Anonymous ID: 71aed4 May 17, 2020, 6:30 a.m. No.9210292   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0418

The Princeton psychologist Hadley Cantril was central to development of the science of propaganda:

Hadley Cantril was Nelson Rockefeller's roommate at Dartmouth in the 1920's and his 1935 doctorate

was on "The Psychology of Radio". Here's a quote from it:

“Radio is an altogether novel medium of communication, preeminent as a means of social control and

epochal in its influence upon the mental horizons of men.”

Cantril joined Princeton in 1936 and became president of the "Institute for Propaganda Analysis" and

founding editor in 1938 of the Rockefeller Foundation-funded "Public Opinion Quarterly" which was

associated with the US government's psychological warfare efforts after World War II. He became chairman of the Princeton Psychology department. The Rockefeller Foundation gave him a $67K grant to

form the "Princeton Radio Project".

The official story is that the October 30, 1938 radio broadcast of H.G. Wells' "War of the Worlds" just

happened to occur outside of Princeton and Cantril and associates took the opportunity to do an

extensive study of people's responses and to write a book and do studies on the event. At the time, it

was the largest mass persuasion event in human history.

In 1940 Cantril wrote "The Invasion From Mars: A Study in the Psychology of Panic".

The Rockefeller Foundation was especially interested in manipulating public opinion during wartime.

Their 1939 report said: “The war in Europe has given this country an unusual opportunity for studying

the development of public opinion, the changes which opinion undergoes

under varying conditions, and the reasons for change.”

and that the project:

"would supply essential facts on the formation and trend of opinion from peace to war time and from

one stage to another under the force of successive war crises. It is expected that further analysis of the

data will demonstrate the influence of such factors as family relationship, educational experience, and

occupation; the group origins of reported intensity of opinion or apparent lack of it on many issues"

They helped guide American public opinion as America joined World War II in 1941.

Rockefeller was moving their banking and oil interests into South America and were excited about using

the new "soft power" of psychological operations to monitor and shape public opinion there. They

funded Cantril and George Gallup to create "American Social Surveys" to assess public opinion in South

America. They did the same in the US. and Roosevelt used Cantril's findings to craft his speeches during

the war. They also did projects with the Psychological Warfare Branch of Military Intelligence in North

Africa, the Department of State on US attitudes toward foreign affairs, and the Office of Strategic

Services on German public opinion.

Over time, the Rockefellers especially but many other groups funded ever more sophisticated public

opinion monitoring and manipulation techniques and used them for both business and politics.

The War of the Worlds (radio drama)

That event seems to now be understood on at least 5 levels and was related to the study of propaganda

for business and to get the US into World War II:

  1. Dramatic Orson Welles radio show intended to move an audience

  2. Rockefeller funded Princeton study to see how influenced a population could be by an emotionally

powerful media

  1. The real manipulation was to test whether people would believe that others would believe the

performance was real and

become hysterical. Early investigation into shifting a population's beliefs about other people!

  1. Denial of the panic as "fake news" and a "naturally arising" myth

  2. Claim that newspaper stories created the myth because "radio was a threat to newspapers" and they

wanted to discredit it.

Anonymous ID: 71aed4 May 17, 2020, 6:36 a.m. No.9210336   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0633 >>0648 >>0706 >>0741 >>0761 >>0900 >>0952 >>1000

[Henry Murray, Harvard, more to come]

 

From late 1959 to early 1962, Murray was responsible for experiments, now widely viewed as 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. 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.

 

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

 

Murray was also a heavy amphetamine user who performed SM rituals with his longtime personal assistant. Devoted to ISIS. Much more to did on this important figure in clown's MK Ultra research program.