Mind control and its effects

Mind control and its effects

CHARACTERISTICS OF MIND CONTROL

This is a very difficult article for me to write because it is very complex and it is a very important part of my attempt to help the Department of Justice. As President Trump has stated, the Justice Department has issues that need to be addressed and I would like to help. The second part of these articles is to raise awareness and educate people about things that many Americans don’t know about.

WHAT IS MIND CONTROL?

This psychological illness is also known by many other names, such as brainwashing, menticidCoercive persuasion, thought control, or thought reform is based on the concept that the mind can be altered or controlled through psychological techniques. Mind control is said to reduce its subject’s ability to think critically or independently, to allow the introduction of new unwanted thoughts and ideas into the subject’s mind, as well as to change their attitudes, values, and beliefs. the 1950s by a government to explain how to get their people to cooperate with them.

When I first walked into the courtroom and looked around I was really scared and scared now of what my chances of release would be, because I was innocent and I was having a hard time understanding why I was there. As I looked around, I felt my mind going in all directions that I had never felt before. I was confused, scared, disoriented and worried about my future and the future of my family. This initial shock was repeated over and over emphasizing that he was no longer in control. And it turned out that I wasn’t in control, which is totally and completely opposite of my previous life.

With the use of high ceilings, a darkened room, including the location of the defendant who was at the rear of the courtroom, while those conducting pretrial instruction held positions facing the front facing the rear of the courtroom. room the accused, along with his lawyer. . I realized that this was only a small part of the mind control influencing and reconditioning my mind.

Another factor is the pre-trial formality, which was completely foreign to me as I didn’t understand a thing they were doing as they were moving at a fast pace along with words I had never heard and quoting some numbers I think. be from the law books. I had no idea what they were talking about, and when I tried to ask my attorney a question, they advised me to keep quiet unless they spoke to me.

These experiences you carry with you as you try to continue with your normal life, but now you are worried, worried not only about the events of the day, but worried about the future with its uncertainty and I had no control, whereas in the past, I always had the control.

I wonder why I had to put up with this troublesome psychological effect at this point, but I guess they want a limp defendant who doesn’t defy but rather accepts their fate as determined for them.

Another thing that bothers me then and still today, is that I understand that you are innocent until proven guilty, but the high percentage of innocent people who are forcibly turned into guilty is growing due to the excess of beds within the Bureau of Prisons, plus the fact that they must maintain their 98.6% acquittal rate.

Those brave enough to go to trial will have a rough time and if they win the case they are free to go but I guarantee they will be watched closely. However, if the jury finds them guilty, additional time is added to their sentence, called stacking, and this is not legal.

When you walk through those doors, you’re guilty. I have learned and have been taught that preventive detention was a confrontational system, but that is not true today. Even my own attorney sided with the others and I was alone without representation. Now this is not true in all cases, but in mine it definitely was, as we have evidence. We have proof of everything I say.

What do mental illness and other psychological factors do to you during the extended periods of time you serve your sentence in federal prison?

He suffered from a psychological illness called PTSD or the post-traumatic stress disorder that almost always affects the elderly released from prison. This is the result of pre-trial stress or stress within the prison system, but is usually a combination of both. This disorder begins immediately after release or even up to 4 to 6 years after release.

I’ve got PTSD and have had it for over four years. Some of the features of PTSD they are: flashbacks, avoidance and mood swings and no matter how hard you try or which psychologists and sociologists you visit, it will never go away. I’ll wake up with night sweats, I’ll have day mares, I’ll get angry when I normally wouldn’t before my devastating experience.

As I write this article, I am experiencing some of the trauma of my psychological illness and I can’t help but get angry and have to stop for a while to calm down before continuing.

Some of the risk factors for PTSD include:

�¼ Living through dangerous events and trauma

�¼ Being hurt or killed

�¼ See people being killed

�¼ Feeling of horror, helplessness, or extreme fear

�¼ Have little or no social support after the event

�¼ Dealing with additional stress after the event, such as the loss of a loved one, grief and injury, or the loss of a job or home

�¼ Have a history of mental illness or substance abuse

What hurt me the most is the lack of social support. It was as if I was pushed into the corner and if someone spoke to me, it was very brief. This was probably the worst part of my trauma, and it still exists today. As a consequence, I attend very few social functions without my wife being with me. The only phone calls I get are usually from my doctors. I would say, “I am living in a prison without bars.” That is why I am writing about my experience and I want to help, because I am a lost cause, but I want to save others from this kind of fate and life.

As I said before, I want you to be aware of the things around you that surreptitiously affect you. Be very careful with social media as it can ruin you for the rest of your life, and we are finally starting to realize that fact. In the near future I am looking for something to do because of the damage it has caused to many people, especially the younger generation who I feel is now under attack.

Please look around you and open your eyes and mind and you will see this mind control happening to you and to others. I realized this and wrote my observations when I was in prison and I was constantly observing and I was going to write a book called Flesh Robots, but that is no longer in the future. But instead I want to help people and also change the system that is in dire need of change in any way I can. I want to be there to help. Open your eyes, and you will see.

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