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patric...@linuxmail.org> wrote:
>On Sunday, September 9, 2012 1:01:40 PM UTC-5, patrick wrote:
>> On Sunday, September 9, 2012 10:21:51 AM UTC-5, bentot wrote:
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>> > On Sun, 9 Sep 2012 07:48:27 -0700 (PDT), patrick
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patric...@linuxmail.org> wrote:
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>> > >ben and tub , do u believe its possible to brainwash people
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>> > >at schools.
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http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/brainwashing-classes-stalled-on-election-eve/story-e6frg6so-1226468492236
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>> > That article is about children. And, yes. children can be conditioned
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>> > to believe and parrot behaviors. You call it brainwashing, I call it
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>> > Don't know if you have children, Patrick, but those of us who do, know
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>> > that we "attempt" to condition them to act and think in way that we
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>> > think best. The success of the "attempts" runs from wonderful to
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>> > disappointing, depending on the our skills (or lack of) and the
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>> > willingness of the child to be "conditioned."
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>> > bentot
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>> thanks for the reply.
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>> i believe when a government wants to set up classes to condition children
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>> to their way of thinking, then the line can be crossed between helping
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>> children make good decisions and putting propoganda in their minds.
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>also could u give an example of brainwashing children as apposed to conditioning
>them ?
There is no difference. "Brainwashing" is a term coined as result of
the Korean war and carries a negative connotation of conditioning. You
like to use the term, "brainwashing", for your own reasons. I don't
My military service was during and after the Korean war. The term was
bandied about extensively right after the war. (actually, the war is