DAY 4, GRAND JURY Corona Cmte, Reiner Fuellmich - psychological warfare
Four parts (Meredith Miller, Adriane Bilheran, Q&A, Yale Study in details) – this is Part 3
Feb 19, 2022
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>>15735789 Meredith Miller on Psychological Manipulation
>>15741032, >>15741047 Ariane Bilheran on CV19 totalitarianism
>>15766485, >>15766497 Q&A on Psychological Manipulation
Meredith Miller briefly discussed this Yale study - eye opening investigation on how to indoctrinate citizens to not only accept CV19 jabs but to promote them to others. DEEPER DIG below.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34774363/
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04460703?cond=covid19+messaging&draw=2&rank=7
Persuasive messaging to increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake intentions
ABSTRACT
Widespread vaccination remains the best option for controlling the spread of COVID-19 and ending the pandemic.
[LIE]
Despite the considerable disruption the virus has caused to people's lives, many people are still hesitant to receive a vaccine. Without high rates of uptake, however, the pandemic is likely to be prolonged.
[LIE]
Here we use two survey experiments to study how persuasive messaging affects COVID-19 vaccine uptake intentions.
ethical considerations?
In the first experiment, we test a large number of treatment messages. One subgroup of messages draws on the idea that mass vaccination is a collective action problem and highlighting the prosocial benefit of vaccination or the reputational costs that one might incur if one chooses not to vaccinate. Another subgroup of messages built on contemporary concerns about the pandemic, like issues of restricting personal freedom or economic security.
We find that persuasive messaging that invokes prosocial vaccination and social image concerns is effective at increasing intended uptake and also the willingness to persuade others and judgments of non-vaccinators.
We replicate this result on a nationally representative sample of Americans and observe that prosocial messaging is robust across subgroups, including those who are most hesitant about vaccines generally.
''The experiments demonstrate how persuasive messaging can induce individuals to be more likely to vaccinate and also create spillover effects to persuade others to do so as well.''