Pentagon Employing Top Scientists to Improve US
Propaganda MachineBy Cassius Methyl
August 01, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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"Antimedia"
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Throughout human history, governments have been
interested in “mastering the human domain”—in fully understanding
how to control the minds of their populations. In 2015, DARPA’s “Narrative
Networks” ( or N2) program is in full swing.
The project is intended to analyze how
“narratives” play into human psychology, delving into the way these
constructs affect the mind. A narrative is a way of phrasing
something, a choice of words, for example, that is likely a biased
strategy to frame information.
“Narratives exert a powerful influence on human
thoughts, emotions and behavior and can be particularly important in
security contexts,” DARPA researchers said
in a paper published in the
Journal of Neuroscience Methods.
They discussed “…conflict
resolution and counterterrorism scenarios [and] detecting the neural
response underlying empathy induced by stories is of critical
importance.”
Mastery of “narratives” could potentially be used
to manipulate the perception of a population using platforms of
communication like television to subtly and potently make a person
think a certain way. Many people know this tactic by a more familiar
term:
propaganda.
“Governments often use stories to present
information, so understanding how we comprehend them is important,”
said co-author Eric Schumacher, an associate professor of psychology
at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
In addition to narratives, the study focused on
fear. Researchers observed a phenomenon of “tunnel vision,” or
impaired reasoning, triggered in the brain when suspects processed,
for example, a suspenseful moment in a movie.
As the
Washington Post summarized,
“When suspense grew, brain activity in viewers’
peripheral vision decreased. Schumacher called it the ‘neural
signature of tunnel vision.’ Moments of increasing suspense were
also associated with greater interference with a secondary task. In
this case, responding by pressing a button when hearing a tone.”
It is likely that predatory actions of war could
come out of this particular accumulation of knowledge. The U.S.
Military has a long history of funding psychological experiments,
some entrenched in human rights violations (like the experiments
performed during the
Project MKUltra era).
Now we have the Pentagon-funded DARPA program,
which pays researchers at colleges and other scientists millions of
dollars to enhance and bolster methods of war. Such work places
great technological power in the hands of a demonstrably criminal
government and militaryDARPA paying geniuses to work for them could
be considered an exploitation of intellectual capability to further
consolidate government and military power.
This is but a sliver of information in the full
timeline of the U.S. Military’s acquisition of propaganda
techniques, but even that smallest sliver of information is a
necessary piece of the puzzle.
Cassius Methyl joined Anti-Media as an
independent journalist in March of 2014. His topics of interest
include thinking, creating a future, deep spirituality, and
astrology. He resides in Sacramento, California.
Copyright 2014 The Anti Media