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tv   Documentary  RT  May 15, 2022 2:30pm-2:58pm EDT

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and coastal defense cruise missiles, they could dominate the north western black c. so is this a lack of communication among the anti russian coalition, or an attempt to play down the catastrophic outcome of the operation? president zalinski who reportedly gave the order to recapture as mean the island remains quiet. okay, just a reminder that our twitter page has you covered for all the important developments as we enter in week didn't give ortiz social teams a fall. if you're not doing solar reading, i'm una liam to buy from in with only one main thing is important for knox ism internationally speaking to that is that nations visits are allowed to do anything. all the mazda races, the reason us, hey jim, it is so dangerous. is it the law?
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the sovereignty of all the country. wars business and business is good, and that is the reality of what we're facing, which is fashion. with if anybody's been trapped in an elevator, 20 minutes can be pretty long time right. and a load trapped an elevator for 20 minutes. not knowing what's gonna happen, not knowing where he wore the sits of sensory deprivation. i think with that if your life at 20 minutes an hour, not at all. yeah, the intercom is nothing i was trying to get you out. i was keeping you in is your
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communication? oh, i think sistant who ah ah, a more of the building. mm . on turn begins with me, but it does not in there. it will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found. stopped and defeated. ah
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. i think we lost more in the warranty. so you know, a comparison decline, resort to torture. and i think it gives them the illusion of mastery and dominant, torturing essentially we blind ourselves, but we could instantly valuable and effective techniques to fight terror. some fears ah, the so called test interrogate techniques to break down the human mind. it's an extremely high district torture on, of course, on those who receive this pain and suffering, but also on the city of cruelty. what we've done is we've not so much lost the war on torture, as we've won the war on democracy through terrorizing
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a population over. if there's nobody in this country, he didn't grow up with some booky man, some danger 1st, it was communism. ah, we are obviously engaged in many facets of or rich the communist policies board. i've had no don mazda cia, engage in any prolific and it was not approved. mm. there was a concern that emerged the 1st started cold war in the late 1940 that they knew how to apply, break the human mind. and it was that, that set off this whole pursuit the creation of the church doctrine of psychological torture. this was a house in eastern europe, made hungary and poland,
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which aroused a lot of concerned to be confessing to crimes that they hadn't committed. or most importantly was the trial of cardinal mind, since he's already in actual war 2 quite famous parties and their occupation of hunger and then the church, or they arrested him. they can fight. it became a kind of target of that regime on trial. were publicly, he confessed that there was this fear in a men not to pressure that if he could be broken clearly, the salon, the cia reaction was primarily around what they thought was brainwashing the concerns with communist brainwashing was that these communist techniques were
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actually borrowed originally from earlier american techniques, in the 19 twenties and 900 ten's, using sleep deprivation exhaustion exercises, all these other techniques were standard demand. they were also driven by 2nd concern. there was a moral panic in the 1950s that an american p o w is in korea. they confess to things that were completely untrue and it didn't look like they had been talking during the korean. more of what happened was that there were chapter down american aviators, and there were around 30 pilots, testimonies. there were 4 pilots, the broadcast on radio burgeon, alleging that the united states was using bacteriological warfare against the korean people. after the armistice,
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one these pilots for the store bought back and they were put through court martials, and they realize that they had been put through what was then called brain wash. could you describe the method used by the common with oh yes, i would put these methods into to categorize physical torture. all the start and mental torture. it consisted mainly of standing at attention, having my faith flap once in awhile and i did fail to respond as they wanted me to it consistent of being confined in a very close area. the mental treatment which they gave was a start day designed to try to wear down my resistance to their interrogation to break my willpower to force me in some manner to confess. a mind control project starts
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in christy. this was a project that involved a $1000000000.00 a year. there was a formal creation, a british finance american operation at the highest levels in order to mobilize behavioral scientists. so these 3 countries are to kind of crack the code of human consciousness alone roles or medical doctors or cornell university medical school in new york city. they got access to some other more classified material on people that escaped from the soviet union. and i've been tortured in this so in wolf was a very well known neurologist. he had a personal relationship with alan dell as the head of the cia and with the human ecology of fun walls offered to who does ca, essentially
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a friends in order to study questions of brainwashing what they discovered was $11.00 of the 2 foundational techniques and the ca, doctrine of psychological torture, they discovered a self inflicted pain. what they described in that, in their, in their co author article was that the most devastating technique that the k j, b and k v d practice was not crude physical beatings. but simply making subject stand immobile for hours and days at a time. if you force a human being to stay in a certain position, especially position that puts a little stress on ligaments or muscles or bones, joints. it doesn't take very long for the pain involved to become absolutely excruciating, but nobody's lane figure finger on you. you are doing it to yourself.
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ah, for technique they discovered was from the there was, dr. hat's work. he was the chair of the psychology department and mcgill university and calendar and to participate in the study of human behavior under extreme and prolong monotony. their hands and arms were softly covered to muffle a sense of touch. all har slide some due by a mass comfortable bed choir. and yet it was impossible for most of these students to take it for more than $24.00 or 48 hours. center deprivation really is way of producing 3 monotony. it's a horrible experience getting worse and worse, somebody, somebody talked about cruelty. what they said was that the degree of boredom became intolerable and was once i'd been shed as bad as anything you had to hitler had
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ever done to any of his son, teresa victims. as we know from almost any basic medical understanding, human contact is what makes us human and a late enables a person to have a sense of normalcy in their lives. and when they are completely isolated from any human contact and often kept in this sensory isolation, you will literally easily become severely mentally impaired. or then they came up a consult. she continued to work for them is really the progenitor, modern psychological torture. on this project funded another guy mcgill named dr. ellen cameron. what erin cameron
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did. alice was close to months for psychotherapy, i was crying, was hopeless. i didn't know what to the psychiatric ward. cameron, yes, i met him and we were, i was terrified of him. we also to fear we all had a fear of him and we didn't want to whatever he did whenever there was a patient with them. the patient was always look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings that the 1st law show your identification. we should be very careful about on personal intelligence. at the point, obviously is to create a job with
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a robot most protective own existence with these are the days and hours and cameron was a very famous psychiatrist. he was head of the american psychiatric association and the world psychiatric association. he was the top of the field, he pretty much willing to do anything. and the for the cia to find a doctor who didn't have limits in a nearby cap. but oh, with lots of patients to work with somebody they were interested in supporting patients would come up with ordinary cycle and then they would be subjected to this bizarre written sensory deprivation, isolation for his favorite things was he had a sort of a football helmet with
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a play a tape and look up to 500000 times, say things like my mother, it's me. and he would blit and of psychological emotional assault. well, what's working? i mean it's garbage. know what it was. he would put people under mass, civil to the banner prolong basis along with what he called sleep was. once you wipe the brain clean, you could wipe bad the city as the ideas they were messing up people's minds. and you could program in other ideas electric convulsive therapy picked up and was widely used in germany before it went anywhere else. soldiers to war. the german army was going to spend tons of money on psycho so they were looking for cheap and effective ways to send soldiers back to war. it then moves into the
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united states in the clinical note of march 23rd. 19. $62.00 confirms a $129.00. e. c. t. 's cameron's clinical notice september 12th recommend patterning and sleep. the clinical notes of october, 19th, november, 1st, november, 3rd, november 8th, november 15, all confirmed the pattern. my sister was that was falsely acting strange, right? my mother decided to our desire to have the bill to the alan for 6 months and this would repeat yeah, over days and days and weeks and yeah, it's what you feel you have been through being the patent. yes, i guess and i say you in mariah and are different we're older or a somehow could be yeah well. 1 they didn't finish the treatments with me. so when i came out, i was still active and so on. but they did. you went through 3
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sessions of di patterning treatments. and when i asked you about things before you don't, you don't remember like i say, if i ask you what were you? what's that for you typing for the national defense, for instance. oh, on that now, are there certain things in your memory that you just don't remember? oh, this 1st hospital lies. i was about 1616 and a half. the doctors pushed me into a sleep therapy. and that was it for about 3 weeks in sort of a deep sleep. but i don't remember getting up to go to the washroom. i don't, i just remember that the doctor came in and occasionally to feed me. and that was it. and then shortly after a while there was another patient that came in, and she was an older one and she slept in the other bed. when i started to wake up,
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i've saw these patients and these patients were in tube, some of them they had earphones and headphones. i dont know if they did any of that to me because when i with the 1st 3 weeks, i don't know what happened. but this was d patterning. ah, the, she is doctrine of psychological torture that they developed through research in the decade, the 1950s. and was codified in khobar, counterintelligence interrogation manual. oh man mm mm. mm. as to basic techniques on which all the rest of the procedures to run one is sensory deprivation and the other is self inflicted pain. ah,
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the cia trained allied agencies in the techniques. so in effect, you know, knowing about dissemination about if use some of these techniques to other armies. could you take an ordinary individual, lighter resty or recruit and make a person become an effective interrogate? and it seems that mil gms experiment was like in part of this project, when i learned of incidents such as the destruction of millions of men, women and children, perpetrated by the nazis in world war 2. how is it possible? i asked myself that ordinary people were courteous and decent in everyday life. can i callously in you mainly without any limitations of conscience? under what conditions, when a person obey authority,
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who commanded actions and when against conscience, these are exactly the questions that i wanted to investigate at your university. the marines permit very simply was assimilated torture. this was one. not all the research we've been describing is the impact of interrogation upon the subject. milligram had another agenda, the impact of interrogation upon the interrogator. if he were to indicate the wrong answer, you would say wrong. then tell him the number of balls you're going to give him. then give him the punishment and read the correct word here once he got an ordinary people who fit by all the regular scales, very normal americans. and then he subjected them under false color to just to doing what he called an educational experiment in try to encourage people to apply ever higher voltages as a false patient kept on getting, making mistakes. here. in fact,
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milgar was able to encourage, at least in his 1st experiments, i think close to 70 percent, to go on to apply highly dangerous and sometimes fatal shocks. i'm not going to get that mad sake and then i, i want to learn a lice in a now we must go on until he's done wrong. i refuse to take the responsibility and get her. i mean, he's under our end, it's actually essential. as you continue teacher, there are still many left here. i mean, ged going get wrong. good as to when in last i mean i was going to take the responsibility apparently had was that i don't i'm responsible for anything that happens here. continue, but i'm actually slow. wow. dance truck. music answer plays wrong. ah
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95 volts dance. yes, you did this simply with a very simple thing, putting the person behind the wall and having a person with a white lab coat, telling them that they needed to continue. very ordinary people can be influenced by situations. and it's one of the implications of both the milligram experiment is embargo. the stanford prison experiment was i think, a unique attempt to answer that question of what makes some people behave in good way. but what makes some people behave in a bad way. and so the idea was let's,
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let's find an evil place and prisons everywhere in the world are evil places and less pill, this evil place with only good people to get the students involved. i had convinced the palo alto police department to make mach arrest of all the students who were going to prison it. and then they came down to the basement of at stanford psychology department, the place where the prison study was done. the idea is prison is made to feel inferior, insignificant, worthless. the most important thing is you take away their name, they become a number. and of course, given they have smocks it with no under pans than behind is showing like my 1st hour in there. it was humiliating,
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lose also. abrupt was quick. it was just, you know, take him off, put this on. and then i got dusted with baking soda, which was supposed to be the de lauser. and i was lebanon. the cell, what is embargo did was a very cheap knock off of the kind of thing that milligram was doing. not always embargo, but i think, you know, the guard called john wayne believed that ethics don't matter if the environment is artificial and that's not true. all life is real life we needed to get tougher with the prisoners and it could well be that we were instructed by the experimenters to get to. in fact, i don't think we considered ourselves to be a subject of the experiment. we were merely
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a tool of the researchers to get the results they wanted from the real subjects, which we thought were the prisoners. and i decided to become the nastiest prison guard that i could make myself for. i was responsible for coming up with all these routines that i would put the prisoners through where i'd have them stand and align, recite their numbers, do push up to do jumping jacks. i had never once stop to think that these prisoners were suffering any harm or any damage. we're not, we're not beating anybody. we're just sort of applying psychological pressure on. wow. yeah. and then a harms me. how did it, how does it hard?
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just to claim that people can be like, yeah, and let me in on some knowledge that, that i've never experienced firsthand. i read about it, i read a lot about it, but i've never experienced it. and i've never seen someone turn that way and i know you're a nice guy. you know, well, you and then what would you have that? i don't know. ah. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy, even foundation, let it be an arms race is on a very dramatic development. only personally and getting to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical of time to sit down and talk in only one main thing is important for not to some internationally speaking to that
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is that nation's allowed to do anything, all the most to races. the reason that you had germany is so dangerous, is it the law, the sovereignty of the country, or is business and business is good? and that is the reality of what we're facing, which is fashion. and a boutique firm. both for us is just like his predecessor, he's a fan of the movie to pull it up from see and they have to wait for a, he's a show on the only see russia relations why the need. so because they acknowledge the fact that the west can not to be very standardized again,
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the west these walls to the west and right as opposed to pretty scam ever in a headline stories, finland and mine says it's formal decision to join nate, so, so i think the trade security lay out in europe and stamps, despite decades of military neutrality and moscow, as warnings of possible retaliatory measures. the threats near its quarters also ahead with these shelters, were used by the craning military during the battles. had the zodiac plat, as you can see, there are various medicines. here are t reports from a key fossil zone in the ukraine, conflicts rebate neu, those forces from the lute guns, people's republic take control of a major chemical production facility in the region. the un.
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