Brainwashing – A Silly Cold
War Propaganda Concept
In the United States, one
phrase you cannot avoiding hearing on a regular basis is “This is the greatest
country in the world” or “America is the greatest country in the world.” This
is repeated constantly on American TV, from American politicians, and from
average Americans when giving their assessment of world events.
If one inquires of someone
who utters the phrase, and asks for specifications about by what metrics or
calculations the country was determined to be “greatest,” rather than getting a
clear explanation, the inquirer will be met with shock.
If asked “Why is America the
greatest country in the world?” is the average US citizen’s jaw will drop. “Do
you mean, you DON’T think America is the greatest country in the world?”
Inevitably, the response that follows will involve something to the effect of:
“If you don’t believe America is the greatest country in the world, you must
be brainwashed.”
This concept of “brainwashing,” which
Americans understand to be like something portrayed in a science fiction movie,
is not only outlandish, but it is central to how Americans understand the
world. Each year, National Geographic magazine publishes statistics about
how uninformed Americans are about the world. Most American youth cannot find
the countries the USA is currently at war against on a world map. Furthermore,
a significant percentage of the American high school and university students
cannot find the USA itself on a world map.
Americans generally laugh at
this. They find it to be a mildly embarrassing, and an almost endearing aspect
of the US identity. However, when Americans look at photographs of Nashi summer
camps in Russia, Young Pioneers in China, Bolivarian Youth in Venezuela, or
Islamic Youth in Iran, they view these images with utter revulsion. Children in
uniforms, saluting, and making ideological statements is something that the US
public is deeply discomforted by.
A Central Concept in
American Ideology
Why do Americans get deeply
offended, and have such strong emotional reactions to photos of youth being
taught ideology, being provided with an identity, wearing uniforms, being loyal
to their community and developing a sense of purpose in their lives? If you ask
them, this is because these young people are “being brainwashed.”
In the American liberal
worldview, carefully constructed during the Cold War, it is far more
problematic to see young people being inculcated with ideology or made to be
part of a group, than to see them left utterly ignorant by a failing
educational system. “We think for ourselves!” Americans insist. “We have our
own ideas!” “No one tells us what to believe.”
The fact that the US Central
Intelligence Agency coordinates with major TV networks, with CNN Anchor
Anderson Cooper himself having started his career with a CIA internship, is
unknown and unacknowledged. The history of Project Mockingbird, or the fact
that even Hollywood movies are routinely sponsored by the Psy-ops and
intelligence wings of the US Armed Forces, is simply glossed over.
The most loyal, true
believing, unquestioning American will insist that no one has ever told him
what to believe. Not the media, not the educational system, not advertising,
not intelligence agencies, not twitter, not Facebook. The most conforming,
true-believing, Pentagon loyal flag waving Americans always insist that they
have come to all of their political and geopolitical beliefs based on their own
independent research. The fact that so many other people have come to the exact
same conclusions is merely a coincidence.
If “Brainwashing” actually
existed, even as it is portrayed in American media, it would seem that those
Americans who insist they are “free thinking” display the signs of being the
most apparent victims of brainwashing. One might argue that they are so
thoroughly brainwashed, they believe all who disagree with them to be
brainwashed.
But brainwashing is not
real. It is a Cold War fiction, as we shall see below.
“Coercive Persuasion” and
“The Manchurian Candidate”
During the Korean War, a
number of US military personnel were taken captive. A number of them appeared
on TV and radio broadcasts to give political statements denouncing American imperialism
and capitalism. How could this have happened? American media and intelligence
agencies became desperate to figure this out. It could not be that facts and
logic had convinced the US soldiers that killing millions of Koreans in the
hopes of crushing the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea was mistaken. The
US war that resulted in mass death and destruction had to be logical, ethical,
and moral. So, how could wholesome American GIs who were taken prisoner have
possibly been convinced otherwise? What sinister evil magic had the Asian
Communists utilized to manipulate the minds of their captives?
It is worth noting that even
a US Army General was captured during the Korean War, and even this General,
William F. Dean, returned from captivity in a 1953 Prisoner exchange, filled
with utter demoralization and confusion about the war. In his 1973
autobiography William F. Dean described Communist journalist Wilfred Burchett
as his friend, and spoke very positively of his captors. He said he was
unworthy of the Medal of Honor saying “I wouldn’t have awarded myself a wooden
star for what I did as a commander.”
In the 1950s and 60s, the
concept of brainwashing found its way into popular culture. The term itself is
a translation, or mistranslation of a Chinese phrase used by Communist
organizers. Films like “The Manchurian Candidate” popularized the concept.
Americans were trained to believe that if someone espouses anti-capitalist or
anti-imperialist ideas, this is because they have become the victim of some kind
of magical communist mind control. Popular wisdom was that not only should
Marxists and anti-war voices in US society be ignored, but it is best to avoid
being around them. If one becomes to close to them, one could become a victim
of “brainwashing” themselves, and soon have one’s mind programmed to believe in
communist deceptions.
As the Mccarthyist hysteria
faded, the concept of brainwashing seemed to fit the emerging Cold War
liberalism like a glove. Fascism and Communism were “the same thing” to voices
like Rod Sterling and Lester Crane. America was said to be superior because it
did not ideologically train its population, and the state did not impose its
beliefs on the population.
Science Fiction vs. Fact
The popularization of the
concept accompanied decades of psychological research by intelligence agencies.
A slew of published academic works like “The Mind Possessed” by William Sargant
or “Coercive Persuasion” by Edgar Schein circulated, attempting to explain the
phenomenon. Robert Jay Lifton became the academic guru of “mind control” and
“brainwashing” studies.
While academics pushed the
myth, the texts of their work don’t actually describe the stuff of science
fiction and horror movies. What the books describe is basically the concept of
“suggestibility,” arguing that people in groups tends to conform to what other
people in the group are doing. Furthermore, practices that have been employed
by religious groups since the beginning of time, such as chanting, singing, and
repeating mantras can serve the purpose of imprinting concepts into people’s
minds. The various studies of suggestibility point out that the most
“brainwashable” people tend to be the most psychologically healthy, while the
least “brainwashable” tend to be those who are mentally ill.
The picture that emerges
from these works is not of a sinister, mystical method that reduces people to
obedient zombies. It is rather one of social conformity, driven by heightened
states of emotion. William Sargant wrote: “Suggestibility is in fact one of the
essential characteristics of being normal. A normal person is responsive to
other people around him, cares about what they think of him, and is reasonably
open to their influence. If the great majority of people were not normally
suggestible, we could not live together in society at all, we could not live
together in society at all…. From the Stone Age to Hitler, to the Beatles and
the modern ‘pop culture’, the brain of man has constantly been swayed by the
same physiological techniques. Reason is dethroned, the normal brain computer
is temporarily put out of action, and new ideas and beliefs are uncritically
accepted.”
Trying to out-brainwash the
brainwashers…
The work of Steve Hassan, a
respected expert on “Cult Mind Control” who is a former follower of Korean
anti-communist fanatic Rev. Sun Myung Moon, argues that during the Cold War
era, tactics utilized by Chinese Communists to “reform the thoughts” of
prisoners and dissidents were adopted by a variety of different forces. Hasan
is an outspoken liberal pundit whose book describing “Cult Mind Control” was a
best-seller in 1988. After quitting Moon’s organization, Hasan admits he was
involved in kidnapping other members and forcibly “de-programming” them during
the 1970s.
Hassan openly admits that
his former leader, Rev. Sun Myung Moon, was most likely tied to American
intelligence agencies. In his October 2019 interview with Jordan Harbringer he
said: “Post World War Two, Korean war… South Korea was very unstable. North
Korea is a version of what it is today… And some people in military
intelligence in the United States decided, ‘Well, the North Koreans are
brainwashing, we need to create a program in South Korea to stabilize the
regime. They taught the South Korean President, ‘You need to set up a Korean
CIA, we’ll help you’ and they set up a re-education program for dissidents in
South Korea, and they decided to use a front person, so it was not looking like
a government operation, and it was the Moonies that was chosen to do that… The
Moonies had, nobody knows why or how, the patents for manufacturing M16 Rifles
and other American military hardware. Why? Because America was leaving Vietnam.
Still the height of the Cold War, we have to stop the Commies. And then
somebody said ‘Let’s bring the Moonies to the United States and set up counter
communist programs on college campuses’ and that’s where I got recruited… I was
sent to fast for Nixon during Watergate, because God loves Nixon, God wants
Nixon. The US government has never acknowledged the existence of these things.
They don’t want to talk about it.”
The fact that the fanatical
anti-Communists of the Unification Church received backing from Japanese, South
Korean, and American intelligence is a matter of public record. This was
revealed in 1977 in testimony before the Subcommittee
on International Organizations of the Committee on International Relations of the US House of Representatives. It
seems that in the hopes of defeating Communists, who they believed were
brainwashing people, the US government and allies were themselves actively trying
to brainwash people.
However, the Rev. Moon’s
Unification Church deflects the allegations of ex-members and academics like
Steven Hassan by pointing out that thousands of people have spent introductory
weekends at Unification Church facilities and undergone their “thought reform”
style rituals, but never joined the organization.
The same thing could be said
for Mao Zedong’s Chinese Communist Party. While the Chinese Communist Party
greatly expanded in membership, millions of Chinese people quit or resigned
from the party during the 1920s and 30s when its supposed methods of
“brainwashing” were being engineered. In fact, many factions that opposed Mao
Zedong and the Communist Party’s general line emerged within the party itself.
Internal turmoil and factionalism was a plague on organization, and continued
to be even after the Communist Party took power in 1949. From the Hundred
Flowers campaign, to the Cultural Revolution, to the arrest of the Gang of
Four, the Chinese Communist Party has never been an organization of drones all
adhering to the same beliefs and blindly following the leader. The Chinese
Communist Party has been able to present a unified face to the world and
mobilize the country to carry out great tasks, but this has always been
extremely difficult. The notion that its power is rooted in some kind Hollywood
“brainwashing” is downright laughable to anyone familiar with Chinese history.
In contemporary China, where
the Communist Party is in power, it is very clear that it does not have a
complete monopoly influencing the mind of the public. Dissident groups are
widespread. Catholicism and other forms of Christianity, something the
Communist Party opposes, have grown in China since the 1980s, driving China and
the Holy See to reach an official agreement in 2018.
Nothing Worth Dying For?
The most interesting aspect
of the evolving myth of “brainwashing” is that American political entities are
now weaponizing it against each other. The most blatant example of this was in
2006, when the documentary film Jesus Camp circulated US television. The film
was nominated for Best Documentary at the Oscars. The film portrayed “Kids on
Fire School of Ministry,” a charismatic evangelical Christian facility in North
Dakota, where children are trained to help “take back America for Christ.” The
film leads viewers to the conclusion that George W. Bush and Christian
right-wing are “brainwashing” children in order to achieve their political
goals.
Now, in 2019, Steve Hassan
announced he is working on a book utilizing his knowledge and studies of
“brainwashing” to expose the “mind control” methods of US President Donald
Trump. Meanwhile, Trump’s supporters largely believe that critics of the US
President have been “brainwashed” by Fake News.
As US society becomes less
stable and more chaotic, with a clear lack of any unifying vision, one wonders
if the intentionally fomented paranoid opposition to “suggestibility” and the
emphasis on “thinking for yourself” is not playing a role in the gradual
decline of western society. After all, if one believes that it is better to
have children who cannot find their country on a map, than to have children who
can find it, and are raised to live life for a larger purpose, what is the
point of fighting for one’s country? What is worth sacrificing for?
Is belief that there is no
truth and upholding individualism above all else something that will elicit
passion? Can post-modernism and supposed “free thinking” really function as the
glue to hold a society together? The answer is: doubtful.
Robert Smith is
an independent American researcher and analyst that specializes in
social psychology and conflict resolution. He writes especially
for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
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