T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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595.1 | a personal statement | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Minus 3 days and waiting | Sun Dec 23 1990 10:15 | 15 |
| I was prompted to enter this note by the way, because of a strong
personal distaste for being told that unless I buy the 'whole'
package, as the definer elucidates it, that I'm not 'x' or 'y' or
'z'. �I've run into this with people who varied from Christian to
Ecologists to Feminists, and I get very tired of people who fell
that have the right to define what is okay for me to think, feel,
do, what ever. I have no intention of subjugating my personal
integrity to any 'ism'. So this particular issue is a strong
'hot' button for me. This is especially true, since I identify
a lot with Wallen, as being a liberal, and ecologist, and a feminist.
But I resist and resent 'mind control' from those who are on
'my side' of the issues, as much and as strongly as I do from
those on the other side.
Bonnie
|
595.2 | | BALMER::MUDGETT | He's reading notes again, Mom! | Sun Dec 23 1990 14:56 | 22 |
| Seasons Greetings from Baltimore,
Rush Linbaugh had a wonderful name for this type of tyrany from the left and
as hard as I try I can't remember what that name is. Here in Baltimore
they have a good example of the tyrany of the left or I would think of a
good principle gone nuts. They are looking for a new Superintentdent of
Schools for Baltimore and it has been alleged that no white applicants
need apply. Though that idea is as wrong as 30 years ago when only
white applicants needed apply for certian jobs I can handle it because
I believe we as a society need to be nudged into accepting change.
The irony of this situation is that Baltimore has a marvalous candidate
who is a princpal in one of its High School who has had wonderful
sucess and is black but his fatal flaw is that he is somewhat conservative
in his policys. Its similar to the Joe Clark problem. The City and the
School Board truly don't care about how well the children of the
city are taught.
You know companys go through this kind of goofiness but they usually can't
handle the bad effects of really shortsighted policys. In Baltimore's
case people move out of the city.
Fred Mudgett
|
595.3 | Maybe just...what side of the fence your on... | 2CRAZY::FLATHERS | Summer Forever | Wed Dec 26 1990 09:17 | 9 |
| Bonnie,
Paul Simon's words from "The Boxer" says it best... "Still a
man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest...."
It's human nature....we all want everybody to share the same
belief/opinions....( sure would make life dull !!! )
Happy Holidays !
|
595.4 | From Raymo's 'Science Musings,' Boston GLOByulE, 12/31/90 | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | a Malediction on you! :-) | Mon Dec 31 1990 10:05 | 27 |
| Sorry to interrupt this string, but it seems fairly relevant (to a man
anyway :-) so I'll put it here.
==============
Female anthropologists met at the U. of Cal. at Santa Cruz to discuss
female biology. The meeting was closed to male researchers, a
restriction that attracted widespread criticism within the scientific
community. One organizer of the conference was quoted in the press as
saying, "At the end of the first day, we were where we'd be after three
days of other conferences." According to the women, male posturing and
filibustering slow scientific conferences.
==============
Reminds me of a =wn= posting awhile back (was it Suzanne Conlon's?)
describing one of the early meetings of the womens' suffrage movement,
where a similar restriction was applied (as I recall, this one on male
speech, not male attendance). The men simply couldn't abide it, and
couldn't "jump out of the system" long enough to realize that their
anguished and protracted protests could be taken as proof of the
original need for the restriction.
BTW my placement of this note here doesn't mean that I think such an
action is wrong, only that it has been taken as wrong by others. As
we've seen demonstrated here in =wn=, this can lead to problems. IMHO
the action taken at UC-SC was debatable but I support it. Not for all
conferences to be sure, but for those whose majorities choose it. Who
knows, other conferences might profit from the example set at UC-SC!
|
595.5 | wonderin | WMOIS::B_REINKE | constantly making exciting discoveries | Thu Jan 10 1991 08:16 | 16 |
| �I find this rather interesting..
One of the reasons that I started this note, aside from my own
personal distaste of what I'd call 'thought control', was to provide
a forum for people who felt they were being treated negatively because
they weren't 'PC' by the standards of this file or other out side
'rules'.
=wn= has been extensively criticized for not 'allowing non PC thought'
but when I started a note to seriously discuss an article in a major
east coast newspaper, which was echoed in the same week by a major
US news magazine, there have been very few replies.
Why is this?
Bonnie
|
595.7 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Jan 10 1991 09:42 | 32 |
| > One of the reasons that I started this note, aside from my own
> personal distaste of what I'd call 'thought control', was to provide
> a forum for people who felt they were being treated negatively because
> they weren't 'PC' by the standards of this file or other out side
> 'rules'.
The trouble is, if you are percieved as PI, you are so busy trying
to explain things, and give examples, that you don't have much time for
many of the other topics.
However, I don't consider this "thought control", the way to get me to
reconsider and re-evaluate, is to come up with some good hard facts,
reason, or logic, or some new aspect that hadn't yet been considered.
Treating me negatively will only prove to me that I am right, and this
is is being used as alast resort.
So, it has the opposite effect to "thought control".
This probably comes under the:
What do you do if someone wants to negotiate?
I evaluate my position, I understand by base line, I understand what
I can trade, and I negotiate.
or
"what do you do if you're attacked".
Well, I entrench, I gather re-enforcements, and I attack.
C'set la vie - it is always interesting.
|
595.8 | "Thought control" by the PC is a so-called PI tactic. | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Thu Jan 10 1991 10:11 | 22 |
| RE: .0 Bonnie
These guys are way behind me - I correctly identified the hysteria
against the politically correct as being McCarthyism (from the right
wingers again, since they invented it) a long time ago.
The idea is to make "politically correct" enough of a political
bogeyman that no person in his/her right mind would want to own
up to being PC. Then, they can pick and choose who to label PC
(as a built-in way to discredit any group they dislike.) The
standard anti-PC claim is that the people in the despised group
were brainwashed or emotionally blackmailed into being there
(since it is presumed that a person couldn't possible hold the
despised political beliefs through actual human thought.)
PC started out as a self-deprecating joke. It never has existed!
Most groups that I see are split in a myriad of ways among the
complete collection of complex issues facing our society.
It amazes me to see people relying on this weak ploy as a way to
gain political ground. Creating political bogeymen never works
for long though. People eventually wise up to it.
|
595.9 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | constantly making exciting discoveries | Thu Jan 10 1991 20:25 | 8 |
| Suzanne,
I've seen this sort of thought control in action, on the left as
well as the right and I dislike it on either side.
Bonnie
p.s. nice to see you in the file again!
|
595.10 | Neither the left nor the right can "control" thoughts. | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 01:11 | 12 |
| RE: .9 Bonnie
"Thought control" itself is a myth, though. While it's sometimes
possible to control what people feel safe saying in public, no
group can control what people think!
It's a scare tactic, nothing more - people make up their own minds
about politics (unless they're locked up in some kind of cult and
subjected to mind control techniques 24 hours a day.)
(P.S. Thanks, but I haven't been away from the file. I've just
been doing my periodic stint as read-only for awhile.)
|
595.12 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 08:10 | 7 |
|
Someone may have an influence about how a person feels about their
thoughts (or about themselves, eg low self-esteem) - but no one can
control what people think. At some point, individuals make decisions
about their opinions, and no other person has real control over what
an individual decides for him/herself about any given issue.
|
595.14 | | MOMCAT::TARBET | for yer ain sweet sake | Fri Jan 11 1991 11:59 | 6 |
| Suzanne, I agree with Eric. I'm put in mind of Himmler's Big Lie
dictum, advertising, and political rhetoric particularly. It seems to
me that if someone doesn't have access to real information, or access
to the intellectual or emotional tools to use the information...her or
his thoughts are indeed being controlled by the system that denies such
access.
|
595.15 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 12:37 | 10 |
| If a system uses dishonesty to convince people to hold certain
political positions, this isn't thought control. The people
still make decisions, albeit with faulty information.
Please describe for me how any group (left or right) can control
how individuals process information that offers a variety of
political choices in our culture (without using cult-level mind
control techniques.)
I don't believe it can be done - especially on a large scale.
|
595.16 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Jan 11 1991 12:50 | 28 |
| > Please describe for me how any group (left or right) can control
> how individuals process information that offers a variety of
> political choices in our culture (without using cult-level mind
> control techniques.)
> I don't believe it can be done - especially on a large scale.
By 1) controlling what information you have access to 2) slanting that
information you do have access to and 3) lying - giving you deliberate
falsehoods.
For example - you apparently believe that we have a variety of political choices
in our culture - I claim we have been brainwashed into believing this. We
cannot, for example, practically choose communism. This country has been
mind controlled into equating Communism with totalitarianism with evil. QED.
In the Soviet Union for many years you, for practical purposes, could not
believe that the Soviet Army had taken out the cream of the Polish army into
the woods and cold-bloodedly murdered them. The information DID NOT EXIST that
would have let you known that.
Mind control doesn't have to be "cult level", our culture has raised "mind
control" to a fine art - it's called "advertising". Advertising's whole purpose
is to influence the way you think. THAT'S ITS REASON FOR BEING. You can argue
that it's not very effective - but I disagree. If it didn't work I don't think
hard headed corporate executives would spend so much money on it. It's degree
of success is measurable - and large.
-- Charles-the-sometime-anarchist
|
595.17 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:03 | 28 |
| When I was 11 years old, all I ever heard was how terrible communism
is (and about the "domino" theory that made it imperative that we
not allow communism to spread.) I had zero exposure to what children
in the Soviet Union were taught about it.
Even so, at 11 years old, I remember realizing (on my own) that it
would make no sense for children in the USSR to be taught that
communism was terrible. They were probably being taught that our
system was as bad as we viewed communism. So it occurred to me that
the relative "badness" of either system could depend on one's
perspective. However, I also knew that we liked our system quite
a bit and would not be happy to lose it, so it made sense to want
to prevent the spread of communism from putting our system in any
danger.
If an 11 year old can see through political rhetoric (without any
assistance whatsoever,) I don't see how either the left or the
right has a prayer of controlling thought in our present information
age.
They spend money on trying to *convince* people to think in certain
ways, but I must reiterate that it isn't thought control if people
have choices about it (after being exposed to the rhetoric, etc.)
If a lot of people *choose* to think a certain way, it isn't thought
control. It's effective lobbying of public opinion.
No one can control the individual decisions that each of us makes
about our political views, though.
|
595.18 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:09 | 16 |
| No one can control the individual decisions that each of us makes
about our political views, though.
I disagree. My decisions have been constrained by the U.S. two party system. If
I want my vote to make a difference I have to choose between two
indistiguishable alternatives - and my vote then doesn't make a difference. My
thoughts in this case haven't been controlled (they are unprintable) but my
decisions have effectively been.
But that's not relevant. If you believe the argument that advertising is mind
control, you should pay attention to the way that modern political campaigns are
run. The candidate is referred to as "the product" and the campaign is almost
purely an advertising campaign. Thought control at its most blatant. Issues are
no longer discussed - the campaign is image, sound bites, and spin control.
-- Charles
|
595.19 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:16 | 20 |
| Decisions in terms of votes are constrained by the available choices
on the ballot, but one can still make personal choices about our
political views (eg, our thoughts.)
As for advertising being mind control, I don't buy that advertising
influence is mind control. People still make choices from the
available options.
Subliminal advertising came close to mind control, but it's illegal
(as far as I know.)
We still have the capacity to make choices. As a result, someone
like Jesse Helms could spend 100 Billion dollars on advertising
(employing every one of my favorite public figures in a campaign
to convince me of his views) - and he could even give me a million
dollars for my own personal use - but he'd never convince me to
share his political views.
I have a choice about it, even if the ballot doesn't give me the
chance to express my preference.
|
595.20 | will wonders never cease | DECWET::JWHITE | bless us every one | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:36 | 3 |
|
i agree with suzanne
|
595.21 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | THAT MAKES SENSE.....NONSENSE! | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:49 | 9 |
| RE: Suzanne
With our form of government and society I would agree
with you.....HOWEVER.....give me a small child and let me control the
infomation (all of it truth) that he/she gets and I can control his *basic*
thought processes.
Dave
|
595.22 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:54 | 14 |
| I agree with Charles in this discussion. I, also, feel constricted by
the 2 party system in the US. I'd prefer a Socialist party to vote
for. Nobody ever gave me the option of deciding if I'd like the views
of a US Communist party, for that matter. I, also, agree that US
school children are badly brainwashed. The teachers never told us in
school about the reforms fought for by the Communist party in the US,
that we all benefit from today. Afterall, our system of government, in
the US, has never worked for *everybody.* If it did, we'd have no
homeless.
The above is all in my opinion of course.
Lorna
|
595.23 | RE: .21 Dave Dawson | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:59 | 14 |
| Well, I wouldn't bet on it, though. When I came to the conclusion
about the relative "badness" of different systems (as I mentioned
earlier,) I did it without any additional information whatsoever.
My son and I used to watch "The World at War" when he was 5 years
old (told from the Allies perspective, of course) - and he had a
profound sense of world politics and 20th century history before
the first grade. Although he'd only been alive for 5 short years,
he could tell you the sequence of events that had happened up to
then (including things that happened before *I* was born, as well
as before he was born.)
It's hard for me to believe that human thought control is possible
to accomplish outside of a cult environment.
|
595.24 | cognitive dissonance and 1984 | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Fri Jan 11 1991 14:09 | 35 |
| A thought on mind control...
Outside forces can obviously control *expression* of thoughts. That
is, if I tell you I will kill you if you say x, and I will let you live
if you say not-x, then I am controlling the expression of your
thoughts.
It is furthermore known in psychology that if you say/do one thing, but
think/feel another, it creates "cognitive dissonance", and
uncomfortable state that your mind will try to resolve. If you believe
x, but say (and act as if you believe) not-x, you will experience
cognitive dissonance. One of the ways for your mind to resolve this is
to start to believe x. It might not even be apparant to your concious
mind that that is what is happening - you might think you have a
million good, rational reasons for believing x...but the real reason
might be cognitive dissonance.
I think this is subtle, and hard to recognize in the small scale, but I
believe it's happening, and that you can see it on a macroscopic scale.
Also, did you read "1984"? Remember the scene at the end where the
fellow acting for Big Brother controls the protagonists thoughts? He
holds up some number of fingers, and asks the prot. how many he is
holding up. The prot. says "three" and get's zapped, and told that no,
it's four. So the next time he holds up three fingers, the prot. says
"four" and get's told no, it's three. This goes on until the prot.'s
mind is *unable* to form *any* opinion about the number of fingers held
up, until he is told. At this point, BB is happy. His thoughts are
now totally controlled by BB.
This is obviously a very extreme example, but I believe the same
principle can work at a more subtle level. I believe outside forces
*do* control our thoughts in this, and other, ways.
D!
|
595.25 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 14:24 | 16 |
| As mentioned earlier, I do believe in cult-level mind control
techniques (which would include the extremes described in "1984.")
I disagree that cognitive dissonance has enough influence to result
in mind control to as much of a degree as you seem to suggest.
Consider the example of a person locked into a hated job with a
boss the person despises. The person may well be forced to greet
the job (and the boss) with a false positive attitude in order to
keep the needed job. Cognitive dissonance would exist, but would
it be enough to make the person start liking both the job & the boss?
It might work in some people's cases, but judging by the number of
people who spend entire working lives hating their jobs - I think
many people can choose *not* to resolve the differences between what
they must say versus what they really think.
|
595.26 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Jan 11 1991 15:22 | 9 |
| > It's hard for me to believe that human thought control is possible
> to accomplish outside of a cult environment.
That's because it works... :-)
[Thass a *joke* son.]
-- Charles
|
595.27 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 15:24 | 5 |
|
RE: .26 Charles
Wise guy. :-) :-)
|
595.28 | The mind boggles. | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Fri Jan 11 1991 15:49 | 15 |
|
I just have one question to ask of those saying that our minds can't be
controlled.....
How would you know if it was? I mean, if you think about it, the best
mind control would be to not give the person being controlled any
inclination that they were being controlled.
How can you safely say that it doesn't exist?
kath
|
595.29 | | MOMCAT::TARBET | for yer ain sweet sake | Fri Jan 11 1991 16:01 | 6 |
| Kath, that's subtle...and I agree with every word.
Suzanne, now I find that you and I are (sorta) in agreement: we define
"mind control" differently, and I agree that as you define it it's not
|
595.30 | | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Fri Jan 11 1991 16:03 | 17 |
|
> Kath, that's subtle...and I agree with every word.
Well, it's certainly something to think about. If our minds were being
controlled in some way, how would we recognize it? It might even be
controlled in such a way that we are led to believe that we are making
our own informed decisions.
I fully believe in what Suzanne is saying, but given my question as a
possibility......we can truly believe the way she's stated, yet still
be controlled and never know it.
Whew........I'm getting a headache thinking about it.
kath
|
595.31 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | freedom: not a gift, but a choice | Fri Jan 11 1991 16:11 | 6 |
| ...took a philosophy course once. spent the whole semester watching
the prof wiggle his finger and ask "did *I* decide to wiggle my finger
this way, or has it been predetermined from the beginning of time
that I will do so?"
I slept a lot in this class
|
595.32 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Jan 11 1991 16:55 | 21 |
| RE: .30 Kath
Interesting idea - how would we know?
Well, I think it would be difficult to find the resources to
control over 200 million people (in this country alone) - and
the controlling would have to be on a pretty individual basis
considering the huge variety of opinions evident in our culture.
When it comes to complete sets of ideas, individuals' viewpoints
are almost as distinctive as fingerprints (although it may not
seem that way at times.)
As a Philosophy major in college, I went through a lot of different
thoughts about the nature of reality - but, luckily, I settled on
Symbolic Logic by my senior year - so I feel secure that my beliefs
have a solid foundation. When I do change my mind about something,
I can see precisely how (and why) it happened.
The thought you brought up does have interesting possibilities, tho.
(Luckily, I have Tylenol handy.) :-)
|
595.33 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Jan 11 1991 17:50 | 28 |
| Ok - let's do a small reality test on this idea that mind control is actually
possible and completely effective.
IF so, then how hard is it to do? If it's hard, how does one learn the
technique? If it requires training, and is hard, and requires many
people to implement, then I would expect we'd see semi-competent dropouts
around - hmm, maybe that's the advertizing industry? Or perhaps it SO effective
that the dropouts are mind controlled into forgetting what they know? Or maybe
they're just killed and we are controlled to not notice. If the technique is
easy and effective then there could be a small cabal of controllers that pass
the technique down only to the initiated. If the group required was large, I
would expect that there would arise conflicts, and that these conflicts would
be noticable. Perhaps the current Iraq conflict is actually an argument in
the ruling cabal? If the technique is too easy then I would expect spontaneous
independent discovery of the techniques. Further I would expect that any
technique could not be 100% effective, and so there will be a minority that
was uncontrolled. It seems to me that they would be in a position to expose
any pervasive control.
So the bottom line is, I don't think we have anything fnord to worry about.
-- Charles
P.S. If you're interested in this kind of stuff, and don't take it too
seriously - check out Robert Anton Wilson's "Illuminati" trilogy. If you're
interested in this kind of stuff and take it seriously, I recommend your local
John Birch Society or any other "conspiracy theory" group.
|
595.34 | don't go anywhere without your sunglasses! | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Fri Jan 11 1991 19:06 | 3 |
| I'm reminded of the movie "They Live".
Dan
|
595.35 | | 7461::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Fri Jan 11 1991 19:11 | 10 |
| Re: .33
I agree with you, Charles, that any mind control technique could not be
100% effective. The way I look at it you can't control someone's
thoughts with a guaranteed result. It depends on the person and the
technique used. So called mind control techniques are used to increase
the likelihood of the desired result, but they can't "control" it in
a deterministic sense. I guess it depends what you mean by "control".
Mary
|
595.36 | feeling cyncical today :-) | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Sun Jan 13 1991 10:28 | 53 |
| Charles, I *do* believe mind-control is happening, but I don't believe
it's a conspiracy, and I don't believe the "ruling cabal" or the
Illuminati type of stuff.
I believe mind-control is happening on a daily basis. Parents control
the thoughts of their children. Advertisers control the thoughts of TV
viewers. The politicos control the thoughts of the populace.
I don't believe it is 100% effective...I don't believe there is anyone
out there deciding "I want Diana Carroll to believe that there are
advertisers controlling her thoughts" or "I want Charles Haynes to
think conspiracy theories are silly" or "I want John Doe to teach his
children the ABC's." I think thought control is happening at a more
subtle, higher-level way.
I believe *attempted* thought-control is a natural artifact of
civilization - but the larger and more dense the society, and the more
effective the techniques of communication, the more effective the
thought-control will be. I believe a certain amount of comformity is
necessary for a society to survive, and therefore the society will try
to impose it's collective ideas on it's constituents. At a very basic
level, this happens by people shunning their neighbors who don't follow
the status quo, by making laws against certain extrememly
non-comformist activities, by teaching our children *very* thoroughly
against taking certain paths.
Yes, some people can get by this. It isn't 100% effective. But at
what cost? And how many original thinkers are there for every dozen
"sheep" in our society?
Take a child, and expose him to the concept that "x is good" 5 times a
day, every day, from the moment until he is born until the moment he
dies. use whatever imagery is most effective for his age: when he is
2, associate x with food. When he is 4, associate x with parental
love. When he is 6, associate x with friends. When he is 13,
associate x with physical beauty. When he is 20, associate x with
love. When he is 30, associate x with money. etc. Do you not think
that he will believe that x is good? Not only will he believe it, he
will *feel* it to the very core of his being, and the suggestion
otherwise will be repugnant to him. Unlearning that mental
conditioning isn't *impossible* but difficult, and unlikely that he
would even see a need. And he will raise his kid with the same imagery
that was given him.
Another aspect of mind control is language. You can't *think* about
something you don't have the words for. How many people invent words
to explain concepts they feel vaguely but can't conceptualize until
they have a word? Some, yes, but not many. Our language enforces
certain thoughts and especially certain thought-processes on all of us.
It's another example of the non-conspiratorial nature of society
imposing thought-control on it's members.
D!
|
595.37 | Question Authority | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Sun Jan 13 1991 16:18 | 26 |
| Completely agree with D! -- and would add that "mind control" is easier
in the United States because of how isolated we are from the rest of the
world.
How many of you read a foreign language; and how many of you that can actually
read a foreign-language newspaper regularly?
For example, what do you know about European Social Democracy? The
"mind control" people have taught you about high taxes and oppressive
bureacracy. (Mention Sweden to someone: all they know is Socialism,
high taxes, and suicide -- why is that?)
Every time you read "the Free World" as a description for "our side,"
you are being exposed to propaganda/mind-control. Whether you agree
with it or not.
During the last winter olympics, one of the NPR reporters interviewed
a Yugoslavian woman:
"How can you live in a country that doesn't permit free speech?"
"You can *you* live in a country where you can't walk in the park at night?"
Which of these people were "mind-controlled?"
Martin.
|
595.38 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Sun Jan 13 1991 16:28 | 54 |
| RE: .36 D!
Well, I disagree that "mind control" is a term that best reflects
what you described. I would call it "lobbying for public opinion."
In our culture, we have the capacity to make personal decisions
about our viewpoints, so we are constantly exposed to material
designed to sway our opinions one way or another (or several ways.)
Ultimately, we still make our own decisions about what we think
- the persuasiveness of the various arguments have an affect on us,
but sometimes these can be ignored in favor of "blind faith" that
has been fostered for a particular belief (which overrides every-
thing else.)
As an example, my 20 year old son has been taught from pre-school
on up that he shouldn't start smoking. I can remember hearing him
tell my Mother (when he was 3 years old!!) that smoking is bad for
the health. He was a bit confused about the details - he told her
that her heart would turn black. :-) But he knew that it was a
health hazard of some sort, at least.
Today, nearly all his friends (his own age) smoke. He doesn't do
it himself, but he comes home with clothes that smell like smoke
every time he goes out with friends (and he tells me that almost
every one of them smokes.)
So - while *they* were able to ignore the message about not smoking,
my son is able to ignore the peer pressure involved with refraining
from smoking while most of his friends do it. So whose mind has been
controlled (and which control would be more compelling to a young
person?)
People make decisions about these things. As a parent, you can lobby
certain beliefs and attitudes with your child, but there is ZERO
guarantee that the child will accept them. The final decision will
be his/hers.
Is it wrong to lobby individuals with certain beliefs or opinions?
It's a natural function of the fact that humans make their own final
decisions (at some level) about what we think.
Even the strictest Communist countries have dissidents who risk
prison and death for their beliefs. Look at how many people came
forward to demonstrate during the early days of Tianenmen Square.
The individuals who survived this attempt at revolution can't say
what they think about it now, but the government can't stop them
from having beliefs contrary to the political/social ideology
required by law there.
"Mind control" is too strong a term for lobbying public opinion,
especially when it is used to convince one side of a debate that
they owe their beliefs to brainwashing (which is the tactic being
used by the right to attempt to sway people away from the left
these days.)
|
595.39 | a good note .-1, except for the last paragraph | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Sun Jan 13 1991 16:48 | 12 |
| re .38,
>> "Mind control" is too strong a term for lobbying public opinion,
>> especially when it is used to convince one side of a debate that
>> they owe their beliefs to brainwashing (which is the tactic being
>> used by the right to attempt to sway people away from the left
>> these days.)
No, no, it's used by the left to sway people away from
the right.
Dan
|
595.40 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Sun Jan 13 1991 17:03 | 13 |
| RE: .39 Dan D'Eramo
> No, no, it's used by the left to sway people away from
> the right.
It's used most often these days to discredit the left (especially
those accused of being "politically correct.")
Notice who is identified as PC in the basenote - it mentions
race, feminism, ecology and beliefs about Third World oppression.
Talk about a dead giveaway to whose interests are attempting to
be served.
|
595.41 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Sun Jan 13 1991 17:23 | 10 |
| re "it's used" ... I wish all sides would do more to
encourage independent thought. Or should I call it
"individual thought"? Maybe Mrs. Bush can slip a shout
of "Challenge Authority!" into one of her literacy
commercials.
I'm glad you have resumed writing here again Suzanne.
Welcome back!
Dan
|
595.42 | you are getting SLEEEEEPY.... | TLE::D_CARROLL | Give PEACE a chance | Sun Jan 13 1991 18:46 | 48 |
| Still disagree, Suzanne.
I think there is a difference between mind-control as I describe it and
"lobbying" as you call it, and I think both occur.
Your son (and his friends) got two messages: one that smoking was bad
(from Dr. Koop, you [presumably], the American Lung assoc. etc) and one
that smoking was good (from ads in magazines, etc.) Merits of both
were presented. I agree that this is not an example of mind-control
but of persuasion.
mind-control would be achieved through being present with *one*
message, and the concept that it can't even be *questioned*, that it is
a *logical* truth and can be no other way. The problem with talking
about this sort of mind-control is that it is awfully hard to point to
particular things and say "We have been 'forced' to think this" because
inherent in the nature of this sort of mind-control is that you don't
question the premise, and it doesn't even occur to you (if the control
is effective) that it could be any other way.
So I can't point to *currently* very effective controls. The best I
do is point to past ones...I think racism and sexism are both examples
of cultural mind-control and that is why they are so hard to overcome,
even now that we recognize them for what they are. Anti-communism.
Pro-capitalism. The importance of money. The definition of beauty.
(Now that I think about it, this last one is a good example of how
effective it can be...our culture dictates who is considered beautiful.
And even after people realize that they have been manipulated into
thinking certain things are beautiful, the truth is, they still think
that! I recognize that it is my society that has made me find tall,
long-legged slim blonde women attractive, but even so, I still find them
attractive.)
There were studies that I can't quote cause i forgot :-) that we
discussed in one of my psych classes about how people from different
cultures approached problem-solving differently. It wasn't genetic, it
was cultural - people raised in different cultures, and with different
languages, approached things differently.
I think a good analogy would be learning to speak. It has been shown
that infants can utter and discriminate between a wide range of vocal
noises - as the infant devlops, learning one or two languages, their
ability to vocalize and to discriminate between noises not made in
their language goes away, never to be regained. To many Chinese, an
"l" and an "r" *sound* alike. Their culture has affected their
verbal-processing mechanism.
D! who isn't sure she is making any sense but knows what she means :-)
|
595.43 | It's a matter of degrees of the same thing. | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Sun Jan 13 1991 19:02 | 35 |
| RE: .42 D!
What you seem to be describing as "mind-control" strikes me as
fad, fashion, and cultural trend-setting.
As an example, it's extremely trendy right now to call people
"politically correct" - it's a fad to use this as a way to
discredit other groups with the implication that PC people
refrain from attaining their ideology via human thought (and,
worse, to claim outright that they're involved in some sinister
conspiracy to persecute those with opposing views.)
The people who overuse accusations like "politically correct" -
are they the victims of mind-control, or are they merely susceptible
to fashion? In another 10 years, some other popular, trendy way
to put down rights groups will be available (as people begin to wise
up to the myths about the politically correct.) Another fad will
take its place.
As insidious as it is, I don't agree that it amounts to mind-control.
It's more a matter of the fact that some people in our culture derive
pleasure or gratification from being perceived as "in" or "cool."
When it comes to fashion involved with sexual attraction, there are
norms but variations do exist. If they didn't, only people with one
certain hair color, height or body type would be getting married and
reproducing (and we KNOW this isn't the case.)
If mind control through the repetition of ONE MESSAGE were possible,
a million people in Tianenmen Square (in the early days of the
demonstration) would have wondered what the heck the fuss was about
when they *knew* their present system was so wonderful as is. Right?
It's all a matter of varying degrees of lobbying for public opinion
(eg, influencing current fad and fashion.) Human beings still have
the option of making other choices.
|
595.44 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Sun Jan 13 1991 19:07 | 9 |
| It seems to ME that fad, fashion, and cultural-trend setting are
precisely the faces that "mind control" have in our culture - that's
how it's accomplished. It's also known as "peer-pressure" and "going
along with th crowd". You can call it what you like, but I claim it
quacks like a duck.
-- Charles
(noting from the Boston Marriott Copley Plaza)
(anyone want to come in to town tomorrow night and BS?)
|
595.45 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Sun Jan 13 1991 19:18 | 16 |
| RE: .44 Charles
Ok, I will agree that fad, fashion and cultural trend-setting have
been used over the centuries to oppress groups (by making it a
norm to regard certain groups as inferior, etc.) - but there were
always individuals who knew better and who had the power to change
the fashion (albeit slowly) by promulgating another message. This
is how social change occurs.
If individuals can come up with completely new ideas in the face
of overwhelming opinion to the contrary - and if these individuals
can engineer movements to expose others to their new ideas (and
we *know* this has happened) - then human minds can be temporarily
influenced but *not* effectively controlled.
Humans do have the resouces to see beyond fad, fashion and trends.
|
595.47 | | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Mon Jan 14 1991 10:18 | 28 |
| Let's see, what are some of *our* PC beliefs?
-- Americans have freedom of speech.
-- One individual working alone can change the world.
-- Democracy is the best political system.
-- The "free market" is the best economic system.
-------------------------
The central figures of the American popular myths are based on the
John Wayne -> Clint Eastwood (Dirty Harry) -> Sylvester Stallone (Rambo)
lone cowboy who sets off on his own, breaks the rules, and "gets the
job done." Female equivalents are fewer in number, but might well
include the Jane Fonda character in "They Shoot Horses, Don't They."
and the Sigorney Weaver character in "Aliens."
Indeed, the fact that female characters do not generally share in
this aspect of the American myth is also part of our culture's PC-ness.
What is clear, however, is that we *do not* build our myths around
cooperation but of dominance. I.e., compare the different "myths" shown
by Dirty Harry and the Fonda/Hopper/Nicholson trio in Easy Rider; two films
from roughly the same time period.
Martin.
|
595.48 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Mon Jan 14 1991 14:45 | 4 |
| It seems to me much of what is being called "mind control" in the past few notes
would have been called enculturization in anthropology 101. It's a grand human
tradition to pass on our beliefs to the next generation. As such it is not "bad"
per se. It's the way human society tries to perpetuate itself. liesl
|
595.49 | We're right, of course. | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:36 | 13 |
| Here's another example of "PC" "mind-control" that we've seen a lot of
in the past few weeks and will see much more of in the future:
From the Boston Globe, Monday, Jan 14:
"... somehow President Saddam Hussein of Iraq will come to
his senses and withdraw from Kuwait before the United Nations
deadline of midnight tomorrow."
Would you believe that Iraq newspapers are writing "... somehow
President Bush will come to his senses ..."
Martin.
|
595.50 | Well..erm... | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Mon Jan 14 1991 17:05 | 13 |
| Well, I dunno. "I'm right/you're wrong" doesn't seem so much
"mind control" to me as Down-home, Garden-variety Ego.
You may disagree with that.
But *I*, of course, am correct.
:-)
|
595.52 | Still not mind control. | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Mon Jan 14 1991 18:08 | 40 |
| While I agree that our culture has a great many persuaders, liars
and manipulators - I don't agree that this can be defined as mind
control (except in a loose definition of the term.)
Obviously, if you define the term differently than I do, we will
not agree on the behaviors/situations that can be regarded as
mind control.
In the case of peer pressure, if "nearly all people" are affected
by it, then there is no clear "controller" versus "controlled" persons.
Many people have voluntarily submitted themselves for the approval
of others (in exchange for those others submitting themselves to
others' approval in the same way.) It isn't "control" if people
have volunteered themselves for mutual peer pressure relationships.
As for dresses, men who are determined to wear them do so. Men
do not lack the mental capacity to make the choice (as individuals)
about whether or not to wear dresses. In light of the fact that
it isn't socially acceptable, most CHOOSE not to wear them. It's
still a choice (for reasons that can be listed.)
In Communist countries with only ONE MESSAGE about which system is
good, the general population can still become dissatisfied with it.
Hearing one message does not prevent individuals from thinking to
themselves, "I'm unhappy. This government stinks. I want out of
here." They may be effectively prevented from expressing their
unhappiness, criticizing the government and/or "getting out" -
but the government can NOT stop them from thinking these thoughts
(as demonstrated by the demonstrations in Tianenmen Square as well
as the mass exodus of people from East Germany when the first clear
exit opened up to them - before the wall came down.)
As for religion, people are usually raised in a particular religion
and many tend to follow the family tradition into adulthood. It's
often part of their family life. While it's entirely possible for
each individual to make a religious choice contrary to their family
religion (my siblings and I made other choices, in fact) - many
people do make the *choice* to stay with their family's religion,
for one reason or another, although humans have the capacity to
reject the family religion as another clear choice.
|
595.53 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Mon Jan 14 1991 18:16 | 12 |
| By the way, how many men would be willing to model panty-hose on
television, does anyone suppose? Very few, I'd bet.
Yet, Joe Namath modeled panty-hose on television for a great deal
of money - and by all appearances, he thought the whole episode
was hilarious.
Men have the capacity to make such a decision - obviously, Joe
was in a position to make some bucks from it without hurting his
image (or his potential earnings as a celebrity.)
Mind control? No way. He knew exactly what he was doing.
|
595.54 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Mon Jan 14 1991 18:56 | 7 |
| Are we confusing mind control with action control? There are many ways someone
could force me to act a certain way, like saying I'll be arrested if I don't.
But they can't really control what I think about it. My going along may not mean
that I agree though it does show that I'm controlled. But if I don't agree or
like it my *mind* was not controlled, just my actions. liesl
|
595.57 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Tue Jan 15 1991 08:31 | 23 |
| Well, it's been stated here several times that mind control does
exist in some religious cults. No one that I can recall has stated
that the human mind is incapable of ever being controlled under any
possible circumstances. Countries having one dominant religion with
close ties to the political policies and interests of the society
come closer to the environment of religious cults than our society
does. Thus, it's possible that some degree of mind control (or at
least profound cultural influence) comes into play.
In the absence of this environment, I disagree that strong religious
beliefs are the result of mind control. If this were the case, then
anyone could be turned into a religious zealot (for a randomly chosen
religion) almost at will. I disagree that most people are susceptible
to this degree of influence outside of a cult environment.
As for peer pressure, it's a mutual relationship. I disagree that
it can be defined (mostly or solely) on the basis of the majority
influencing the minority. Look at the effect teenagers have on
each other. Most teenagers are strongly influenced by what their
friends think. It isn't a one-sided effect by any means.
Neither is it real mind control. As Liesl said, these examples are
things that control actions, not thoughts.
|
595.58 | I Have to Agree... | BATRI::MARCUS | I am not an actor...this is my true story" | Tue Jan 15 1991 09:45 | 16 |
| With Suzanne and liesl - if you say mind control then IMO you mean thought
control not behavioral control. However, edp, if you wish to define mind
control as obvious by outward appearance, that's your priveledge.
Now this is just me, but a few truly interesting (*to me*) thoughts have been
brought up that are getting lost under the definition of mind control.
The most notable - which *I* find fascinating - is whether "PC" is "the
MCCarthyism of the left" or it's exact opposite - a label used by the right to
silence the left.
*I* find with the latter - in fact, one is looked at as sort of a fascist if
one is PC these days. Boggles the mind when you think that those are really
diametrically opposed. What next? A fascist liberal?
Barb
|
595.59 | Thanks, Barb. | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Tue Jan 15 1991 11:45 | 25 |
| RE: .58 Barb
Agreed - people seem to have different definitions of mind control,
and we can most definitely agree to disagree on these.
> The most notable - which *I* find fascinating - is whether "PC" is "the
> MCCarthyism of the left" or it's exact opposite - a label used by the
> right to silence the left.
> *I* find with the latter -
Me, too. Accusations of "Mccarthyism of the left" is the same old ploy
used in the original Mccarthyism (by the right who invented it) - it's
a way of creating political boogeymen with superhuman powers that most
need to worry about and fight against (while the rest of us deny that we
have affiliation with such dastardly creatures ourselves.)
It's a devious attempt to discredit and split the left. (Notice that
not *ALL* of the left is referred to as PC. They tend to single out
the parts of the left that are the most threatening to the right -
"race, feminism, ecology" and those who speak of the oppression of the
Third World, per the basenote.)
It's a new-style witch hunt, in other words. They claim to be on a
witch hunt for those they accuse of being on a witch hunt. Ironic, eh?
|
595.60 | goodness gracious! | TLE::D_CARROLL | Give PEACE a chance | Tue Jan 15 1991 13:55 | 10 |
| I don't believe it...-edp and I agree! Who'da thunk?!?!
Eric, thanks, you stated it better than I was able to.
Suzanne, guess this is a case of difference of opinion.
(I do understand the difference between thought control and action
control, and I believe that *thought* control is going on.)
D!
|
595.61 | "Thought control," rather. | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Tue Jan 15 1991 14:31 | 11 |
| Yikes, D! - this is going to confuse the hell out of those who
believe in the myth of the strict Party Line here! :-) :-)
"Mind control" seems like too strong a term (to me) to be used to
describe the ways that people are influenced in various cultures.
Ultimately, I regard humans as having choice about what we THINK
(even if our actions are being controlled via laws, peer pressure,
etc.)
We can agree to disagree.
|
595.62 | | CALS::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Tue Jan 15 1991 16:35 | 15 |
| re: .57
> I disagree that most people are susceptible to this degree of influence
> outside of a cult environment.
There are some people who are brought up not to think for themselves;
they are used to being told what to think and they feel insecure when they
have to think for themselves. From the examples you cited earlier in
this string and from the general way you present yourself in notes, you
seem to be a person who is a strong independent thinker. This is just
my opinion, but from reading this string, it strikes me that you may be
overgeneralizing your own personality and experiences to others.
-Mary
|
595.63 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Tue Jan 15 1991 17:20 | 11 |
| Norman Cholmsky (of MIT) once said in A World of Ideas that
totalitarian systems do not really care about what you think as long as
you don't say it or act it out. Hence, they are essentially
behaviorists. Democratic systems can't control what you say or do;
therefore, they must worry about what you think.
Now, I think that is a very cynical statement, but it does make one
think.
Eugene
|
595.64 | RE: .62 | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Tue Jan 15 1991 17:30 | 15 |
| Ok, I'll buy the idea that some people are taught to deliver
themselves to cultural/political influences - and others do it
as a short cut to the research it takes to establish informed
opinions. And I do agree that various aspects of the media
capitolize on this by presenting news with bias added.
It still doesn't strike me as "mind control" - it sounds more
like apathy.
If true mind control were possible (outside the realm of a cult
environment,) people wouldn't have to be "taught" that they
should allow others to influence them. Many/most people would
simply have no choice at all about it - and I have yet to see
anything to convince me that such involuntary mind control is
possible on a widespread basis in the absence of a cult.
|
595.65 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Jan 15 1991 17:52 | 13 |
| edp - it wasn't a straw man tha tI set up it was a reply to a
particular sub-series of notes in here that (not very seriously)
proposed that if complete and effective mind control existed that we
wouldn't be able to tell. While that statement is self obviously true,
I attempted (semi-humorously I thought) to dispell the "real"
possibility that that was how our world worked. Sorry you missed that
particular point, but you seem to have sparked a good continuation.
-- Charles
P.S. I believe that if your actions are controlled your mind will
follow. (As D! argued...)
|
595.66 | I think therefor I was told | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Tue Jan 15 1991 18:16 | 17 |
| < -- Charles
<
< P.S. I believe that if your actions are controlled your mind will
< follow. (As D! argued...)
Hmm, this reminds me of the current rash of self-help books that espouse just
the reverse of this theory. That if you say/think you *can* do something, such
as lose wieght or quit smoking, that you will be able to *do* it. And that
positive self talk in general will improve your life. Sort of a private form
of mind control.
In fact, given the obsession in our society with weight, if mind control could
really work weel, why don't more people lose weight and keep it off? This may
seem a silly comparison to politcal thought but isn't it the same principle?
Eugene, I liked the Chomsky quote, I'd never thought of it that way before.
Maybe "they" wouldn't let me. :*) liesl
|
595.67 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Tue Jan 15 1991 18:49 | 14 |
| One of the biggest lessons of my life on the futility of thought
control over a human being in my care (whom I felt I should be
able to influence for his own good) came when my toddler put away
his toys at my insistence ...
... but not without giving me a very grumpy sidelong glance
punctuated by, "I'm not your friend!!" :-} (It was temporary.)
Although I've had a lot of wonderful talks with him over the years
and I think he's accepted a number of my ideas, I never kid myself
about having control over what he thinks.
I've had an influence on him, though, and I hope it's been a good
one. But control? Nope.
|
595.68 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Tue Jan 15 1991 19:10 | 27 |
| re .63,
As Maggie pointed out to me, it is Noam Chomsky.
...
All of us have been conditioned by our surroundings that by the time
we are adults, our thoughts have largely become reflections of our
culture. This is not at all bad, but rather it provides continuity and
stability to a culture and a society. That is also why few of us
have any original ideas, and those who do become either outcasts or
geniuses.
But I guess we all know that "mind control" is something totally
different, and we all know what it is (all the confusion on the
definition not withstanding). I don't think this campus PCism
qualifies as "mind control". It is a minor irritation if it ever
qualifies as anything. These guys ain't there yet. The real (and
the dangerous) "mind control" techniques would not even let you aware of
its existence. One example was the Nazi movement in Germany. The
brain wash was so complete that even after the war when Germany was
completely devastated, people there, by and large, still voted for the
Nazi politicians. It is also astounding that the mass believed that
Jews were inferior when Goettingen, the center of the intellectual
activity of the time, were largely made up by scholars of Jewish decent.
Eugene
|
595.70 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Wed Jan 16 1991 09:03 | 27 |
| Well, I still disagree that strong religious beliefs are the result
of mind control outside the realm of a cult environment. People
give themselves over willingly to religion and religious leaders
(except in cases where religion is tied closely to the political
system of the country.)
If "most people" are indoctrinated so thoroughly into one religion
or another, then I guess most of the people I know are in some kind
of minority in this (myself included.)
As for Reagan, he sure as hell never swayed me - I had a choice
about this, too, and I chose to dislike him. I'm not crazy about
his successor either.
As for peer pressure, we are speaking of two different things here,
because I'm referring to a non-antagonistic relationship where
people who have things in common (making them "peers") have an
influence over each other. Teenagers are often the most subject
to this phenomenon.
When people think "sexist thoughts" even though they know better
(especially when the thoughts amount to discrimination against
themselves,) it is often a matter of habit rather than mind control.
As for the witch hunt for the people the right claim are on a witch
hunt, I find a delicious irony in it that I don't expect everyone
else in the world to appreciate. :-)
|
595.71 | Religions aren't randomly dispersed | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jan 16 1991 09:15 | 16 |
| > Well, I still disagree that strong religious beliefs are the result
> of mind control outside the realm of a cult environment. People
> give themselves over willingly to religion and religious leaders
> (except in cases where religion is tied closely to the political
> system of the country.)
I don't agree with this assessment. Statistically, I believe
you'll find that the majority of people continue in the religion
of their parents. Yes there are many exceptions, but that's the
trend I see. Consider the proportion of Catholics in Latin
countries, Anglicans in England, Hindus in India, etc. This shows
me a preponderance of influence that doesn't look like "giving
over willingly".
Delving deeper in this area is likely to offend someone, so I'll
quit now...
|
595.72 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jan 16 1991 09:29 | 4 |
|
remember the Inquisition?
D.
|
595.73 | There are degrees of influence... | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Wed Jan 16 1991 09:43 | 6 |
| Families have religious influence over their children (as has been
pointed out numerous times.) Humans have the capacity to reject
this influence - but not everyone does (especially if the religion
is tied into the politics or ethnic identity of their country.)
I don't regard all possible human influence as mind control.
|
595.74 | The Hunt Within the Hunt | BATRI::MARCUS | I am not an actor...this is my true story | Wed Jan 16 1991 09:44 | 10 |
| Delicious irony, indeed. Shakespeare could really have enjoyed it:
Don't remember the play's name, but the character was a man
playing a woman playing a man. Boggling.......
On the serious side of the irony, deflection is an exceptionally powerfull
tool. Going on the attack while seeming to be the "victim" is beyond being
dangerous.....Deserves some spotlights.
Barb
|
595.75 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Wed Jan 16 1991 10:03 | 9 |
| Something else about mind control...
No one has denied that it is possible to control the human mind
under certain extreme circumstances. We know this to be true.
Just because we know mind control is feasible, why assume that
almost every case of human influence falls into this extreme
category? I guess I just don't see the point.
|
595.76 | Semantics'r'us | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jan 16 1991 10:21 | 8 |
| I suppose the real question is whether, on the continuum of
degrees of influence, there is some definable point where
"influence" becomes something called "mind control".
Insofar as "mind control" doesn't appear to be a clearly defined
process, distinguishing it from other styles and degrees of
influence really devolves into another exercise in semantics,
doesn't it?
|
595.77 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Wed Jan 16 1991 10:28 | 7 |
| RE: .76 Paul
Yup. And a rather useless exercise in semantics at that, since
it's been obvious for some days that we've reached the point where
it is wiser to simply agree to disagree about it.
Shouldn't be a problem. Should it?
|
595.78 | Metaphor and War | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Wed Jan 16 1991 10:43 | 17 |
| George Lakoff, One of Chomsky's collegues, has just distributed a monograph
on the way metaphor influences our thought -- specifically about the Iraq war.
It's far too long to post here and is pretty dense reading. If you're
interested, feel free to copy bolt::user_5:[minow]metaphor.txt.
Lakoff's main point is that we use metaphor to invest countries,
economic systems, and actions with "human" values and base our
responses, not on reality, but on the methaphor.
To simplify Lakoff's argument, we must "punish" Iraq because it
"raped" Kuwait. (At least, this is what our government is saying.)
There is a lot more to Lakoff's argument, and the thesis has wider
applicability. I read it last night, between bits of tv news that
offered unexpected examples of Lakoff's argument.
Martin.
|
595.79 | speaking generally | TLE::D_CARROLL | Give PEACE a chance | Wed Jan 16 1991 16:40 | 8 |
| >then I guess most of the people I know are in some kind
> of minority in this (myself included.)
I am certain this is true.
(You being a self-directed independent-thinking and intelligent woman.)
D!
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595.80 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Jan 17 1991 10:41 | 27 |
|
> Families have religious influence over their children (as has been
> pointed out numerous times.) Humans have the capacity to reject
> this influence - but not everyone does (especially if the religion
> is tied into the politics or ethnic identity of their country.)
The Church of England is definately tied to England, not only does
it have the country name tied to the Religion, it also has the Queen
as the defender of the faith, and there are blasphemy laws on the books
to protect this.
However, there are many people who reject this faith, even though it was
their parents faith, it is tied to politics, and is tied to the
monarchy, and tied to the country.
There are many people with individual thought. - Some of these decide to
follow this faith, and some decide not to, and there are some that
"follow the herd". I do not beleive the latter to be in the majority.
And on to dresses/skirts - the Scots do a good job of bucking "mind
control".
And on to trousers - the women in many countries have done a good job
of bucking the "mind control" here too.
Heather
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595.81 | | QARRY::QUIRIY | | Thu Jan 17 1991 11:43 | 6 |
|
I find it curious that even though The Church of England is tied to
England, is "the official church", religion itself doesn't really seem
to intrude on the government as it does here in the states.
CQ
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595.82 | From rumo[u]rs and hearsay | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Jan 17 1991 12:21 | 5 |
| Judging by comments made about the Archbishop of Canterbury, it's
not clear to me if religion intrudes on the Church of England
either.
Ann B.
|
595.84 | Another article | BTOVT::JPETERS | John Peters, DTN 266-4391 | Tue Jan 22 1991 15:31 | 9 |
| See also "Are You Politically Correct?" by John Taylor in "New York"
magazine, 21 January 1991 issue.
If the "PC'ness" of the left is being bruited about, has anyone seen
similar analyses of the right, or is it too obvious to warrant
examination? Anyone want to take a stab at a list of conservative PC
tenets?
J
|
595.85 | Still another article | LDYBUG::GOLDMAN | The simplest things... | Sun Mar 10 1991 20:47 | 107 |
| This is from a column called "Female Trouble", in the Village
Voice. Seems to fit perfectly in this note...
amy
PC Does It
By LynNell Hancock
"I am Politically Correct. If that's not appalling enough to
the Neo-Conservative Front, I am, even worse, a Politically
Correct Woman. A PCW. Mouthpieces for the front - 'New York
Magazine', 'Newsweek', and 'The Atlantic Monthly' - tell me I'm
part of a dangerous conspiracy to undermine Western Civilization
as they know it. They tell me that things like sensitivity
training for gay-bashers are tantamount to Thought Control � la
'1984'. They tell me that wanting books by Toni Morrison on a
required reading list is insulting to Shakespeare at best, and
totalitarian, at worst. I warn you, I speak the language of the
Red Guard, but it seems to me this PC tag has been invented by a
group of the powerfully paranoid to keep the poor and disadvantaged
out of their faces.
"I'm afraid I have some confessions to make. I came of age in
the '60s, a decade of enlightenment that John Taylor at 'NY Mag'
tells me most have rejected. My politics evolved initially from
the disturbing experience of growing up in small town America, in
a Dark Era known as pre-Roe v. Wade. I've had an underground
abortion, underpaid jobs, unwanted intercourse. (We didn't know
to call it date rape then.) I see antiwoman images and attitudes
all around me, which must make me a Gender Feminist encroaching on
others' Freedom of Speech. According to the Politically Incorrect
People (PIPs, I suppose) I'm now one of the new breed of
"fundamentalists." And, because I demand respect for all, I'm
even (Mom, you better sit down for this) a descendent of the
"Hitler Youth!"
'"It's fascism of the left," according to Camille Paglia in 'NY
Mag'. "These people behave like the Hitler Youth." For those who
don't yet grasp what is wrong with people like me, the editors
have included some useful graphics: photographs of Young Nazis
burning books, of China's Red Guard parading dunces through the
streets. PIPs point fingers at anyone (students, mostly) who
challenge racist, homophobic, sexist behavior and language. They
grab the most extremist antiracist hollerers (Leonard Jeffries,
for one), and conveniently assume they speak for anyone who stands
up for social justice. People like me are all, in an ironic
twist, "new McCarthyites." Call me a Nazi, but didn't something
McCarthyesque happen recently to Vanessa Redgrave when her theater
tour was canceled because she supported the PLO? Vanessa is, by
most definitions, a PCW, being hounded by PIPs.
"Just like Karl Marx and Simone de Beauvoir (there, I said the
names), I feel compelled to speak out when I see people demeaning
each other with metamessages, allusions, and historical half-
truths that keep Hispanics ignorant, gays closeted, women
disembodied. PIPs think this violates their freedom of speech.
PIPs want freedom to ignore decades of civil rights achievements.
They want freedom to be intolerant. They want freedom to teach
and write exclusively about Eurocentric issues without hearing
rebuttal. It's not enough for them that the left is on the run.
It doesn't give them enough pleasure that 10 years of Reagan-
Bushonomics has decimated day care, housing and health programs
for the poor, the sick and the not-so-very-famous. The PIPs have
Bush. They have Quayle. They have the Missouri abortion laws.
They have the New World Order. They have it all and they still
want more.
"Frankly, I don't see any alternatives to life as an out-of-
fashion PC person. No one has invited me to their club. Instead,
I've been told to get a life. I, PCW, must nod politely when they
call me a classic bitch and bar me from the football locker room
(Victor Kiam), lay back and enjoy it when they rape me (Tex
Antoine and Bobby Knight), turn away from the women's health
clinic when they block the door and call me a murderer (Randall
Terry). I must can any notion of including meaningful non-white,
non-straight, non-male experiences into high school curricula.
"In this way, I would avoid a label and become a pal to the
PIPs. They could continue their lives into eternal PIPitude -
blissfully unaware of the groans of all those pesky have-nots
around them. Many PIPs, not so long ago, wer young lefties with
tweakable consciences themselves. Once upon a time, they too were
perturbed by social inequities around them - cruelties embodied in
words like 'nigger', 'women's libber', 'faggot', 'pinko', 'Juden'.
Now it seems that was just some terrible acid trip. Ethics are
unimportant, self-aggrandizing notions. They're saying that
language isn't powerful; that sticks and stones break bones, but
words float aimlessly out of context.
"Shrewd shrew that I am, I have noticed something else. These
PIPs are people who make a living using language: James Barber,
Jerry Adler, John Taylor, Camille Paglia. They are writers. They
are thinkers. They are professors. Words, they know, are not
just arbitrary scribbles on the page. Words carry tremendous power
- historical, linguistic impact. Forty years ago it was okay to
call blacks "coloreds." Twenty years ago it was okay to call
grown women "girls." Now, these labelers are turning the
"Politically Correct" into a slur. I am their target this time.
It's PC to actively oppose the gulf war. It's PC to support AIDS
research over Patriot missiles. It's PC to encourage learning
things other than white-male-Western culture at school. Soon,
mainstream magazines and professors may succeed in bludgeoning all
voices of dissent into silence. Love it or leave it. Gimme
Sweden."
|
595.86 | | USWS::HOLT | | Mon Mar 11 1991 00:09 | 5 |
|
Yeah, kinda makes one wonder how anyone could possibly disagree
with the holders of the so-called high moral ground...
|