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social climate:

the general character of the social milieu in which individuals and groups live; that is, the totality of the prevailing customs, mores, and attitudes that influence their behavior and adjustment.

https://dictionary.apa.org/social-climate

Social Climate Research J. B. Bennett

Abstract Social climate (psychological climate, social context) is typically defined as the perceptions of a social environment that tend to be shared by a group of people. Climate is rooted in perception (“how I see the way things are done or how people treat each other around here”). Culture refers more to the beliefs, values, and norms that comprise the interdependent experiences and practices of larger collectives (“what we—as a group—should do and why and how we do it”) (Deninson, 1996; Schneider, 1990). Like meteorological or atmospheric climate, social climate is relatively distinctive across groups (as the tropics differ from the Himalayas), is dynamic or changeable within groups (like the seasons), and can influence behavior (like an individual's choice of clothing). Social climate research has grown considerably since White and Lippitt's (1960) early experiments comparing democratic, autocratic, and laissez-faire leadership in small groups of children. The concept and measurement of social climate have since been applied across widely diverse disciplines both within and outside the field of psychology.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9780470479216.corpsy0885#:~:text=Social%20climate%20(psychological%20climate%2C%20social,each%20other%20around%20here%E2%80%9D).

The Deep State has been attempting to change the social climate with their fake pandemic and plans for their 'Great Reset'.

We are making change in society by exposing the Deep State. And we're winning!

social climate: the general character of the social milieu in which individuals and groups live; that is, the totality of the prevailing customs, mores, and attitudes that influence their behavior and adjustment. https://dictionary.apa.org/social-climate Social Climate Research J. B. Bennett Abstract Social climate (psychological climate, social context) is typically defined as the perceptions of a social environment that tend to be shared by a group of people. Climate is rooted in perception (“how I see the way things are done or how people treat each other around here”). Culture refers more to the beliefs, values, and norms that comprise the interdependent experiences and practices of larger collectives (“what we—as a group—should do and why and how we do it”) (Deninson, 1996; Schneider, 1990). Like meteorological or atmospheric climate, social climate is relatively distinctive across groups (as the tropics differ from the Himalayas), is dynamic or changeable within groups (like the seasons), and can influence behavior (like an individual's choice of clothing). Social climate research has grown considerably since White and Lippitt's (1960) early experiments comparing democratic, autocratic, and laissez-faire leadership in small groups of children. The concept and measurement of social climate have since been applied across widely diverse disciplines both within and outside the field of psychology. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9780470479216.corpsy0885#:~:text=Social%20climate%20(psychological%20climate%2C%20social,each%20other%20around%20here%E2%80%9D). The Deep State has been attempting to change the social climate with their fake pandemic and plans for their 'Great Reset'. We are making change in society by exposing the Deep State. And we're winning!

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This is a simplistic, but good introductory, list of notable social psychology experiments. https://www.verywellmind.com/famous-social-psychology-experiments-2795667

They all blatantly relate to our current social climate. Accidental? I think not. For example - how much violence was on television in the late 50's/early 60's? Not much. Funny how the violence appeared after the Bobo doll experiment showed that children were more likely to exhibit aggressive behavior when it was modeled for them.

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There was a lot of violence in children's cartoons in the 50s - 60s. Those of us who grew up with that were being normalized to real violence in the world at large that started coming about later on. Now they're normalizing children to sex, transgenderism, and pedophilia.

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There was a lot of violence in children's cartoons in the 50s - 60s.

OMW - I didn't think about cartoons - but yes, you're right - people being flattened, blown up, etc. One I remember was a spanking machine that was a wheel with shoes attached to kick the character. Using "pretend" to usher in a new normal - like they're doing with VR (and, of course, other programming) now.

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The Roadrunner and Wily Coyote were particularly violent cartoons.

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The Bennington College study was one of the earliest looking at how social climate correlated with attitude change. Given the fact that psychology was a rather new discipline in the 1930's, it's no accident that TPTB were interested in the factors involved in attitude change, and, perhaps most importantly, how those attitudes could be cemented longitudinally. https://psychology.iresearchnet.com/social-psychology/social-psychology-experiments/bennington-college-study/

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late adolescence is a key time for change and influence in people’s social and political attitudes.

This is why they have so many in this age group involved in Antifa/BLM.

But it really doesn't take a study to figure this out. Moving into adulthood is when people naturally begin to enter into the world at large and develop/determine their choices and attitudes in respect to it.

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it really doesn't take a study to figure this out.

Agree, but people give credibility to studies - even if and when that credibility isn't merited.