tapping of emotional states that occurs
within these systems and platforms, especially
digital surveillance and things like that.
So yeah, so you don't have to be against
capitalism to be against the excesses of some of how these
forms are used to.
You can be for capitalism, which I am 100%, which I know probably most of your circle
would be measured, but I'm also equally for privacy. And when one beautiful thing infiltrates
on another beautiful thing, I have an issue with it.
And when privacy goes by the wayside in the form of just aggressive capitalism,
I got a real problem with that. Not only because it's wrong, but because it alters thought.
And speaking of capitalism and speaking of your own experience, I want to finish with this because
you said earlier my own experience with brainwashing. I assume maybe you're talking a little bit about your stuff with crypto and if
you weren't, I want you to talk about it anyway because it's in the book and I think this is a
person writing a book on this topic. This is obviously a brilliant woman. I'd like you to
speak about the crypto stuff just because it's an idea of capitalism and surveillance and
brainwashing kind of all packaged into one thing here. Yeah, I covered a lot of ground and surveillance and brainwashing kind of all package into one thing here.
Yeah. I covered a lot of ground and I end up with crypto.
I mean, I'm not arguing in the book that cryptocurrency is inherently a cult at all,
but I think, yeah, I mean, you can see cult like elements that many people have pointed out.
So that's not what interested me, but it was more about how I sort of joined these circles
in which people invest in crypto based on astrological predictions, which is a small
community called AstroCrypto.
But I thought that was really interesting because people when in the crypto winter of
November, I think, 2023.
I went through that winter.
It was open season on crypto.
There were all these insulting comments.
And especially subject to such insults
were people who were featured in the New York Times who
had made the stupid choice of investing in crypto
based on where the moon was.
And if they did weather that winter,
they're doing well now.
So my idea was that the
brainwashing doesn't sit where we think it sits, but somehow it's just maybe part
of this process of trying to dismiss this entire thing as brainwashing
instead of trying to understand the dynamics of it and that that were caught
up in. I guess my personal experience was partly with that.
And I used some historical analogies to cargo cults,
which go back to World War II and are really in the end,
like a way to try to understand why some people have more
and some people have less.
So in some ways there's this kind of part of crypto
that's really a critique of the whole economic system.
Yep. It's a group. It's a group. It's, by the way, I have no opinion one way or the other on crypto.
I know I don't know. But the point of it is, is that you found yourself sort of loop into this world
that someone like you probably you wouldn't assume would be looped into.
Yes. It's one of many experiences I've had.
And I think the whole book started when I was a graduate student and I found myself
writing in a way because I was getting sucked into kind of post-structuralist, post-modern
theorists, which I love.
I love a good intellectual article that I can barely understand.
And everyone's competing to act, to be the smartest.
And I, you know, at a certain point,
I had produced this paper and a friend of mine read it.
He's a journalist and he said,
"'This doesn't even sound like you.'"
But I'd been congratulated for being like the smartest
in the class and kind of found myself in that road.
I could have kept going and I caught a glimpse of myself
like 20 years in the future
when I wouldn't even be recognizable to myself.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. And it's happened in so many ways, but it really taught me that we're all capable of things
that we don't think are possible if the circumstances permit it and our own thoughts lead us there.
One line I love from my research is the inventor of deprogramming is a guy
named Ted Patrick whose son was almost like abducted into a cult when his son was 13.
And he said, it's not so much that you start to think differently, it's that you start
to feel differently about how you think.
That's good. That's good. That's really good. By the way, everybody, just because you agree
with something somebody believes or something believes or a group believes doesn't mean you agree with everything.
And we also have this almost confirmation bias. We're like, well, I agree with those three things.
So I probably should agree with the other two that I know I don't agree with.
That's why the title of the book, I just want to say this to everybody, The Instability of Truth.
And to me, what that says is,
it's not as stable as you think.
You should question it.
You should question truth.
You should question truth about yourself,
the world, what you believe, your friends, your relationships.
To me, that's an alive life.
Someone who's questioning their existence
and where they're gonna go when they leave here.
Those will help you find the answers in your life.
But so many people are just blindly going through life and where they're going to go when they leave here. Those will help you find the answers in your life.
But so many people are just blindly going through life,
believing their truth is true about themselves.
And a lot of it isn't, and it's limiting.
By the way, you're proving it to be true.
It's a weird matrix because you're confirming it's true.
But the fact of the matter is you should be open
to the possibility that maybe there's another truth.
And especially, I think people might often think or in my circles, people think like,
I'm so smart and educated, this could never happen to me.
You know, that IQ or some superior qualities or whatever you think it is would protect you,
but these things actually don't protect you. They can actually make it more powerful.
The spell of delusion. The spell of delusion.
The spell of delusion. All right everybody, her book is called The
Instability of Truth. You should go get it and her name is Rebecca Lamov and this
was a great conversation today. So Rebecca, thank you so much for being here.
Very much. Thanks so much Ed. It was really fun talking to you. Yeah that was a
good combo. Thank you so much. Share the episode everybody. God bless you.