The Last Song to Go Through The Orlando Shooter’s Mind

In 1988, N.W.A. frontman Eazy E rapped about an encounter with a …

Afghan Girl Day of The Dead

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Music in psychological operations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Music has been used in psychological operations. The term music torture is sometimes used by critics of the practice of playing loud music incessantly to prisoners or people besieged.

The United Nations and the European Court of Human Rights have banned the use of loud music in interrogations.[citation needed] The term torture is sometimes used to describe the practice. While it is acknowledged by US interrogation experts that it causes discomfort, it has also been characterized by them as causing no “long-term effects.”[1]

Music and sound have been usually used as part of a combination of interrogation methods, today recognized by international bodies as amounting to torture.[2] Attacking all senses without leaving any visible traces, they have formed the basis of the widely discussed torture in Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib. They were, however, devised much earlier in the 1950s and early 1960s, as a way to counter so-called Soviet “brainwashing”.[3] They include:

sensory deprivation
stress positions
sleep deprivation
food and drink deprivation
continuous music or sound

What the Americans do to Afghans at their base in Cuba. The eyes of the moon have the mystery of why the Orlando Shooter went on his Jihad. No tears for Afghanistan from the brainwashed Babylonians