Man Pleads Guilty to Participating in Online Neo-Nazi Group that Exploited Children into Producing Child Sexual Abuse Material
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/man-pleads-guilty-participating-online-neo-nazi-group-exploited-children-producing-child
NEO NAZI GROOMING
Psychological conditioning—often referred to as brainwashing or coercive persuasion—is a structured process used to systematically break down an individual's identity and replace it with a new set of beliefs.
Here is the step-by-step breakdown of how this process typically functions:
Phase 1: Breaking Down the Self
• Isolation: Cutting off the individual from family, friends, and information sources.
• Assault on Identity: Systematically attacking the person's self-esteem, beliefs, and core values.
• Guilt and Shame: Making the individual feel constantly wrong, guilty, or responsible for failures.
• Crisis Point: Driving the person to an emotional breaking point or existential crisis.
Phase 2: Introducing the New Identity
• Leniency and Relief: Offering a small kindness or escape from pressure when the target complies.
• Compulsion to Confess: Pressuring the individual to denounce their past life, actions, and old belief systems.
• Channeling of Guilt: Directing the target's internal guilt toward a specific "enemy" or old way of thinking.
• Logical Surrender: Forcing the individual to accept that their old worldview is completely flawed.
Phase 3: Rebuilding and Cementing
• The New Worldview: Introducing a new, simplified belief system as the absolute truth.
• Social Acceptance: Rewarding compliance with affection, inclusion, and a sense of belonging in a new group.
• Final Confession and Pledge: Publicly swearing allegiance to the new belief system or leadership.
• Reinforcement: Using repetitive routines, rituals, and ongoing social pressure to maintain the new identity.