‘Oxytocin-Enforced Norm Compliance Reduces Xenophobic Outgroup Rejection’

March 14th, 2018

Via: Jon Rappoport:

I really hope you understand this.

It is not a fantasy. It isn’t science fiction. It isn’t satire.

It is Brave New World, but not the Huxley novel. It’s happening now.

It’s a published study that appears on the website of the prestigious Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

The title of the study is, “Oxytocin-enforced norm compliance reduces xenophobic outgroup rejection.” (Reference: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Aug 29;114(35):9314-9319.)

Xenophobia is defined as: “fear or hatred of foreigners, people from different cultures, or strangers.” (Dictionary.com)

Oxytocin, the chemical used in this study, is described by Medical News Today: “Widely referred to as the love hormone, oxytocin has also been dubbed the hug hormone, cuddle chemical, moral molecule, and the bliss hormone due to its effects on behavior, including its role in love and in female reproductive biological functions in reproduction.”

“Oxytocin is a hormone that is made in the brain, in the hypothalamus. It is transported to, and secreted by, the pituitary gland, which is located at the base of the brain.”

The published study details a successful attempt at chemical mind control. The goal is making people more “happy and friendly” about mass migration, by changing their hormonal response toward migrants.

Nothing in the study cites inherent migration problems, such as increased violent crime, back-breaking financial pressure on government budgets, and the eroding of local cultures. It’s all about shifting feeling and reaction toward waves of immigrants.

Research Credit: Pookie

4 Responses to “‘Oxytocin-Enforced Norm Compliance Reduces Xenophobic Outgroup Rejection’”

  1. Dennis says:

    Fortunately, oxytocin can’t be administered orally as it’s destroyed in the GI tract, and has a fairly short half-life

  2. Kevin says:

    Could they simply spray it over a city from an aircraft? In the study, it was administered to test subjects through a nasal spray.

  3. Dennis says:

    I was wondering the same. Using misters or smoke machines, I imagine it could be done in a controlled environment like an indoor concert or movie theatre, but in an open-air urban environment, the challenges would be considerable.

    Remember Clockwork Orange? I wonder whether it could be used to induce long-term positive emotional associations if, for example, someone were dosed while watching a movie sympathetic to a particular cause or POV,

  4. pookie says:

    From her past research, Dr. Bales knows that even a single dose of oxytocin can have long-lasting effects; “The clearest message was that any exposure to oxytocin can cause long-term behavioral and neuroendocrine effects”.

    http://www.cnprc.ucdavis.edu/unknown-effects-of-long-term-oxytocin-use-in-children/

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