you should make a vid on the worst man made/non man made disasters in history (possibly before WWII?) I personally as a writer for my Community College, think you should start a website for short little bits of information.
this is so well researched and presented. how u don’t have more subscribers is beyond me.. this was incredibly interesting! plz keep up the good work I always look forward to ur uploads :)
Poisoner in Chief is a great book about Sidney Gottlieb and MK ULTRA. He rarely gets mentioned when people talk about MK ULTRA despite being the man in charge. That program was his baby.
Love the videos... one request. Can u put a longer pause or add a number or a sound cue that you're changing stories. The facts are so close together that it's hard sometimes to separate the stories.
I learned about Harlow's Monkeys in college and found it so disturbing I could not finish watching the video on the subject. It was animal cruelty in the most psychological way possible. No one should have to be subjected to the type of experiments on this list.
You focused a lot on how unethical the MK Ultra experiments were, but even if they were completely ethical, I think the main concern is what the experiments were trying to accomplish. They were literally trying to invent mind control, ethical or not, the CIA should not be tryna do that shit.
I pay my respects and thank the victims who were subjected to experiments. Without them, medical knowledge would not have progressed. Because their medical information cost their lives forever. R.I.P But I curse the experimenters who treated them inhumanely and without their consent.
Milgram Obedience sounds what L.Ron Hubbard did with Scientology it's the mind games almost, if he could make you put your hand on a wall he could do it again, almost until exhaustion, MK Ultra also type things can also be seen in scientology.
I enjoy the video, but some of the conclusions this channel comes to are a little iffy, which is no fault of the channel! A lot of these events were so shocking that the information that's the most easily accessible tends to be the methods and materials used, the demographics of the participants and the effects the experiments had on them in both short and long-term, and the researcher's intentions & conclusion. The validity of the study and the limitations are often ignored and it's in everyone's best interest to look at the actual study for themselves and perhaps cross-research to see what other researchers were saying about the experiments at the time... which is a lot of work, and no wonder people don't do it. The most glaring inaccuracy is in the Stanford Prison and Milgram experiments. It wasn't a show of how average, everyday people can be warped into violent, authoritarian types who will torture others just because they're following orders. It reveals how people who already have a bias towards or against certain demographics and a respect or fondness towards ideas like order, law enforcement and due punishment, and authoritarianism to some extent are more likely to fall into the behaviors they admire, and sometimes to an excessive degree. In the Stanford Prison experiment, the researcher gave participants a questionnaire asking them their views on justice, order, crime, criminals, things of that nature. He then had participants that fell mostly on authoritarian views play the part of the guard, and those who scored lower on that scale play the prisoners. The experiment also revealed that the ones playing prisoners tended to be more collaborative and vocal about unjust treatment. But since they were playing prisoners, their complaints often went ignored, and plenty stuck it out far longer than they should have for the sake of the experiment. Another youtuber whose focus is in scientific and historical "fun facts" and experiments of sorts but hones in a lot on psychology and philosophy (fields that have always gone hand-in-hand) actually wanted to try the Stanford Prison experiment himself (which ended up being far more reminiscent of the Milgram experiment) while accounting for Dr. Zimbardo's limitation in his study. He gave a similar questionnaire to pick his participants and picked ones who had either more collaborative & less authoritarian views or fell somewhere in the middle. He separated them into 2 groups, and had them play a puzzle game (I forget what game it was exactly) and gave both groups the opportunity to sabotage the other group with loud noises or cutting the lights off to scare & confuse the opposing team or to disrupt their progress in the game. A lot more tame, yes, but this is after the psychology field stopped permitting wildly unethical practices in research 🤣 we can no longer physically or psychologically torture one another for science lmao. But as it turns out, neither group used either punishment on the opposing group for the first half of the experiment. They were so focused on collaborating with their group members and trying to win the game through merit and teamwork that some even said they forgot the punishments were available and others felt too guilty to use them. The youtuber and his testers actually had to initiate the punishments themselves by using a low setting on the noise punishment on one group and have them believe it was the opposing one to get the participants to use the punishments on one another at all. And even so, no one ever set it on the loudest setting. Both groups were coed, too, as one of the other limitations of the Stanford Prison experiment was that it was all male participants, who can't account for half of the population. This also revealed that in a coed setting, men and women not prone to authoritarian views tend to be equally collaborative. I'll link the video here, I'm terrible with names and it's been at least a year or two since I've seen it (the video itself is older) so I may have some details wrong, but you may recognize him! He's very popular: ua-cam.com/video/KND_bBDE8RQ/v-deo.htmlsi=yOZrek9eaZGJXCuf
20th century science was peak science. People willing to do whatever it takes, irregardless of the feelings or dogma of others, to find the truth. Some of these took it too far but still provided useful information we still use today.
I love your videos man! But your audio on this one seemed really bad compared to others. All of your "s" came off very staticy and peaky and made it hard to listen too. It might be a good idea to lower your input and move the mic away a bit to stop these sounds. Keep going!!
i can't listen to these weird pauses and sentence abominations. its just too unnatural of a speech pattern for my brain to want to hear for more than 7 seconds.
Leave a like and subscribe for a part 2!
I waited weeks for this
Unit 731 gotta be in the next video right?
@matt_rl6016 I talked about Unit 731 in a previous video
Dude how do you know so much?
you should make a vid on the worst man made/non man made disasters in history (possibly before WWII?) I personally as a writer for my Community College, think you should start a website for short little bits of information.
Thank you for mentioning Tuskegee. Many channels leave that out. It needs to be talked about more.
No one's fault they were too dumb to noticed. They like being played
@@HEA_01what is wrong with you
@@HEA_01so what about others in the video ?
Putuhs resol
How does talking about it make it any different? It happened.. womp womp.
this is so well researched and presented. how u don’t have more subscribers is beyond me.. this was incredibly interesting! plz keep up the good work I always look forward to ur uploads :)
Poisoner in Chief is a great book about Sidney Gottlieb and MK ULTRA. He rarely gets mentioned when people talk about MK ULTRA despite being the man in charge. That program was his baby.
Bro ur on a roll rn, keep it coming with the great content brother❤
I can't comfortably approve this video without Unit 731 being included
Keep these coming!!!!! Been on it since you created your channel.
luv your content 😁😁
Love the videos... one request. Can u put a longer pause or add a number or a sound cue that you're changing stories. The facts are so close together that it's hard sometimes to separate the stories.
I’m a huge fan of your channel. Very interesting content and I like your narration.👍
Store got robbed this morning, back for another shift and this is definitely gonna aid my anxiety. Thanks as always bro
Hope you’re good bro.
@Nick_Valentine2702 thanks brother, a little shaken up but im good.
Sorry to hear that. I hope everything is okay
I’m
Comingggg with a weapon
@@jaydonehistory thanks so much brother and much better, they’re upgrading the security
It’s frustrating that the nazis were punished, yet the Japanese were pardoned by giving over test results
I think it's also about going on against the jews
not all the nazis got punished, check out Operation Paperclip. And the rumors of German-esque towns in South America
Thalidomide … in Quebec we have a singer (Martin Deschamps) who is a child of thalidomide … he’s an inspiration ❤
fun fact: mk ultra was so poignant that it ends up being an important part of the plot to the first outlast game and it's "whistleblower" DLC
Jerry The Head.. are you Al Snow's head's S/O? (this is a joke that involves Pro-Wrestling)
It’s also the entire plot of the 2nd game.
I learned about Harlow's Monkeys in college and found it so disturbing I could not finish watching the video on the subject. It was animal cruelty in the most psychological way possible. No one should have to be subjected to the type of experiments on this list.
This guy is pumping out content like crazy.
You focused a lot on how unethical the MK Ultra experiments were, but even if they were completely ethical, I think the main concern is what the experiments were trying to accomplish. They were literally trying to invent mind control, ethical or not, the CIA should not be tryna do that shit.
tryna
Great work my friend 🤟
I pay my respects and thank the victims who were subjected to experiments. Without them, medical knowledge would not have progressed. Because their medical information cost their lives forever.
R.I.P
But I curse the experimenters who treated them inhumanely and without their consent.
So that's what Thalidomide is, now I can understand the Slipknot lyric from Left Behind, "I CAN'T! stand to see your thalidomide robot face"
the first experiment about little albert reminds me of a part of the book brave new world
seeing "Monster" experiment with a picture of a bunch of children in a school instantly reminded me of the anime Monster lol
One of the best anime and manga ever made
Milgram Obedience sounds what L.Ron Hubbard did with Scientology it's the mind games almost, if he could make you put your hand on a wall he could do it again, almost until exhaustion, MK Ultra also type things can also be seen in scientology.
Why is Unit 731 not included? Rather more disturbing than most of the examples mentioned in the video.
I talked about it in a previous video
@@jaydonehistory Thanks. This was the first video I saw by you 🙂
NOTHING is more disturbng than the Tuskugee "experiment"
Babe wake up new Jaydone History video just droped.
babe dump your boyfriend hes a follower
incredible how many of these were done by the US government
yet predictable
Ily goat
Relatable
W-W-WHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Only ten million for many people 11:40 single victim cases get hundreds of millions.
Watching this while sewing 💜
Unit 731?
What about Project SUNSHINE
why include harlows monkeys?
I enjoy the video, but some of the conclusions this channel comes to are a little iffy, which is no fault of the channel! A lot of these events were so shocking that the information that's the most easily accessible tends to be the methods and materials used, the demographics of the participants and the effects the experiments had on them in both short and long-term, and the researcher's intentions & conclusion. The validity of the study and the limitations are often ignored and it's in everyone's best interest to look at the actual study for themselves and perhaps cross-research to see what other researchers were saying about the experiments at the time... which is a lot of work, and no wonder people don't do it.
The most glaring inaccuracy is in the Stanford Prison and Milgram experiments. It wasn't a show of how average, everyday people can be warped into violent, authoritarian types who will torture others just because they're following orders. It reveals how people who already have a bias towards or against certain demographics and a respect or fondness towards ideas like order, law enforcement and due punishment, and authoritarianism to some extent are more likely to fall into the behaviors they admire, and sometimes to an excessive degree. In the Stanford Prison experiment, the researcher gave participants a questionnaire asking them their views on justice, order, crime, criminals, things of that nature. He then had participants that fell mostly on authoritarian views play the part of the guard, and those who scored lower on that scale play the prisoners. The experiment also revealed that the ones playing prisoners tended to be more collaborative and vocal about unjust treatment. But since they were playing prisoners, their complaints often went ignored, and plenty stuck it out far longer than they should have for the sake of the experiment.
Another youtuber whose focus is in scientific and historical "fun facts" and experiments of sorts but hones in a lot on psychology and philosophy (fields that have always gone hand-in-hand) actually wanted to try the Stanford Prison experiment himself (which ended up being far more reminiscent of the Milgram experiment) while accounting for Dr. Zimbardo's limitation in his study. He gave a similar questionnaire to pick his participants and picked ones who had either more collaborative & less authoritarian views or fell somewhere in the middle. He separated them into 2 groups, and had them play a puzzle game (I forget what game it was exactly) and gave both groups the opportunity to sabotage the other group with loud noises or cutting the lights off to scare & confuse the opposing team or to disrupt their progress in the game. A lot more tame, yes, but this is after the psychology field stopped permitting wildly unethical practices in research 🤣 we can no longer physically or psychologically torture one another for science lmao. But as it turns out, neither group used either punishment on the opposing group for the first half of the experiment. They were so focused on collaborating with their group members and trying to win the game through merit and teamwork that some even said they forgot the punishments were available and others felt too guilty to use them. The youtuber and his testers actually had to initiate the punishments themselves by using a low setting on the noise punishment on one group and have them believe it was the opposing one to get the participants to use the punishments on one another at all. And even so, no one ever set it on the loudest setting. Both groups were coed, too, as one of the other limitations of the Stanford Prison experiment was that it was all male participants, who can't account for half of the population. This also revealed that in a coed setting, men and women not prone to authoritarian views tend to be equally collaborative.
I'll link the video here, I'm terrible with names and it's been at least a year or two since I've seen it (the video itself is older) so I may have some details wrong, but you may recognize him! He's very popular:
ua-cam.com/video/KND_bBDE8RQ/v-deo.htmlsi=yOZrek9eaZGJXCuf
Some of these are absolutely disgusting.
yo jaydone what mic u use my boy
Another interesting fact about M-K Ultra is that Ted Kaczynski was a believed "member"
wouldn't surprise me
20th century science was peak science. People willing to do whatever it takes, irregardless of the feelings or dogma of others, to find the truth.
Some of these took it too far but still provided useful information we still use today.
except half of them were nowhere near the truth. and the ww2 ones are probably made up.
*regardless
Imagine being pedantic and still wrong
no it wasnt. it was all funded by capitalist giants to create "truths" not discover anything.
literally none of it is useful
I love your videos man! But your audio on this one seemed really bad compared to others. All of your "s" came off very staticy and peaky and made it hard to listen too. It might be a good idea to lower your input and move the mic away a bit to stop these sounds. Keep going!!
Agreed can hear it too
You'll pay dearly for what you did to my people
No one cares. Yall are doing the same thing in israel rn.
Who will lmao?
🤓
i can't listen to these weird pauses and sentence abominations. its just too unnatural of a speech pattern for my brain to want to hear for more than 7 seconds.
Sounds like AI
I mean this in the nicest way I just can’t listen to your voice man 😢
i can, thats my goat
Hmmm interesting very interesting