Yeah, seen it tons at the protests. Like when one gal was being asked quesitons her brain shut off and all she did was scream "STAND UP FIGHT BACK" till the guys who she was in NPC mode and yelling at, had to alert one of the girls handlers to go get her.. cuz THEY were concerned about her mental state.
It was greatly developed in sportsball marketing research, IIRC, in the 1950s and 1960s. Sportsball culture as a ritual/cultic universe originated on college campuses. The (already by then established/old) culture of pep rallies, cheers, etc.--it was realized with later social "science" thinking/research that the power of that was how it combined tacit with explicit motor functioning.
If you could teach people to chant sportsball slogans, for instance, and jump up and down in certain ways, you'd capture them at a level beyond just selling them sportsball team A or B.
There was a thing in the '70s and '80s among the Atlanta Braves fans, the "tomahawk chop"--that some of us felt was an intel experiment, given the connection between the Braves and the DS intel community in Atlanta (C cough cough NN cough). There was also "the wave" (whose origin/setting I forget).
There were other realms of this, but this was one I watched pretty closely. It's nothing new overall. Ancient rhetoric, for instance, and ancient mnemotechnics (art of memory) apply these methods. But in the era of the globalist MSM, they have developed all these things to the Nth x a million degree. People can be programmed to vomit slogans just as they can program themselves to ride a bike, paddle a kayak through rapids, sail a boat, or anything else. And at some point all you need is the eliciting setting to spur the behaviors.
Guys, their mental capacity is not engaged! They respond by rote. Hitler, racist, orange man bad, etc. etc. with no evidence, only the programmed repetition of propaganda!
I've seen this within my own social circle. When the subject of politics come up, all of the buzzwords and phrases come to the forefront. It's like pulling the string on a talking doll.
Also related to the "Agent Smith Effect" where you mention a certain trigger phrase and suddenly it's like someone else takes over and starts spouting official narratives against what you had said.
So, as a classical educator, I take advantage of this phenomenon to promote memorizing good information. We put our memory work to songs, use movement, and create hand motions to involve as much of the brain as possible. We then tag the information with a question such as "Tell me about the Korean War," or "What are the Latin noun cases?"
Yeah, seen it tons at the protests. Like when one gal was being asked quesitons her brain shut off and all she did was scream "STAND UP FIGHT BACK" till the guys who she was in NPC mode and yelling at, had to alert one of the girls handlers to go get her.. cuz THEY were concerned about her mental state.
Can repeat, "My Body My Choice," except when it comes to mandatory injections!
That explains the Baizuo very nicely, they can only communicate by slogans that satisfy their sense of moral superiority and political correctness.
YES.
It was greatly developed in sportsball marketing research, IIRC, in the 1950s and 1960s. Sportsball culture as a ritual/cultic universe originated on college campuses. The (already by then established/old) culture of pep rallies, cheers, etc.--it was realized with later social "science" thinking/research that the power of that was how it combined tacit with explicit motor functioning.
If you could teach people to chant sportsball slogans, for instance, and jump up and down in certain ways, you'd capture them at a level beyond just selling them sportsball team A or B.
There was a thing in the '70s and '80s among the Atlanta Braves fans, the "tomahawk chop"--that some of us felt was an intel experiment, given the connection between the Braves and the DS intel community in Atlanta (C cough cough NN cough). There was also "the wave" (whose origin/setting I forget).
There were other realms of this, but this was one I watched pretty closely. It's nothing new overall. Ancient rhetoric, for instance, and ancient mnemotechnics (art of memory) apply these methods. But in the era of the globalist MSM, they have developed all these things to the Nth x a million degree. People can be programmed to vomit slogans just as they can program themselves to ride a bike, paddle a kayak through rapids, sail a boat, or anything else. And at some point all you need is the eliciting setting to spur the behaviors.
Guys, their mental capacity is not engaged! They respond by rote. Hitler, racist, orange man bad, etc. etc. with no evidence, only the programmed repetition of propaganda!
I've seen this within my own social circle. When the subject of politics come up, all of the buzzwords and phrases come to the forefront. It's like pulling the string on a talking doll.
Also related to the "Agent Smith Effect" where you mention a certain trigger phrase and suddenly it's like someone else takes over and starts spouting official narratives against what you had said.
So, as a classical educator, I take advantage of this phenomenon to promote memorizing good information. We put our memory work to songs, use movement, and create hand motions to involve as much of the brain as possible. We then tag the information with a question such as "Tell me about the Korean War," or "What are the Latin noun cases?"
Yes it is a learning / training method -- being used by them for propaganda.