>>6966807 (cont'd)
Information War
History of social control systems.
[Henry Murray, Harvard, more to come]
From late 1959 to early 1962, Murray was responsible for experiments that have come widely to be considered unethical, in which he used twenty-two Harvard undergraduates as research subjects. Among other goals, experiments sought to measure individuals' responses to extreme stress.
The unwitting undergraduates were submitted to what Murray called "vehement, sweeping and personally abusive" attacks. Specifically-tailored assaults to their egos, cherished ideas and beliefs were used to cause high levels of stress and distress. The subjects then viewed recorded footage of their reactions to this verbal abuse repeatedly.
Among them was 17-year-old Ted Kaczynski, a mathematician who went on to become the Unabomber, a domestic terrorist targeting academics and technologists for 18 years.[5] Alston Chase's book Harvard and the Unabomber: The Education of an American Terrorist connects Kaczynski's abusive experiences under Murray to his later criminal career.[5] In 1960, Timothy Leary started research in psychedelic drugs at Harvard, which Murray is said to have supervised.
Murray's experiments were part of, or indemnified by, the US Government's research
into mind control known as the MK ULTRA project .
Since the days of Key and Cantril and Murray, fMRI and ingenious experiments by behavioral economists like Daniel Kahneman, Dan Ariely and many others have confirmed in a multitude of ways that habits,hunches, and conditioned responses is responsible for almost all non-formal human decision making.
Even complex, procedural logic driven human decision-making has an intuitive component, which anyone involved with the advertising, market research or media content production knows. For this reason, tactics and technologies which reliably influence the unconscious component of mind are highly
developed. National, regional and local media are freighted with sounds, symbols and images, unperceived messages targeting consumers' unconscious, to be retained and held in memory to influence future decision-making.
As professor Wilson Bryan Key put it, “In spite of the evidence presented in this book, most
Americans will still find it difficult to believe that their trusted, high-credibility information sources long ago betrayed them into the hands of profit hungry marketing executives who have quietly researched, developed and exhaustively applied a subliminal technology of communication that is now driving every
larger segments of the population to pathological behaviors. “
Subliminal and subsonic influence tactics are seldom discussed in legacy media, not because the tactics
are ineffective and rarely used, but because they are so effective that the advertising-supported media
superorganism considers them critical to the function of the industry. Subliminal advertising is illegal,
though the laws against it are both feeble and likely unenforceable, having been openly transgressed for
the term of their existence and since the business model of advertising supported media depends on
their nullity. The manipulation of individuals, identity groups and national populations after world war 2
was held critical to “national security;” subliminals are key to that manipulation. Advertising and media
content targeting viewer’s unconscious mind has been augmented by techniques like hypnotic
induction, subsonic “whisper” acoustics and images which stimulate aggression, sexual arousal or
instinctual response. As previously noted, the power of these exploits, their depth of penetration and range of their reach has been greatly enhanced by the advent of networked media technologies.
The presumed independence and competitive operation of entertainment and communications industry
is illusory. The media may be considered as a single functionally integrated parasitic organism which includes the advertising industry. “Simply expressed, what is consciously perceived by individuals, groups or nations has little or nothing to do with the physical, biological, economic and social realities the perceptions represent. “