Article Image Paul Rosenberg - Freeman**Q**s Perspective


Fear, Shame And Intimidation Are Chemical Weapons

Written by Subject: Social Engineering

I rather hate to do this, but these first two paragraphs seem the best way to make this very important point. Apologies.

Imagine that some combination of circumstances end with you walking into a so-so bar, then accidentally causing some gigantic brute to spill his drink. Imagine also that this brute just learned that his girlfriend moved out, taking his money with her.

The brute, towering over you, clenches his fists and start spewing threats. Your knees go weak, you can barely think or move… you try to back up but do it so clumsily that you're grasping the edge of the bar to prevent yourself from falling.

The brute hasn't touched you, but you've already been seriously impacted. This happened because of well-known and well-studied chemicals… the chemicals now surging through your body.

So, wasn't this fear a chemical weapon? It was, in fact, the bully's first blow. The chemicals in question were generated by your own body, but they are chemicals just the same. 

Fear, then, is a chemical weapon. So are intimidation and shame. As are their cousins, guilt, blame, and probably a few others, depending upon how we write our definitions.

Robert Sapolsky, who studied the chemicals involved (he studied baboons, but their body chemistry and ours are nearly the same), finding that these "chemical weapons" resulted in more stress, higher blood pressure, a suppressed immune system, and reduced fertility. They are, then, potent weapons.

Our Unfortunate Biology

For both better and worse, we have a biological history. On one hand, that biological history has kept our species present and thriving, and so our complaints, however legitimate, are mitigated. On the other hand, our hormones, after who knows how many generations, have been trained to respond to things like authority and group identity. As a result they can release some very unpleasant and harmful chemicals into our bodies at certain times. And that's something the manipulators of mankind have learned to use.

Our hormonal responses are not necessarily overwhelming, but they do have their effects… poisonous effects. By triggering fear, shame or intimidation (and the boundaries between them can be fuzzy), our hormones are triggered as well. And these hormones do more than just spur some of our thoughts and actions, they directly damage our health.

And, by the way, people display higher IQs and do far better in executive control tests when they are feeling less rather than more intimidated. These chemical weapons make us dumber. 

Western Guilt

We Westerners are especially susceptible to some of these influences because of our cultural traditions. These particular characteristics leave us vulnerable to guilt. As a result, we've developed political classes that are devoted to finding fault, assigning blame, and then offering paths to absolution that serve their  private goals.

In other words, our civilization has been attacked with the chemical weapons of intimidation and shame, purposely and at great length.

Political types, especially, thrive upon assigning shame. It has worked very effectively for them, time after time after time.

Nonetheless, our hormones, however long trained, can be managed. Prize fighters, football players and other repeated participants in violent activities learn how to manage these chemical attacks.

And so, we who are subjected to endless chemical attacks both large and small, must learn to manage our responses. We must train ourselves to not respond to them.

We can consider facts, then repair and improve our actions if they were harmful, but merely feeling these weaponized chemicals is not to be taken as any sort of verdict. In most cases it's a hijacking of our internal chemistry, by and for professional abusers.

In point of fact, billions of dollars are spent every year, precisely to take advantage of our unfortunate biological history. And so I say again, we must train ourselves not to be moved by those chemical weapons… and particularly not to respond to guilt.

It's time for us to recognize this and get past it. 

**

Paul Rosenberg
freemansperspective.com

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