Hypnosis and radicalization. Possible?

I watched a show last night dealing with assassinations committed by "The nice guy next door".
It showed how easy it was to make the right person do the wrong thing.
They started off with 50 random people, had them as an audience for the hypnotist.
He started off simple, making people think one hand was too heavy to lift, one was too light to hold down, etc.
Some people in the audience responded better than others.
They kept track of who was responding, kept working with them and weeding them out.
Finally, they got down to one guy.
A nice, well spoken, intelligent young man who, for whatever reason, was susceptible to hypnosis.
They then invited him to a restaurant and had him sitting down working on some kind puzzle,
The hypnotist put him to sleep instantly and gave him a bottle of liquid, then told him when he hears the clicker he was to walk to a certain table and pour the liquid in the glass of water.
At that time, there was no glass of water.
Soon another guy came in (retired CIA), went to the counter and asked for a coffee and a glass of water.
The person behind the counter gave him the water and he went and sat down.
The counter person told him his coffee was ready (could have been a latte or something).
He went to the counter to get his coffee, the clicker clicked, the young guy got up, walked to the table and poured the contents of the bottle into the guy's water, then went back to his table and continued to work on his puzzle.
The man took a drink of his water, started coughing and gasping for breath, stood up and fell to the floor.
People rushed to him hollering to call 911, and the young guy looked on with no idea what happened.
Afterwards, he had no idea what had happened and no memory of his involvement.
They showed him the video of him getting up and pouring the liquid into the glass. He was shocked. He couldn't deny it, the evidence was there, but he had no recollection of his actions.
They told him to look in his pocket, and he pulled the bottle out.
He was stunned, confused and a little bit scared.
Could a hypnotist find the right person and convince him to pick up a gun and shoot someone?
Sirhan Sirhan claimed to have no memory of shooting RFK, could he have been just an unknowing tool?
These shooters, school shooters, political assassins, all seem to shoot themselves if someone doesn't shoot them first.
Could that be part of the directive?
One of the things needed to hypnotize someone is distracting them, getting them to focus on something, something that will make them oblivious to all around them.
Millions of people walk around, sit around, ride around or lay around with a smart phone in their face.

Smart Phone, PC, tablet, everything with a screen hooked to the internet.
We've already accepted the fact that our devices are getting to know us.
They gather information on our buying habits, our interests, habits, needs, wants and desires.
We are focused on our screens, ignoring the world around us, soaking up information, true, false, made up, all day long.
How easy it would be for "them" to ferret out certain people with the right personality traits.
Now we have AI to do our thinking for us. Soon we won't even have to drive, our cars will do that for us.
If we want to know something, we don't even have to look it up or figure it out, Siri or Alexa will do it for us.
Got a numbers problem to figure out? Don't bother engaging your brain, just ask Alexa, she'll do it for you.
Just focus on the screen, you might be useful.
 
Hypnotizing is demonic, just like medical drugs if it has suicide listed as a side effect.

They used to go pray against it with a group from church in the 90s when a guy had a show in town. He went from town to town. He couldn't do anything when they prayed, because they just bound these demons and forbid them to work there.
 
I watched a show last night dealing with assassinations committed by "The nice guy next door".
It showed how easy it was to make the right person do the wrong thing.
They started off with 50 random people, had them as an audience for the hypnotist.
He started off simple, making people think one hand was too heavy to lift, one was too light to hold down, etc.
Some people in the audience responded better than others.
They kept track of who was responding, kept working with them and weeding them out.
Finally, they got down to one guy.
A nice, well spoken, intelligent young man who, for whatever reason, was susceptible to hypnosis.
They then invited him to a restaurant and had him sitting down working on some kind puzzle,
The hypnotist put him to sleep instantly and gave him a bottle of liquid, then told him when he hears the clicker he was to walk to a certain table and pour the liquid in the glass of water.
At that time, there was no glass of water.
Soon another guy came in (retired CIA), went to the counter and asked for a coffee and a glass of water.
The person behind the counter gave him the water and he went and sat down.
The counter person told him his coffee was ready (could have been a latte or something).
He went to the counter to get his coffee, the clicker clicked, the young guy got up, walked to the table and poured the contents of the bottle into the guy's water, then went back to his table and continued to work on his puzzle.
The man took a drink of his water, started coughing and gasping for breath, stood up and fell to the floor.
People rushed to him hollering to call 911, and the young guy looked on with no idea what happened.
Afterwards, he had no idea what had happened and no memory of his involvement.
They showed him the video of him getting up and pouring the liquid into the glass. He was shocked. He couldn't deny it, the evidence was there, but he had no recollection of his actions.
They told him to look in his pocket, and he pulled the bottle out.
He was stunned, confused and a little bit scared.
Could a hypnotist find the right person and convince him to pick up a gun and shoot someone?
Sirhan Sirhan claimed to have no memory of shooting RFK, could he have been just an unknowing tool?
These shooters, school shooters, political assassins, all seem to shoot themselves if someone doesn't shoot them first.
Could that be part of the directive?
One of the things needed to hypnotize someone is distracting them, getting them to focus on something, something that will make them oblivious to all around them.
Millions of people walk around, sit around, ride around or lay around with a smart phone in their face.

Smart Phone, PC, tablet, everything with a screen hooked to the internet.
We've already accepted the fact that our devices are getting to know us.
They gather information on our buying habits, our interests, habits, needs, wants and desires.
We are focused on our screens, ignoring the world around us, soaking up information, true, false, made up, all day long.
How easy it would be for "them" to ferret out certain people with the right personality traits.
Now we have AI to do our thinking for us. Soon we won't even have to drive, our cars will do that for us.
If we want to know something, we don't even have to look it up or figure it out, Siri or Alexa will do it for us.
Got a numbers problem to figure out? Don't bother engaging your brain, just ask Alexa, she'll do it for you.
Just focus on the screen, you might be useful.
As for the first part of your post- YES, getting ahold of a person's mind and getting the person to do something he/she would not want to do, is not only possible, but I've both seen it and experienced it.
 
Hypnotizing is demonic, just like medical drugs if it has suicide listed as a side effect.

They used to go pray against it with a group from church in the 90s when a guy had a show in town. He went from town to town. He couldn't do anything when they prayed, because they just bound these demons and forbid them to work there.
I don't know if you use the word literally or figuratively, but yes it is a very bad thing.

Note: I goofed- I meant to bold the word 'demonic.'
 
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