That's not strictly true. For instance if you were under and told to kill your mother or someone you knew, cared about then the anxiety that produces would be sufficient to bring you out of hypnosis. However if that reality was changed so that the person you cared about was not perceived to be that person (doesn't have to be someone you care about either, just someone/thing where your internal morality could kick in to prevent you)....
I think in the 40's or 50's the US experimented on US soldiers, and one officer was told that the next man to come in the the room (something like that) was a Japanese soldier about to kill him (might have been German but you get the picture, he was told it was an enemy about to kill him) when someone entered the room he legit tried to kill them before he was killed (as he believed). The guy who entered the room was his Superior Officer, but he didn't see that he saw an enemy soldier. So effectively if you change the reality of the subject so it becomes morally acceptable to do harm, then that apparently is successful.
The connection between mass shooting and ssri is undeniable. Any one who prescribes them should be held criminally liable. People should file a class action against pharma for loss of life now that remington took a hit for sandy hook, setting that standard.
Slows the neuronic transfer between the synapses leaving you in limbo between thoughts (assimilation of prerequisites of connections in thought formation), making you questioning the reality/validity of your own thoughts.
I don't know if it's truly 100% disassociative like paranoid schizophrenia but I imagine it gets you most of the way there.
Feds: Airport shooting suspect complained of mind control
Kevin Johnson, and Tom Vanden BrookUSA TODAY
Two months before Esteban Santiago allegedly unleashed a deadly assault inside the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, the 26-year-old former National Guardsman showed up unannounced – and troubled – at the Anchorage, Alaska offices of the FBI.
There, according to the FBI, Santiago told federal authorities that U.S. intelligence agencies had gained control of his mind and were urging him to fight for the Islamic State terror group. While the report was initially alarming, it was soon clear that the young man's reported complaint was more a cry for medical treatment than a matter meriting the attention of counter-terrorism officials.
"During the interview, Santiago appeared agitated and incoherent, and made disjointed statements,'' the FBI said in a statement Friday night. "Although Santiago stated that he did not wish to harm anyone, as a result of his erratic behavior, interviewing agents contacted local authorities who took custody of Santiago and transported him to a local medical facility for evaluation. The FBI closed its assessment of Santiago after conducting database reviews, inter-agency checks, and interviews of his family members.''
A background check, while revealing a brief military deployment to Iraq as a member of the Puerto Rico National Guard, found no nexus to terror.
Local Anchorage police authorities did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
I was under the impression that hypnosis couldn't make you do anything you were vehemently opposed to doing.
Meaning this guy was disturbed enough to actually do this, and then encouraged--groomed, you could say--to do it.
That's not strictly true. For instance if you were under and told to kill your mother or someone you knew, cared about then the anxiety that produces would be sufficient to bring you out of hypnosis. However if that reality was changed so that the person you cared about was not perceived to be that person (doesn't have to be someone you care about either, just someone/thing where your internal morality could kick in to prevent you)....
I think in the 40's or 50's the US experimented on US soldiers, and one officer was told that the next man to come in the the room (something like that) was a Japanese soldier about to kill him (might have been German but you get the picture, he was told it was an enemy about to kill him) when someone entered the room he legit tried to kill them before he was killed (as he believed). The guy who entered the room was his Superior Officer, but he didn't see that he saw an enemy soldier. So effectively if you change the reality of the subject so it becomes morally acceptable to do harm, then that apparently is successful.
Scary ain't it. Our minds are very malleable.
Okay, this reminds me of that movie Zoolander.
MerMAN!
The connection between mass shooting and ssri is undeniable. Any one who prescribes them should be held criminally liable. People should file a class action against pharma for loss of life now that remington took a hit for sandy hook, setting that standard.
Crazy the way it works, as I understand it.
Slows the neuronic transfer between the synapses leaving you in limbo between thoughts (assimilation of prerequisites of connections in thought formation), making you questioning the reality/validity of your own thoughts. I don't know if it's truly 100% disassociative like paranoid schizophrenia but I imagine it gets you most of the way there.
That's some evil stuff.
Pharmkeia is black magic
He wasn’t vehemently opposed.
Feds: Airport shooting suspect complained of mind control Kevin Johnson, and Tom Vanden BrookUSA TODAY
Two months before Esteban Santiago allegedly unleashed a deadly assault inside the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, the 26-year-old former National Guardsman showed up unannounced – and troubled – at the Anchorage, Alaska offices of the FBI.
There, according to the FBI, Santiago told federal authorities that U.S. intelligence agencies had gained control of his mind and were urging him to fight for the Islamic State terror group. While the report was initially alarming, it was soon clear that the young man's reported complaint was more a cry for medical treatment than a matter meriting the attention of counter-terrorism officials.
"During the interview, Santiago appeared agitated and incoherent, and made disjointed statements,'' the FBI said in a statement Friday night. "Although Santiago stated that he did not wish to harm anyone, as a result of his erratic behavior, interviewing agents contacted local authorities who took custody of Santiago and transported him to a local medical facility for evaluation. The FBI closed its assessment of Santiago after conducting database reviews, inter-agency checks, and interviews of his family members.''
A background check, while revealing a brief military deployment to Iraq as a member of the Puerto Rico National Guard, found no nexus to terror.
Local Anchorage police authorities did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In 30% maybe....but if they are impressionable then the seeds the therapist plants will germinate if you will.