Subject: Turn Off Your TV: part 4 Turn Off Your TV--Part IV The Clockwork Orange Society by L. Wolfe I'm back again. I won't even ask you this time whether the television set is turned off. By now, I hope, you realize that it is impossible to think about any important subject as long as it is on. But in case {someone else} has turned the set on, I'll give you a chance to either turn it off or to go to another room before we begin. The people who had put the Nazis in power never gave up on the idea of mass psychological brainwashing as a means to maintain the power of the oligarchical elite. They only grudgingly acknowledged that the Nazi model of social control, with its requirement for total regimentation, could not have universal application. The question confronting the brainwashers at such places as the Tavistock Institute outside London was how to create a Nazi state in the United States without its now socially unacceptable state terror apparatus. Americans returned home from fighting a war in which they had defeated a monstrous evil at great human sacrifice. Those involved in the war effort were thus focussed on the {higher purpose} in life, the kind of moral outlook that leads an individual to be willing to sacrifice his life, if necessary, to make the world a better place to live in for someone who might come after him, while giving renewed meaning to achievements of past generations. The war effort led to a burst of {cultural optimism} in the population, that made it seem that we could do great things for all mankind. Now, look around at this miserable nation of ours; it is hard to believe that it is the same place as 40 or 50 years ago. For most people, there is little or no purpose to life, except to survive to the next day. Our people have a deep-seated {cultural pessimism}, and are cynical about nearly everything. Now, think hard: over the last 40 years, while our moral outlook has collapsed, what became a constant, ever-present part of your life. That's right, {television}, that box in your living room. That realization is necessary to understand what I am about to tell you. The New `Leader' The evil Sigmund Freud, in his work {Mass Psychology and the Analysis of the I}, said that an individual's moral inhibitions and outlook can be broken down as part of a mass or crowd. According to Freud, people in crowds or masses behave as if they are hypnotized: A person becomes more infantile, and hence more like an animal under such circumstances, and loses the power to reason critically. By using the power of mass suggestion, a new outlook, based on different ideals can then be substituted for values a person had previously held. Freud says that each mass has a leader, who serves the function of hypnotist. It is to the leader that the individuals in the crowd surrender their ideals, and it is from the leader that they receive their new values. It is at the will and word of the leader, that the mass or mob can be deployed. Freud claimed that the leader principle worked as a brainwashing tool because of some innate need of man to be led; this merely betrayed his own oligarchical outlook. He believed that man was merely a two-legged animal, whose basic animalism could be induced to come to the fore in mass situations. Freud is wrong: Man is not an animal; however, he can, under conditions of mass psychosis, through brainwashing techniques of the type described, be made to {act as if he were an animal}. The key to mass brainwashing is to create the kinds of {organized, controlled environments} in which {tension} and {stress} can be applied to break down morally informed judgment, thereby making an individual more susceptible to {suggestion}. Such {controlled environments} are organized so as to appeal to base emotionalism, sensuality, and even eroticism--``feelings'' that make man ``one with animals''--and not to man's higher reasoning capabilities which truly distinguishe him from the beast. It is this fact, and not merely the size of an event, that makes the brainwashing possible. For the brainwashers, what was required for a new system of mass social control was a means to organize a {mass appeal to emotionalism}; the more overpowering and all encompassing that appeal, the better. The more infantile the population could be made, the less their resistance to suggestion and manipulation. In television, they found the tool to make that constant appeal to infantilism, organized on a mass basis. It had the potential to reach into {every} home, to reach {every} citizen with a set of messages and suggestions. It also had the ability through the control and dissemination of information, to create large {controlled environments} by creating your perceptions of events. {Television is the new ``leader,'' the technolgical equivalent of Hitler}. Writing in 1972 with Eric Trist, formerly of the Wharton School and now of the University of Toronto and the leading Tavistock brainwasher in the United States, Fred Emery says: ``We are suggesting that television evokes a basic assumption of {dependency}. It must evoke (this) because it is essentially an emotional and irrational activity.... Television is the non-stop leader who provides nourishment and protection.'' Emery and Trist report that the population has never been told this about television and writing for a handful of fellow brainwashers they are now about to let this secret out: ``... the questioning and confrontation of television has been put aside in order to maintain its role as the {leader} in the dependent mode.'' They note that {all} television has a dissociative effect on mental capabilities, making people less able to think rationally. Harkening back to the studies of the Hitler experiment, they find that this confirms the thesis that ``the leader should be `mad' or a `genius,' yet all the same people feel compelled to believe that he is a dependable leader.'' Emery and Trist, after looking at over 20 years of television brainwashing, comment; ``In other words, television can be partly seen as a technological analyst of the hypnotist.'' The more you watch, the more susceptible you become to suggestions from your {leader}, the television. ``... It turns you off [to] reality and time,'' Emery and Trist write, commenting that comprehension of time relationships and reality are required for an individual to take reasoned, and purposeful action. In looking at the effects of habituated television watching, Emery and Trist cite studies proving that it does neurological damage: ``{Our thesis is that television produces a quality and quantity of habituation that approximates the destruction of critical anatomical structures}.'' They report, however, that the damage is not irreversible. The neurological problems can be cleared up within a few days of halting the six to eight hours of daily viewing. The effects on the ability to reason and on moral value structures are far more difficult to ``clear up'': ``Man can (therefore) be seduced from purposeful functioning in such a way that he is unable to become aware of his deficit.'' Social Turbulence Now, we are ready to look at what the brainwashers and the oligarchs who have deployed them have in store for you. Many neo-Freudians have criticized Freud for presenting too biologically oriented a system. They say that Freud failed to understand how much of a role the {social environment} plays in shaping the personality of the individual. A new social psychology must place an emphasis on the role of tension-filled environments in shaping the personality or the ``ego,'' producing regression to more infantile, or ``id-like'' personalities. According the view of personality held by Tavistock's Emery and Trist, the {social environment} is either {stable}, at which point, people are more or less able to ``cope'' with what is happening to them, or it is {turbulent}, at which point people either take actions to relieve the tension, or they adapt to accept the tension-filled environment. If the {turbulence} does not cease, or if it intensifies, then, at a certain point, people cease being able to adapt in a positive way. At that point, Emery and Trist say, people become {maladaptive}--they choose a response to tension that degrades their lives. They start to {repress reality}, denying its existence, and constructing increasingly more infantile fantasies that enable them to cope. All the while, their lives are becoming increasingly worse, when measured by value structures of a short time before; to avoid this contradiction, people, under conditions of {increasing social turbulence}, change their values, yielding to new {degraded} values, values that are less human and more animal-like. Sound like a bunch of gobbledegook? Well in a certain sense it is: Morally reasoning individuals, acultured by 2,000 years of Christian civilization, do not think in such ways. They would reject barbaric choices, the so-called critical choices, where none are good. They would seek Truth, and by seeking Truth, find ways out of the brainwashers' mind trap. Forty years ago, our responses to problems, and our moral outlook were different. You would have probably rejected the kinds of critical choices you are offered today. But that was {before television}: Forty years of television have eroded your ability to make moral choices, have steered you into critical choices. You have followed your {leader}, television, down a path to Hell. Looking into Hell Twenty years ago, the brainwashers, Emery and Trist, laid out some scenarios for the future based on a {permanent condition of social turbulence}. There might be brief periods of respite, but, according to them, the world would become increasinly more chaotic and violent. In the hands of those with the power to make policy--to create the {social turbulence}--what they have written is a cookbook recipe for a desired ``future.'' It were proper to look at what they produced, back in 1972, as the psychological warfare underpinning, the mass brainwashing concept, behind the political doctrines of such institutions as the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission. It for such people that they were written. Their forecast--a period of continuous turbulence, especially economic turbulence leading to economic decline--had its political corollary in the CFR's {Project 1980s} reports drafted in the mid-1970s. There, we find reference to plans for the ``controlled disintegration'' of the American economy. In 1972, twenty years of television-watching in the United States and most of the West had left populations with three basic {maladaptive} scenarios for dealing with the tension. One scenario is called {superficiality}. It is a form of psychological retreat, an attempt to simplify choices. Tension, say Emery and Trist, makes man desire to break free of the emotional values formerly placed on choices. A person reduces the ``value of his intentions, lowering the emotional investment in the ends being pursued, whether they be personally or socially shared ends.... This strategy can only be pursued by denying the deeper roots of humanity that bind ... people together on a personal level by denying their individual psyche.'' Emery and Trist, writing in the Vietnam era, point to drug-soaked rebellion of the ``flower children'' against society as an example of how this scenario functions. Fighting an increasingly senseless and brutal war, the older generation begins to ultimately accept the moral decadence of the drug culture of its children, rather than seek conflict. Society as a whole accepts a {lower moral standard}, posited as a higher value. Citing the Frankfurt School philosopher, Herbert Marcuse, popularized by the 1960s counterculture, Emery and Trist say that under such conditions choice becomes meaningless. What is important is ``the moment,'' and ``the momentary experience becomes all,'' they state. Quoting from Marcuse in his {One Dimensional Man}, Emery and Trist say that modern society is thus confronted with ``the rational character of its irrationality.'' The organized societal response to this process is best identified by Aldous Huxley's {Brave New World}, the drug-controlled society, in which there are {no} individual moral choices. They identify the 1960s counterculture as ``pioneers'' for this scenario. The second scenario involves the {segmentation} of society into smaller parts, of a size that one might be more easily able to cope. ``There is an enhancement of in-group and out-group prejudices as people seek to simplify their choices,'' say Emery and Trist. ``The natural line of social divisions have emerged to become barricades.'' In this scenario, it is every group--ethnic, racial, sexual--against the other. Nations break apart into regional groups, those smaller areas in turn fissure into even smaller areas, along ethnic or other lines. It is an incredibly violent scenario, but a violence associated with a purposefulness of sorts, in individual defense of each ethnic or other group. The organized social response to such a psychological and political disintegration is the Orwellian fascist state, modelled on George Orwell's book {1984}. In the book, individuals turn to ``Big Brother'' to regulate their lives and conflicts among various castes within society. A continuous conflict among three superpowers, writes Orwell, is ``waged by each ruling group against its own subjects, and the object of the war is not to make or prevent conquests of territory, but to keep the structure of society intact...'' While noting that the Orwellian scenario is not acceptable in its fully regimented form, any more than Nazism could now be replicated in its exact form, Emery and Trist state that there are nonetheless obvious parallels in the ``Cold War'' to the Orwellian ``war of each against all''; they comment elsewhere that, should the Cold War collapse, the ability to control a segmentation scenario on a societal scale would also collapse. The third scenario is most intense, involving a withdrawl and retreat into ``private world and a withdrawl from social bonds that might entail being drawn into the affairs of others.'' Emery and Trist caution that {dissociation} is not the more assertive statement of ``me first,'' of personal selfishness that became the hallmark of the 1970s and 1980s. Fearing the terror that surrounds him, the individual seeks to avoid all forms of danger entirely. Individuals seek {invisibility}, to fade into their environments; they see nothing and no one, so that no one might see them. The brainwashers remark that {dissociation} has always been a response of sorts to living in a city. People tend to ``look the other way,'' at some of what is going on, just as the person who rides the subway tries to ``remain invisible'' although in a crowd. Here we can see how Freud and others' predictions about the behavior of crowds or masses of people is specific to only certain types of specially organized experiences: ones in which the mass is organized around appeals to emotionalism, that lead to the regression of the individual to an infantile state of mind, to an animal-like ``freedom'' of hedonistic expression. Emery and Trist describe a level of {dissociation} so great that the individual is reduced to an animal. He withdraws from the terror around him, and like an animal ``playing possum,'' tries to hide. With individuals withdrawn into their fantasies, their minds numbed and brainwashed by their televisions, the brainwashers ``predict'' that men will be willing to accept ``the perverse inhumanity of man to man that characterized Nazism''--not {the structure} of the Nazi state, but the {moral outlook of Nazi society}. Ultimately, the majority of people withdraws so far that they don't even bother to go to their sporting events or rock concerts: {they have such experiences mediated through television}. It is the television that ``gives them solace,'' write the brainwashers. To survive, such individuals require the comfort of a {new} religion; the old religious forms, especially Western Christianity, demand that man be responsible for his fellow humans. The new religious forms, will be a form a {mystical anarchism}, a religious experience much likened to satanic practice of the Nazis and the views of Carl Jung. Again, it is to be television that provides the ``social glue'' that binds the minds of the population to their new religious forms: It is television as the leader, in this case, the {anti-Christ.} A Clockwork Orange The organized social response to {dissociation}, say Emery and Trist, is a society described in the pages of Anthony Burgess's novel {A Clockwork Orange}. In the book, Burgess depicts a society gone controllably mad. A majority of people are engaged in useless ``schooling,'' a few engaged in mind-destroying trivial labors, and somewhere, there are people running all this as if it were an insane zoo. Senseless violence is everywhere in the streets, committed by gangs of youth who lust for blood. In a typical {Clockwork Orange} street scene, a gang of drugged, outlandishly dressed teenagers viciously beats an old man. He had it coming, said one of the gang members; everyone knows that if you go into certain parts of town, you will be beaten and raped. There is no politics to any of it: Burgess made sure that his ``hero,'' Alex, repeatedly makes clear that he is {apolitical}. Alex speaks a language invented by the linguist Burgess, appropriate to his infantilism; It is never translated--the reader is forced to ``learn'' what it means by description or ``word pictures.'' Burgess provides no explanation about how society got this way; there is no war or other social calamity referred to. ``That's just the way things are,'' one character says. {A Clockwork Orange} portrays a society dominated by infantile animal-like rage. The {dissociated} adults cannot exert moral authority over their children, because they are too involved with their own infantile fantasies, brought to them through their television sets. Even as they watch the reports of the daily mayhem, they convince themselves that it isn't {their kids} who are doing this. For Emery and Trist, Burgess's {Clockwork Orange} vision {is} the Nazi state without the superstructure. It is organized disorder, without moral control. It is the force of the mass communications media, the {power of television}, however, that is driving us toward the {Clockwork Orange society}. As we have explained in previous sections, television, when watched in habituated, long viewing induces {dissociation}. It also provides the tension and images of violence required to create the form of social organization in {A Clockwork Orange}. Under its ever-present eye, the {leader}, television, transforms children into beasts like Alex and parents into impotent caretakers of beasts. Over time, one state of mental and social disintegration can transform itself into another. Given the power of television over society, all states will tend to become more {dissociative}, more like {A Clockwork Orange}. As the Futures Group brainwasher Hal Becker put it back in 1981, ``Orwell made a big mistake in his {1984}. Big Brother doesn't need to watch you, as long as you watch it.'' That is enough for now. When we speak again, I will explain how the programs you watch on television have been crafted to brainwash you. {To be continued.} -- John Covici covici@ccs.covici.com