Visceral disgust is proof that our morality lives not in our thoughts,
but in our flesh.
Follow us for more threads on hidden psychology, emotional wiring, and how your body tells the truth your words can’t.
But here’s the twist —
too much disgust makes empathy impossible.
It’s what drives hatred, dehumanization, and division.
Your body’s instinct to protect can become
your mind’s barrier to understanding.
Psych's dark side: Little Albert experiment (1920). A baby was conditioned to fear fluffy rats with loud bangs—proving phobias are learned. Ethical nightmare today, but it unlocked how trauma wires the brain. Face your fears?
The CIA's spy cat flop: Operation Acoustic Kitty. In the 1960s, they wired a cat with mics for Soviet eavesdropping... but it chased birds on its first mission and got hit by a taxi. Ethics aside, it proves tech can't tame instincts.
WWII's unsung hero: a bear named Wojtek. Polish soldiers adopted him as a cub; he carried ammo crates like a pro and got his own rank (Private). Trauma bonded them—psych studies show animals heal war's scars. Would you enlist a bear?
Ever wonder if history’s villains were just misunderstood? In 1518 Strasbourg, Frau Troffea started dancing uncontrollably—and 400 joined her for days, some dying from exhaustion. Mass hysteria or ergot poisoning? Psych shows stress can make crowds lose their minds.
Napoleon conquered Europe, but lost to… bunnies? In 1807, his “hunt” turned chaotic when 3,000 tame rabbits swarmed him for food, climbing his legs like a furry avalanche. A reminder: even emperors bow to chaos. Psych twist: power blinds us to the absurd.
Behind the scenes, the CIA and FBI buried witnesses, erased files, and silenced voices.
Even Kennedy’s autopsy photos were “lost.”
Lost — like too many truths in American history.
Jeffries asks: What if everything we were taught about the 20th century is a fairy tale written by the guilty?
From JFK to Watergate, from Vietnam to 9/11 — the same pattern repeats: power protects itself.
He begins in 1963.
Dallas.
A motorcade, a bullet, and a silence that lasted decades.
The Warren Commission gave us “the lone gunman.”
Jeffries calls it a script written by the same hands that pulled the trigger.