Writing the book on mass indoctrination
This book by Buck Sexton sounds worth reading: Manufacturing Delusion: How the Left Uses Brainwashing, Indoctrination, and Propaganda Against You. From the Amazon blurb:
Some of history’s greatest empires have devolved into genocidal lunacy—often with shocking compliance from their own people. What methods can create this madness?
In Manufacturing Delusion, acclaimed conservative commentator and former CIA officer Buck Sexton offers answers. Drawing on his intelligence experience, expertise in crowd psychology, knowledge of propaganda, and research into some of history’s darkest totalitarian chapters, he equips you to identify mind control tactics used to form compliant citizens. He explores the eight tactics of mass delusion through examining:
— How Stalin used Pavlovian mind games to establish absolute control
— How Chinese thought reform transformed opposition into terrorized pawns
— How Jihadist preachers replace shared humanity with weaponized fearUsing these examples and others, Sexton walks you through a history of controlling regimes and the methods they used to create passive citizens. More importantly, he shows you how some of the early stages of mass delusion have already occurred right here in the United States of America, on issues of public health, gender, and racial justice.
I heard about the book through this interview with the author. Although the book’s title only mentions the left, he says in the interview that he also sees it on the right (or the former right, or the pretend right – aka Carlson and Owens). However, that is still a fringe group on the right, whereas it’s a widespread and mainstreamed tool of the left.
Here’s the interview:
In the interview, Sexton also mentions a much older book, The Rape of the Mind: The Psychology of Thought Control, Menticide, and Brainwashing by Joost A. M. Meerloo. It was first published in 1956 and this is from Amazon’s description:
In 1933 Meerloo began to study the methods by which systematic mental pressure brings people to abject submission, and by which totalitarians imprint their subjective “truth” on their victims’ minds. In “The Rape of the Mind” he goes far beyond the direct military implications of mental torture to describing how our own culture unobtrusively shows symptoms of pressurizing people’s minds. He presents a systematic analysis of the methods of brainwashing and mental torture and coercion, and shows how totalitarian strategy, with its use of mass psychology, leads to systematized “rape of the mind.” He describes the new age of cold war with its mental terror, verbocracy, and semantic fog, the use of fear as a tool of mass submission and the problem of treason and loyalty, so loaded with dangerous confusion. The “Rape of the Mind” is written for the interested layman, not only for experts and scientists. Contents: Part One: The Techniques of Individual Submission. 1. You Too Would Confess. 2. Pavlov’s Students as Circus Tamers. 3. Medication into Submission. 4. Why Do They Yield? The Psychodynamics of False Confession. Part Two: The Techniques of Mass Submission. 5. The Cold War against the Mind. 6. Totalitaria and its Dictatorship. 7. The Intrusion by Totalitarian Thinking. 8. Trial by Trial. 9. Fear as a Tool of Terror. Part Three: Unobtrusive Coercion. 10. The Child is Father to the Man. 11. Mental Contagion and Mass Delusion. 12. Technology Invades Our Minds. 13. Intrusion by the Administrative Mind. 14. The Turncoat in Each of Us. Part Four: In Search of Defenses. 15. Training Against Mental Torture. 16. Education for Discipline or Higher Morale. 17. From Old to New Courage. 18. Freedom — Our Mental Backbone
I think “our mental backbone” has gone rather squishy lately.
The reason I have highlighted the Meerloo book, though, is that – strangely enough – I read it when I was about ten years old. Did I understand it? Certainly not deeply. But the topic already interested me so much that I plowed through it.
How did it fall into my hands? My family had received a free and unsolicited catalogue in the mail from Marboro Books, which was (according to Google AI) “a notable discount book retailer and publisher founded in 1947, famous for selling remainders and overstock books at steep discounts through retail stores and mail-order catalogs, the chain was acquired by Barnes & Noble in 1979.” When the catalogue came, I pored over it, fascinated. It was the first time it occurred to me that I could order an adult book – and by “adult” I certainly don’t mean anything to do with sex.
My childhood interests were a portent of things to come as a blogger, because not only did I order that Meerloo book with my allowance, but I also ordered Charles MacKay’s classic Extraordinary Popular Delusions and The Madness of Crowds. That one was first published in 1841:
The subjects of Mackay’s debunking include alchemy, crusades, duels, economic bubbles, fortune-telling, haunted houses, the Drummer of Tedworth, the influence of politics and religion on the shapes of beards and hair, magnetisers (influence of imagination in curing disease), murder through poisoning, prophecies, popular admiration of great thieves, popular follies of great cities, and relics.
I think I’m going to order the Sexton book. I seem to have lost the others along the way, although I had them for a long long time.

As a mainly historical reader this does sound interesting. Read a book on the Soviet Show trials, The Prosecutor and Judge were in cahoots, and would get defendants to admit to crimes they didn’t do but they bowed down admitted them and often executed for these fake crimes.
That they could do this amazed me while reading that book.
The head protector actually survived after Stalin died being in New York at the time.
I think “our mental backbone” has gone rather squishy lately.
Squishy minds: I recall when terrorists bombed a large passenger train in Spain right before an election, killing many. I believe the terrorists were leftists, and the election suddenly shifted hard left. (I might have the politics that wrong, but it seemed that way to me at the time.) I thought, “Oh my, I don’t think something like that would happen here. Don’t you want to fight back at the ballot box? Would it happen here now? I’m not sure.
The election swung towards the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE).
— Copilot
I heard some hot shot investor guy on air recently respond to all activity and success for socialist DSA candidates. To the voters, he said, “Read a history book.” 😉 He might have added, “An honest and accurate one.”
Nice. Buck Sexton looks like a writer who can update Dutch named Merlot book, I can see why you’re eager.
The understanding from psychology and media has changed a lot in 70 years. If Buck misses certain topics or relevant realms that deserve mining, I hope others will attempt a tome like this on.
As for Charles MacKay’s well-known classic, I doubt that any social psychologist has adequately covered the history of scape-goating. Of course, it’s a large and varied phenomenon.
I think Rachel Wilson has taken care to update witch persecutions in her book “Occult Feminism: The Secret
History of Women’s Liberation.” Wilson writes from a post feminist ans critical Christian perspective.
Buck’s book does very much look worthwhile! Added to my buy list.