Joost Meerloo, a Dutch psychiatrist, was an early proponent of the concept of brainwashing. "Menticide" is a
neologism he coined meaning "killing of the mind". Meerloo's view was influenced by his experiences during the German occupation of his country during the Second World War and his work with the Dutch government and the American military in the
interrogation of accused
Nazi war criminals. He later emigrated to the United States and taught at
Columbia University. His best-selling 1956 book,
The Rape of the Mind, concludes by saying: Russian historian
Daniel Romanovsky, who interviewed survivors and eyewitnesses in the 1970s, reported on what he called "
Nazi brainwashing" of the people of Belarus by the occupying Germans during the
Second World War, which took place through both mass
propaganda and intense re-education, especially in schools. Romanovsky noted that very soon, most people had adopted the Nazi view that the Jews were an inferior race and were closely tied to the
Soviet government, views that had not been at all common before the German occupation. Italy has had controversy over the concept of
plagio, a crime consisting in an absolute psychological—and eventually physical—domination of a person. The effect is said to be the annihilation of the subject's
freedom and
self-determination and the consequent negation of his or her
personality. The crime of plagio has rarely been prosecuted in Italy, and only one person was ever convicted. In 1981, an Italian court found that the concept is imprecise, lacks coherence and is liable to arbitrary application. Recent scientific book publications in the field of the
mental disorder dissociative identity disorder (DID) mention
torture-based brainwashing by criminal networks and malevolent actors as a deliberate means to create multiple "programmable" personalities in a person to exploit this individual for sexual and financial reasons. Earlier scientific debates in the 1980s and 1990s about torture-based ritual abuse in cults was known as "
satanic ritual abuse," which was mainly viewed as a "
moral panic."
Brain-Washing: A Synthesis of the Russian Textbook on Psychopolitics published by the
Church of Scientology in 1955 about brainwashing.
L. Ron Hubbard authored the text and alleged it was the secret manual written by
Lavrentiy Beria, the
Soviet secret police chief, in 1936. When the FBI ignored him, Hubbard wrote again stating that Soviet agents had, on three occasions, attempted to hire him to work against the United States, and were upset about his refusal, and that one agent specifically attacked him using electroshock as a weapon.
Kathleen Barry, co-founder of the
United Nations NGO, the
Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW), prompted international awareness of human sex trafficking in her 1979 book
Female Sexual Slavery. In his 1986 book
Woman Abuse: Facts Replacing Myths, Lewis Okun reported that: "Kathleen Barry shows in
Female Sexual Slavery that forced female prostitution involves coercive control practices very similar to thought reform." In their 1996 book,
Casting Stones: Prostitution and Liberation in Asia and the United States, Rita Nakashima Brock and
Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite report that the methods commonly used by
pimps to control their victims "closely resemble the brainwashing techniques of terrorists and paranoid cults." In his 2000 book,
Destroying the World to Save It: Aum Shinrikyo, Apocalyptic Violence, and the New Global Terrorism, Robert Lifton applied his original ideas about thought reform to
Aum Shinrikyo and the
war on terrorism, concluding that, in this context, thought reform was possible without violence or physical coercion. He also pointed out that in their efforts against terrorism, Western governments were also using some alleged mind control techniques. In her 2004
popular science book,
Brainwashing: The Science of Thought Control,
neuroscientist and
physiologist Kathleen Taylor reviewed the history of mind control theories, as well as notable incidents. In it, she theorized that persons under the influence of brainwashing may have more rigid
neurological pathways, and that can make it more difficult to rethink situations or to be able to later reorganize these pathways. In 2006
Brainwash: The Secret History of Mind Control is a non-fiction book about the evolution of brainwashing from its origins in the Cold War through to today's war on terror. The author,
Dominic Streatfeild, uses formerly classified documentation and interviews from the CIA. Non-suggestive interviews of
Sirhan Sirhan over eleven years by psychologist Daniel Brown provided evidence of Sirhan's preparation as a "Manchurian Candidate" for the 1968 assassination of Senator
Robert Kennedy. ==In popular culture==