Diary of a Psychosis
I couldn't finish that book. It made me far too angry.
It's ok for me in small doses. :) I want to keep the memory (kind of) fresh. We tend to forget how it felt too easily, at least I do.
Diary of a Psychosis
I couldn't finish that book. It made me far too angry.
It's ok for me in small doses. :) I want to keep the memory (kind of) fresh. We tend to forget how it felt too easily, at least I do.
(((covid))) was the mass-scale Stanford Prison Experiment. The plandemic was used to get people to do what the prison guards did in the experiment by enabling the vaxxinated with power over the pure bloods. The vaxxed quickly used their perceived power to turn those who opposed the vaxx into subhuman garbage and call for violent treatment of them with some vaxxies actually acting out these violent threats. The jews knew exactly what they were doing with their (((plandemic))).
Here's an AI synopsis of the Stanford Prison Experiment for you
The psychology prison experiment, also known as the Stanford Prison Experiment, was a 1971 study where male college students were randomly assigned to act as either prisoners or guards in a simulated prison. The "guards" quickly became abusive and the "prisoners" became passive and distressed, leading the experiment to be terminated early on the sixth day after a fellow psychologist raised concerns about the participants' well-being. The study is often cited as evidence for the powerful influence of social roles and situational factors on behavior.
The setup: Participants were evaluated for psychological stability before being randomly assigned to be either a "prisoner" or a "guard". The "prisoners" were arrested by real police, processed, and given a smock and a number. The "guards" were given uniforms, reflected sunglasses, and instructed to prevent escape, while the "prisoners" were stripped of their identities.
The results: The experiment quickly escalated, with the "guards" exhibiting increasingly brutal behavior, and the "prisoners" suffering psychological distress, leading to one prisoner's release on the first day.
The termination: After a fellow psychologist, Christina Maslach, visited and confronted him about the unethical conditions, experimenter Philip Zimbardo decided to end the study prematurely on the sixth day.
The interpretation: The experiment is often used to illustrate how situational factors can lead ordinary people to behave in ways that are contrary to their usual character, with a significant number of "guards" adopting authoritarian and abusive behaviors, while the "prisoners" became submissive.
Criticism: Some critics have questioned the experiment's methods and findings, pointing out that not all guards acted sadistically and that the experiment's conclusion may have been influenced by demand characteristics.
I knew about that experiment and yes, that's part of what was going on. It disillusioned me massively about my so called fellow citizens. Maybe that was a blessing in disguise.
I got my own ideas of what to do with those Democrats. Some ideas involve reeducation camps (731 camps), some involve forced labor until death camps, but the majority involve something far more sinister. Just for a taste of the true sinister I have in mind, many will be forced to read veggietales stories to kids. Buhahahaha.
Noncompliance- the big no-no. The breakdown of discussion is where this starts. Discussion leads to revealing, nay, noticing. Noticing is very bad.