Dr Calhoun's Experiment
Dear peeps, a great thank you for giving so many of your
nuggets of wisdom on this thread. Do give time too, I shall respond with debate to all your points raised. There is no greater honour for me than to return your respect. We, especially I, would never be any wiser if not for your great inputs. It is sad that we all have come this way.
This very long self-mind-fucked essay is
the most biased essay thus far. I must apologise for its
inappropriateness.
If one might be offended, please read no further and skip this essay. Please be warned!
This essay is written solely to address the point raised by boss
Botak1:
2. Singapore, has becum extremely Toxic,
3. UpComing New Cities, ditto
The only Real Wealth, is Health
& such comes only when Human densities are carefully managed to be low, & in harmony with surrounding nature. …
Again, this is to
decrypt the
extreme wisdom of boss
Botak1.
Dr Calhoun’s Experiment on Humans
The full literature is here:
Dr Calhoun's Experiment
John Calhoun’s experiments gained world-wide recognition and they present a useful yet grim insight into what could be our own future, for no matter
how many times Calhoun repeated the experiment, the results led to the
same inevitable conclusion:
extinction.
Let this song soothes our pain a little:
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My heart is very heavy. I don’t like to be fooled. The imposition of 7m-10m population grows at all cost had taken another victim: My bloodied relation has suffered another round of cancer (previously raised). I really don’t give a damn about what will happen to those who intently decide to stay on in that island, as I have already decided to move on. But, like many bros here, I do still have loved ones who are left behind. I am too weak to be able to bring everyone out. For all the intelligence in me, I was systematically sucked dry before I could release myself from that
hell hole. The battle was long and the victory hard. But, my victory was
not without sacrifice. I have to sacrifice some of my most loved ones to be left behind. I do hope with my future years, I might be able to build enough strength to pull one by one over. My heart is soft and tender. But,
not all believe and walk in the same softness. Just then, my tears welled up. I truly felt sorry for all my loved ones who are still forced to drink
toilet water on a
daily basis.
Evil knows no bounds.
The folks on that island didn’t realize that that island would soon be remembered as the place of the next holocaust -
Holocaust II. The infamy is really a cruel joke.
Dr John B. Calhoun
Dr. John B. Calhoun, an American research psychologist of the National Institute of Mental Health, set out to prove his theory on the dangers of
population overcrowding. He claimed that the bleak effects of overpopulation on rodents were
a grim model for the future of the human race. During his studies, Calhoun coined the term "
behavioural sink" to describe aberrant behaviours in overcrowded population density situations and “
beautiful ones” to describe
passive individuals who
withdrew from
all social interaction.
Rat City
In 1947, Calhoun’s neighbour agreed to let him build a rat enclosure on disused woodland behind his house in Towson, Maryland. Calhoun would later reflect that his neighbour probably expected a few hutches, perhaps a small run. What Calhoun built was quarter acre pen, what he called a “
rat city”, and which he seeded with five pregnant females. Calhoun calculated that the habitat was sufficient to accommodate as many as
5000 rats. Instead, the population levelled off at
150, and throughout the two years Calhoun kept watch, never exceeded
200. That the predicated maximum was never reached ought to come as no surprise:
5000 rats would be tight indeed. A quarter acre is little over
1000 square metres, meaning each rat would have to itself an area of only about
2000 square centimetres, roughly the size of an individual laboratory cage. Be that as it may, a population of only
150 seemed surprisingly low. What had happened?
Mouse Paradise
In 1954, Calhoun
persevered and repeated the experiment in specially constructed “
rodent universes” – room-sized pens which could be viewed from the attic above via windows cut through the ceiling. He had chosen rodent species that are aplenty in North America, and are
true omnivores — would eat almost anything — have acute hearing, are sensitive to ultrasound, and possess a highly developed olfactory sense. A 2007 study discovered too that these rodents possess
meta-cognition,
a mental ability previously found only in humans and some select primates. He once more provided his populations with food, bedding, and shelter. With
no predators and with exposure to disease kept at a
minimum, Calhoun described his experimental universes as “
rat utopia”, “
mouse paradise”. He wanted to create a colony of
cultivated rodents –
rats with “values” as high as any human values. The cage was always cleaned, was well-stocked with food and water and was free from predators — indeed, an ideal habitat, except for its overcrowded condition. The rodents were
deprived of privacy, with
no time or space to be
alone. Since there was
no escape, Dr Calhoun was especially interested in how these animals would handle themselves in their crowded environment.
He placed 32 to 56 rodents in a 10- by 14-foot case in a barn on a Montgomery County farm. Using electrified partitions, he divided the space into
four rooms. Each was designed to support 12 adult brown Norway rats. Rats could move between the rooms only via the ramps he built.
With all their visible needs met,
the animals bred rapidly. The population grew to
80 in the first instance. The only restriction Calhoun imposed on his population was of
space. As the scientist observed, a
social hierarchy developed: One despot male and 9 females claimed the
two defensible pens with only one ramp provided; 60 others crowded into the other 2 pens with two ramps. Calhoun found that “rodent utopia” rapidly became “
hell”.
He allowed them to populate to
2600, about
16 times what would be considered normal density. When thrown together in such huge numbers, rodents rapidly develop a hierarchy. Those rodents
closest to the food supply grow
most rapidly. Because of their size, these rodents also
assume higher social status.
Adult rodents develop
optimal groups (or cliques) of about a
dozen in each group. Rodents organize themselves into twelve or thirteen local colonies of a dozen rats each, the
maximum number that can live
harmoniously in a natural group. Beyond this number,
stress and psychological effects take control and
force-break the group. Dr Calhoun says every species of organisms
has an optimal group size, and when a group gets to be
twice its optimal size it must
split —
or perish.
Rodents perform
particular functions to
preserve and protect their clique. For example, instead of adopting new social roles necessary to survive in their densely populated universe, they on their own develop ways of manipulating the environment by
blocking major passageways with paper in order to
isolate themselves and
reduce social interaction.
He described the onset of several toxic pathologies:
violence and aggression, with rats in the crowded pen “
going berserk, attacking females, juveniles and less-active males”. There was also “
sexual deviance”. Dominant males
became aggressive, some moving in groups, attacking females and the young.
Mating behaviours were disrupted. Some became exclusively
homosexual. Others became
pansexual and
hypersexual, attempting to mount
any rat they encountered. Rats became
hypersexual, pursuing females relentlessly even when
not in heat. The
mortality rate among females was
extremely high. A large proportion of the population became
bisexual, then increasingly
homosexual, and finally
asexual.
Mothers
neglected their infants, first failing to construct proper nests, and then carelessly
abandoning and even
attacking their pups. In certain sections of the pens, infant mortality rose as high as
96%, the dead
cannibalized by adults.
Calhoun coined a term — “
behavioural sink” — to describe the decay.
At a latter phase,
subordinate animals withdrew psychologically, surviving in a physical sense but at an immense psychological cost. They were the
majority in the
late phases of growth,
existing as a vacant, huddled mass in the centre of the pens.
Unable to breed, the population plummeted and did not recover. The crowded rodents
had lost the ability to co-exist harmoniously, even after the population numbers once again
fell to low levels.
At a certain density, they had ceased to act like rats and mice, and the change was permanent.
The males in the group who
normally protect their territory
withdraw from leadership and turn uncharacteristically
passive. Notable conditions in the
behavioural sink also include
hyper-aggression, with the females in the group becoming
unusually aggressive and forcing out the young. In a crowded environment such as this, there is notably a deterioration of attitude, spirit, and health of the organisms.
Too Close for Comfort
Dr Calhoun clearly saw
these rats and mice as models for man.
Life in an unnatural urban environment of ever-increasing density could result in the complete devastation of humanity. He noted that even when population levels dropped and more space became available, the community
never recovered. Even when healthy rodents are placed in the new environment, they
never breed successfully again.
Organisms need space to comfort selves, to seek refuge and privacy, and find connection: Strong boss Botak1's input.
Other notable conditions in the
behavioural sink also include failure to breed and nurture young normally,
infant cannibalism and,
increased mortality rate at all ages. Dr Calhoun saw
universal autism among rodents. [I wondered who's in that royal family are autistic.] This is a phenomenon in which all members of the last generation of rodents in a super-crowded environment become
incapable of social interaction that would allow them to produce the next generation.
The whole rodent society ultimately became disrupted, and after five years
all of them died. Dr Calhoun was convinced that
his mice and rat populations were an accurate model for humans. He didn’t regard it as hypothesis any more, he regarded it as
factual.
Time line
Initially, the population grew rapidly, doubling every 55 days. The population reached 620 by day 315, after which the population growth dropped markedly. The last surviving birth was on day 600. This period between day 315 and day 600 saw a breakdown in social structure and in normal social behaviour. Among the aberrations in behaviour were the following:
expulsion of young before weaning was complete,
wounding of young, inability of dominant males to maintain the defence of their territory and females, aggressive behaviour of females, passivity of non-dominant males with increased attacks on each other which were not defended against. After day 600,
the social breakdown continued and the population declined toward extinction. During this period females
ceased to reproduce. Their male counterparts
withdrew completely,
never engaging in courtship or fighting.
They ate, drank, slept, and groomed themselves – all solitary pursuits. Sleek, healthy coats and an absence of scars characterized these males. They were dubbed “the beautiful ones”.
The conclusions drawn from this experiment were that when
all available space is taken and
all social roles filled, competition and the stresses experienced by the individuals will result in a
total breakdown in complex social behaviours, ultimately resulting in the
certain demise of the population.
Applying Humans to the Experiment - A.D. 900 Easter Island
The limiting factor of Calhoun’s experiment was
space. As time transpired, the mice
passed on the negative behavioural attitudes to the next generation, and these, subsequently
passed them on to the next generation, with the
addition of new unsocial attitudes.
Notice how the evolution of the behaviours displayed by the mice, parallel those of the people of
Easter Island. The people of
Easter Island are a historical example of a human version of the
mice utopia experiment:
“When humans first arrived there about
A.D. 900, it [
Easter Island] was densely forested, and was capable of sustaining numerous tribes and a relatively high population.”
The conditions of the islanders were similar to that of Calhoun’s mice. On an isolated island, with a lush environment, a group of human settlers arrived on boats to Easter Island. The settlers could thrive with almost
endless resources
without natural predators or
external factors of stress. With time, the island became
over-populated.
“The islanders then began to
compete with each other more and more fiercely for an
ever-declining volume of natural resources; vendettas multiplied, inter-tribal warfare flared, and a pall of
hostility and
fear descended on the island. As the trees vanished, the islanders were
unable to build boats to escape to other islands: they became
trapped in their own hell, doomed to fight each other
in perpetuity for the last crumbs that the barren land could offer. Eventually the islanders began to starve, and
feed—literally—off each other. As wild meats became
unavailable, and escape off the island became
impossible, the natural consequences followed.
Cannibalism stalked the island, animating its folklore and infecting its archaeological sites. Perhaps the islanders compensated for their misery by
focusing more and more on the
empty ritual of building and raising statutes,
as their means of sustenance melted away.”
The extinction of Easter Island was eminent.
This is reminiscence of the ”
behavioural sink” observed in the
mouse utopia. It also resembles the abhorrent behaviours observed in Calhoun’s experiments resemble several shocking stories from recent times.
There are natural limitations on the degrees of social interaction we can manage on a daily basis, just like with the mice. In humans this is referred to as "
Dunbar’s number", and it has been observed to be
true in social media sites.
Whilst it could be argued that this could not happen to humans; as we have large swathes of unpopulated land, it has to be noted that at the peak population, only
half the colony space was being used.
The mice had a tendency to congregate and overpopulate certain sectors of space, something reminiscence of modern day cities.
The full text is here:
Return of Kings
My conclusion
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From the ill-fated experiment, increasing
homosexuality is brought about by
lack of female interactions or the males'
inability to convince the females of their
dominance and
quality of their
gene pools to
sire the next generation. Hence, they turn to their
same sex for comfort and
release of sexual tension.
I have seen many personal examples of males being
withdrawn but well-groomed (????) and
aggressive females (????) who sexed anything with a tiny semblance to cash. They are
mutants forced by circumstances.
This behaviour is also detectable in this forum where forummer like
bodycells keeps advocating man should go
MGTOW and be sex-less (
asexual), just as predicted by Dr Calhoun. It is very sad.
That little island is heading towards the
same fate as the
rat paradise -
the Holocaust II. The controllers of the island of course do have a choice - all their off-springs are now
sent overseas and
stayed overseas. But, how about the
weak ones that are
forced to participate in this terrible experiment? I am very sad indeed.
Let this essay be
kept as a historical record of
how mindless these controllers are in pursuit of personal glory.
They will meet their makers
with blood in their hands. Because they gave
no quarters in their life time, in time their off-springs will also receive
no quarters too. I will ensure that. ???? ... These ????? really ????. ????, ???? ... everything also can do. No pity, no mercy. ???????????????.
That island after all is only just that - a tiny island.
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What a cruel coincidence to the
Easter Island?
As time went by, that rat city became totally
unstable. There were
no means of the king rat that could quieten and feed the rats. So the king rat resorted to the idea of
expansion. He suggested to the rats that they should give birth but not too many. For each increase in birth, there were added goods and services demanded. In exchange, they worked for MNCs to buy food and materials. All was well till the rats
ran out of space and the MNCs like locusts moved on to greener and cheaper places.
Due to the lack of space and living in coffin holes (remember the bees), the rats
refused to procreate. The birth rate dropped to
1.1. This was called, for the lack of a better term, the
space stressor. The king rat then implemented the idea of
foreign importation of fresh rats. The birth rate went back up towards
1.29, the king rat proudly proclaimed. To me, the explanation was simple: Due to the Calhoun's effect, the local rats had stopped procreation due to the
space stressor. The imported fresh rats were healthy and had none of the
space stressor, they procreated like rats. Hence,
briefly pushed the birth rate index back higher. But, given time, the
space stressor would once again set in on these newer rats and they too would stop procreating. These newer rats would behave exactly like the older rats. Greater, newer and fresher rats are more than ever needed.
The cycle repeats. The problem would become
extremely dire
very rapidly, as the birth rate of 1.20-1.29 means for
every new born, they will need to support
2!!! silver adults. This clearly is
not sustainable.
In the past, the rats in the rat city used to try to produce innovative goods, like the creative techie and the thumb drives. But that was in the past. At the present moment, the rats in the rat city produce nothing original, they only try to provide
nondescript time units in services rendered. One should be able to
deduce that
a service engineer, lawyer or accountant is useless without the farm products.
The world is a
very cunning place. You produced
no original goods, you only have your
nondescript service time units for sale. Your employers will
only pay you
pittance and
only just enough for you to survive. If the entire rat city is on service terms, the whole rat city is being paid
pittance. The whole rat city would
under-perform most of the time,
i.e., the payment for each time unit would be well
below food prices. Over time, the whole rat city has
no choice but to
cannibalize each other for survival. The king rat and his cronies would naturally have the advantage. The gini index just got worse.
The king rat thinking that he is "
smartest" among his rats would always come out with the most obvious and silly solution,
i.e.,
expansion. He was by far the most stupid,
i.e., the king without clothes. Like it or not, the rat city is not just an ordinary place but a nation. In a nation-hood, the early rats would grow old and become the next
silver tsunami; if not careful, these
silver tsunami would get stuck in the rat city and
demand health care. So the king rat just willed them away by allowing them to
emigrate easily. This explained why it is
so easy to leave the rat city through
emigration. The king rat just simply
not interested in keeping you, as you age. But, this is a
double-edged sword. Only the more abled rats would immigrate, bringing along with them, very educated rat kids.
The rat city hollows out in no time. Corporate knowledge and expertise just drain away. The king rat thinking that these corporate knowledge and institutional skill would easily be replaced is once again
proved wrong. Corporate knowledge takes time to build and takes more than a lifetime to perfect. Once lost, the rat city is
hollowed out. Just like if all of kikkoman soya sauce makers were to resign totally, kikkoman or was it Micropolis would be
fucked bad. Same thing for a rat city, you need older rats to guide the newer rats so that knowledge (an art) could be passed down by
training of apprentices. There is simply
no short-cut to corporate knowledge retention.
On the other hand too, the king rat just
open the flood gate and allow new fresh rats to enter. The effect is simple: The rat population is now renewed and made young again. Now you have 2-3 young rats to support one old rat. As long as this ratio is maintained, the rat city would be OK. The additional demand for goods and services would be healthy and great for nation building
initially. But, the king rat
forgot one big factor -
space. The rat city for all its wonders would run out of space. Why? The world is a clever place. Unless the immigrants are strong, healthy and superior, they would
not be able to immigrate to another place,
i.e., the export of rats
cannot be higher than the production of silver tsunami, making the silver population growing at all the time. With growing silver population, it would imply an
ever greater need to grow young, fresh and foreign trash. Sooner rather later, the
space stressor of the rat city would turn up.
The rats would stop behaving like rats and lose all procreation skills, the rat city would go the way of dinosaurs.
One may wish to
reject the results of this experiment. One may wish to
hide behind the semblance of clean and gleaming side-walks. One may wish to
self-deny that one is stronger than the rest and is not affect-able by one’s surroundings. Good Luck!
One has already been mind-fucked clean by the royal family.
I may sound
too alarmist, but, the effects are deadly. In fact, by careful comparison, one would already see this
wheel of loss in motion.
Get the fuck out as soon as it is still possible. If ever, the north korean king rat might become alarmist
and shut all exits. Ho ho ho ...
Genocide is not a bedtime story. Just google “
Rebecca and Gabriel Loh” and you know the process has started long since.
So please don’t doubt the intelligence of each and every bros here. They paint only very tiny windows into their wise minds. One has to be extremely cunning in deciphering these
nuggets of wisdom.
I am no doubt your
decryptor partner-in-crime on this.
I must thank again boss
Botak1 for being so generous in sharing the truth, but, this truth really hurts bad -
Holocaust II and is
multi-generational to boot.
in metta …