Message from @Human Sheeple

Discord ID: 581665267428622354


2019-05-24 07:39:18 UTC  

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2019-05-24 09:04:30 UTC  

Join the conversation on Hangouts: https://hangouts.google.com/group/kXbrxes6Tx1TCgrFA Join the conversation on Hangouts: https://hangouts.google.com/group/kXbrxes6Tx1TCgrFA

2019-05-25 01:25:50 UTC  

@Human Sheeple
They say the Tavistock Institute is instrumental in the development of MKultra.

Look who attended Tavistock.
👇

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2019-05-25 01:51:23 UTC  

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2019-05-25 01:51:28 UTC  

2019 Tavistock Institute

2019-05-25 01:53:11 UTC  

From 2006

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2019-05-25 01:58:48 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/564598119590002708/581662421446295553/Eric_L._Trist_-_The_Social_Engagement_of_Social_Science__A_Tavistock_Anthology___The_Socio-Technical.pdf

2019-05-25 01:59:01 UTC  
2019-05-25 01:59:31 UTC  
2019-05-25 02:00:35 UTC  

Oh wait didnt I bring this up before

2019-05-25 02:01:23 UTC  

My memory is like a sieve thats been shot with a shotgun

2019-05-25 02:02:57 UTC  

Heyworth Committee

2019-05-25 02:03:17 UTC  

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2019-05-25 02:05:51 UTC  

:''See Tavistock_Institute for the independent charity focussing on group relations. For the organisation which contains the Tavistock Centre for Couple Relationships, see Tavistock_Institute_of_Medical_Psychology.'' The '''Tavistock Clinic''' is a noted centre for mental health therapy in the British NHS. It offers outpatient clinical services in London and provides many postgraduate training and academic courses for the mental health and social care professions. According to the official history of the Tavistock Clinic: *In 1920, under its founder Dr Crichton-Miller's leadership, the Clinic made a significant contribution to the understanding of the traumatic effects of 'shell shock' and how it could be treated by talking, listening and understanding. Before that soldiers who suffered these symptoms in battle were regarded as cowards and likely to be punished, even shot. The Tavistock was set up by charitable funding to provide mental health treatment to the general population based on psychological approaches. *The Second World War saw many of the Tavistock's professional staff joining the armed services as psychiatric specialists, where some (notably Dr Wilfred Bion) introduced radical new methods of selecting officers, using the 'leaderless group' as an instrument to observe which men could take responsibility for others, by being aware of their preoccupations rather than simply by giving orders. This led to reductions in the number of applicants rejected.http://www.tavi-port.org/about/tavistock-clinic.html The early wartime experiences still "influence the clinic's work in group teaching and work discussion, in consultancy, in the understanding of early separation from parents (as happened during evacuation of children) and in the treatment of trauma. Today, the Trauma Unit offers a training workshop in the understanding of trauma and its treatment

2019-05-25 02:06:09 UTC  

Dr Crichton-Miller

2019-05-25 02:09:53 UTC  

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2019-05-25 02:10:06 UTC  

Ronald David Laing (7 October 1927 – 23 August 1989), was a Scottish psychiatrist who wrote extensively on mental illness and particularly the experience of psychosis. He is noted for his views, influenced by existential philosophy, on the causes and treatment of mental illness, which went against the psychiatric orthodoxy of the time by taking the expressions or communications of the individual patient or client as representing valid descriptions of lived experience or reality rather than as symptoms of some separate or underlying disorder. He is often associated with the anti-psychiatry movement although, like many of his contemporaries also critical of psychiatry, he himself rejected this label. He made a significant contribution to the ethics of psychology.

2019-05-25 02:10:31 UTC  

Tavistock Centre
120 Belsize Lane, Swiss Cottage, NW3 5BA



Medical dates:

Medical character:
1920 - current

Mental (Out-Patients only)


During WW1 (1914-1918) the neurologist Dr Hugh Crichton-Miller, greatly influenced by the new psychology emerging from Vienna and Zurich, pioneered psychotherapeutic methods of treating soldiers suffering from shell-shock and neurosis.

After the war Dr Crichton-Miller was convinced of a need to provide similar therapies to civilians of limited financial means.

In 1919 he organised a meeting of supporters to create the Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology. Each would donate £300 a year for three years, the project being conceived as a temporary measure, as it was hoped that the model would soon be copied elsewhere.

After some difficulty in finding a willing landlord, the Tavistock Square Clinic for Functional Nervous Disorders opened in 1920, at No. 51 Tavistock Square, with Dr Crichton-Miller as its Honorary Medical Director (Field Marshal Earl Haig and Admiral Earl Beatty later became Honorary Vice-Presidents). The first patient, a child, was seen on 27th September 1920.

2019-05-25 02:10:35 UTC  

The Clinic was furnished with items donated by the (mostly) volunteer staff and their friends and families. There were no beds as only out-patients were seen. Unlike other mental health establishments, there was no medical equipment and the medical staff did not wear white coats. It was intended that the patients' experience should be as 'de-medicalised' as possible.

The Clinic established a reputation as a psychotherapy centre for neurotic and traumatised children and adults. Referrals were received from other institutions and a waiting list quickly developed. It soon became popularly known as 'The Tavi'.

The Clinic was incorporated on 5th August 1929. Paid administrative staff were appointed and modest means-test fees were introduced for the patients.

A second building was acquired to provide accommodation for up to 14 patients who needed to attend regularly, but who lived too far away to do so. An appeal was launched to raise funds for larger premises and also to endow the Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology.

By 1931 the waiting list had grown so long that it had to be closed. Only the most urgent cases were prioritized.

2019-05-25 02:10:46 UTC  

In 1931 the Extension Fund, unable to afford to purchase land and to build new premises, acquired the lease of a former stables used as the packing department by Messrs Shoolbreds. Its frontage was along Torrington Place. The building was redecorated in a combination of dark green and sunny yellow. It opened to patients on 9th December, 1932. The Children's Department on the ground floor had, in addition to four consulting rooms and two offices for social workers, a large, airy playroom fitted with pictures and toys. The ground floor also contained two refectories - one for staff and one for adult patients - with a kitchen in between. The remaining ground floor space was occupied by an L-shaped Lecture Theatre with 200 seats. The upper floor contained 11 consulting rooms, offices for the Director and other senior staff, and a laboratory, fully equipped for routine work. The furniture was mostly of bare oak, the lighting and equipment in modern style, and the building was centrally heated. The main waiting room was furnished with easy chairs and a thick carpet.

In 1933 Dr Crichton-Miller was succeeded by Dr John Rawlings Rees as Medical Director. The Children's Department was renamed the Children and Parents Department, in view of the policy of treating the parents as well as the child - an innovation at the time.

2019-05-25 02:10:51 UTC  

In 1935 a neurologist was appointed to the staff to examine each patient prior to them being accepted for psychotherapy (this practice continued until 1940).

In 1936 the Clinic was renamed the Tavistock Clinic. The name had originally been suggested in 1920, but the Post Office declared that this would be too confusing.

In 1937 the residential hostel closed as the Clinic had so many patients from outside London that it was unable to accommodate them all.

At the outbreak of WW2 in 1939, the Clinic was evacuated to the Halls of Residence at Westfield Women's College. The medical records and some furniture were moved there too, but most administrative records and furniture went into storage (and were destroyed by wartime bombing).

Although many of the professional staff joined the armed forces, serving as psychiatric specialists, civilian patients continued to be seen throughout the war. Centres for neuroses were also established, including one at the Stanboroughs Sanitarium, with Dr Crichton-Miller as Medical Director.

2019-05-25 02:11:06 UTC  

During the war, the premises on the corner of Torrington Place and Malet Street were destroyed by bombs.

After the war, in August 1945, the Clinic acquired the use of a building at No. 2 Beaumont Street. A grant of £22,000 was received from the Rockefeller Foundation to help develop work in social and preventative psychiatry; a new division - the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations - was created for this.

In 1948 the Clinic joined the NHS under the control of the North West Metropolitan Regional Hospital Board. However, the Institute, while remaining part of the umbrella organisation, was legally separated from the Clinic and became a charitable company.

During the 1950s a new service - family therapy - was pioneered by the Clinic, focussing on the interaction between children, adolescents and their parents.

In 1956 the Clinic came under the control of the Paddington Group Hospital Management Committee, which already governed the Child Guidance Training Centre and the Portman Clinic.

2019-05-25 02:11:11 UTC  

In 1959 the Adolescent Unit was established. It was accommodated in rented premises in Hallam Street.

In 1965 the foundation stone was laid by Dr Rees for a purpose-built building at the corner of Belsize Lane and Fitzjohn's Avenue.

The new 5-storey building, named the Tavistock Centre, was officially opened in May 1967 by Princess Marina. As well as the Clinic, it accommodated the Adolescent Unit from Hallam Street, the Young People's Consultation Centre from Kings College Road, and the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations. The Child Guidance Training Centre was also housed in the same building; it later merged with the Tavistock Clinic's Department for Children and Parents in 1985 and was renamed the Child and Family Department. The Mulberry Bush Day Unit, part of the Child Guidance Training Centre, also merged with the Department, later becoming the Tavistock Children's Day Unit, a special school.

In 1974, following a major reorganisation of the NHS, the Centre came under the control of the Hampstead District Health Authority, part of the North East Thames Regional Health Authority.

2019-05-25 02:11:20 UTC  

In 1994, with the introduction of the 'marketplace' system of providers and purchasers within the NHS, the Centre became an independent NHS Trust, merging with the Portman Clinic to form the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust. In the same year the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations moved to new premises in Tabernacle Street, Shoreditch. However, the Family Discussion Bureau, part of the Institute, remained at the Centre and was renamed the Tavistock Centre for Couple Relationships; it is fee-based rather than part of the NHS. (In 2009 the Bureau moved to new premises in Warren Street, becoming Tavistock Relationships.)

On 22nd June 2001 Princess Alexandra officially opened the Centre for Mental Health in Nursing, established in collaboration with the Middlesex University. It provides a range of training programmes for nurses, based on the Tavistock approach.

In 2006 the Trust became a Foundation NHS Trust.

2019-05-25 02:29:13 UTC  

Heritage Foundation, Center of Strategic and International Studies at Georgetown,

2019-05-25 02:30:52 UTC  

The Hudson Institute

2019-05-25 02:32:59 UTC  

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2019-05-25 02:33:50 UTC  

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2019-05-25 02:34:15 UTC  

RAND RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

Without a doubt, RAND is THE think tank most beholden to Tavistock Institute and certainly the RIIA’s most prestigious vehicle for control of United States policies at every level. Specific RAND policies that became operative include our ICBM program, prime analyses for U.S. foreign policy making, instigator of space programs, U.S. nuclear policies, corporate analyses, hundreds of projects for the military, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in relation to the use of mind-altering drugs like peyote, LSD (the covert MK-ULTRA operation which lasted for 20 years).