In the early 1960s, one of the most unethical experiments in psychology’s history was quietly conducted in a state hospital in Michigan. It sought to upend the delusions of the three patients involved, but ultimately disabused the experimenter of his own. Tune in to this classic episode to hear Josh and Chuck explore this disturbing project.
Hi, everybody, it's your old pal Josh. For this week's Select I've chosen our episode from August of twenty twenty one, where we take a look at one of the most unethical social psychology experiments in the history of the field, where doctor Martin roe Keach assembled three men who each believed he was christ, put them in a room together and sat back and waited for the fireworks to start. And what came out of it is both an indictment and an inspiring affirmation of humanity. And on a personal note, I would like to wish my sweet sweet wife Yum, a very big happy birthday. Enjoy. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck and Dave is here with us today and we're all just quietly holding hands. Now we have to stop and I'm into the real world and start talking to you find people for this episode of Stuff You Should Know. My lip got caught in my tooth when I said you, and it came out a little weird.
It's funny. My daughter finally lost her first tooth and it's you know, it's changing the way she talks. She's got a little funny little lisp and she's always tongue in on it, and I'm like, I'm gonna be there with you soon, you know, I gotta get this front one redone right. So yeah, I'm gonna wait till write before we have live shows so I could pull that front tooth again.
Nice. That'll be a special treat for everybody, especially me.
Oh, you were used to it.
I really was. The worst was when when you had that little case that you would put it in and that they had events so the smell could waft out of it.
Yeah. I gave up after the first one on wearing that thing. I was just like, who cares?
Yeah, No, it's great. It was very liberating.
It was, as is this podcast episode.
I think this is going to be a good one because Chuck, I've been wanting to talk about this for a really long time. This is one of those things that you like hear about and you're like, wait what that can't be right, And then you read a little more about it, and a little more and it just keeps getting worse and worse. But yet it's it's just kind of one of the like a landmark study in the field of psychology that we're talking about today.
Yeah, the Three Christs of Hypsilanti, and I study this. I remember this from studying it in psychology class in college and got kind of into it at the time, and.
You started wearing like Three Christ t shirts and stuff.
I followed them on tour. It was great. I don't for some reason, I thought I read the book. But I don't think I read the book. I think we just covered the book in college and in the psychology class, Like, I don't think they major read the whole book. We basically just kind of went over it. But I had been pretty fascinated for years, and you know, eventually, when Hollywood made a movie about it four years ago, I was excited and even paid to rent that thing.
How'd that work out? Pretty good?
I watched the first half hour and realize, oh man, they've just sort of disneyfied this thing and it's not good. Yeah, Ohtho or Budd Kevin Pollack isn't it And he's always great?
Hey, that guy can steal a scene better than the Hamburglar.
Yeah. The movie, just so everyone knows, is called The Three Christ of Hipsolani from John Abnett starring Richard gear as the name changed doctor and then the Three Christ in the movie you're portrayed by Peter Dinklage, one of my favorite actors, Walton Goggins.
Yeah, he's great, man, I went back. I told you I was watching The Shield again. That guy was amazing in that.
Oh was he in that?
Yeah? Yeah, he played one of the main characters.
He's just the best. And then, uh, what's a guy's named Bradley Whitford who's also great. Everyone in it is good. It just it's one of those movies that they I think just over sanitized and should have made a documentary instead.
But they didn't, and that's okay, and we don't have to talk about that movie ever again now that we'll have instead, I think we should start by giving a little background on the guy whose idea the Three Christs of if Silani experiment was, and it was a researcher, a psychologist, a social psychologist, your favorite named Milton Rokeach. And Milton Rokeach had some ideas about what it was to make up an identity, what made up a person's sense of who they were. Yeah, and he basically had broken it out into beliefs, a series of different kinds of beliefs, which we'll kind of talk about here there a little more. But there's this anecdote that's frequently passed around that kind of like lays the early groundwork for this idea that someone's belief in who they are could conceivably be challenged. And it came one night when he was sitting around the dinner table with his wife and his two young daughters, and he accidentally, in like a moment of frustration telling them to settle down at dinner, called one another by their opposite names, and the girls just thought that was like the funniest thing that I ever heard.
At first, Yes, was that is that my cue?
Yeah? I even stuck my finger up like all right now you but you can't see it, can you?
No, because we just listened to each other, Yeah, at first, and that was a little fun game. And then I think the five year old even said, you know, this is just a game, right dad, And Dad said no, it's real, and I hear him saying it in that voice, and you know, pretty soon they were begging for him to stop. And I can verify that this is a thing I've been I think as a parents, sometimes you'll call your kid by another name as a joke, like I know I've done it, like called my daughter my dog's name. If she's like she'll come into the room and like bark or something as a joke. So, oh, you're Nico, and she'll say, yeah, I'm Nico, and then for a few minutes later, I'm like, hey, come here, Nico, and then it's fun for about five minutes and then she's like no, like I am not. So there is very much a thing to a child's identity, especially from their parents, where they kind of get their identity and seek their identity. When that is challenged, it is very quickly kind of traumatic.
Yeah, he learned a couple of things that One, you can very quickly challenge somebody, or you can very quickly push someone to a state of like trauma or anxiety or panic even Yeah, by just by simply challenging their identity by calling them the wrong name purposefully.
That's right, Jerry.
He also right, Yeah, I know, Jerry, call each other.
Jerry, I think it would cancel e you there, out.
Do it one more time and I will crumble, okay, Jachiffer, Oh god, but he also learned like, Okay, there's consequences to this. You can't take somebody with a with a well formed, well developed sense of identity and I guess a normal sense of identity and push push them to the edge, mess around with that sense of identity. There's there's harmful consequences to that. So he's starting to kind of explore this, and like I was saying, like he had broken everybody's belief system into a handful of different types of beliefs, and the belief that you are who you are, which is what we call our identity. He ascribed to primitive beliefs, which are just like basic truths in the same neighborhood as you know, I'm wearing a headphone on one ear and I have the other one behind my head. Right now, I have brown hair. My name is Josh, your chuck, Like, just basic truths of the universe that anyone you talk to is going to generally agree with. Right, That's where the personality comes from.
Yeah, and that that is the very bedrock and foundation of how we think about ourselves. And he already saw messing with that can be bad, So he was like, hey, why not take it a step further.
Right right, So what I was saying a minute ago with like how we saw that there's consequences to messing with saying person I just made air quotes. If you couldn't tell from my intonation messing with a sane person's identity, you can't really do that. But this is the mid century in America, and there's a whole group of people that you can do basically whatever you want to with as far as mental stuff goes. And that were people who are suffering from mental conditions who were locked up in state institutions at the time. And so Rokeach came up with this idea like, Okay, wait a minute, what if I got my hands on some mentally unstable people, some possibly diagnosed people, and messed with their sense of identity, took their delusion and challenged it. That could be okay, because hey, their lives are basically useless anyway, I'm paraphrasing Rokeich here, and if something does come of it, there's a good chance that it could be positive instead. So let me have it, let me add them basically.
Yeah, there's a quote here from the book, And big thanks to Dave Ruse for putting this one together. I know this was a huge it's a tough one to wrangle, but he did a great job. Here's the quote from the book. Because it is not feasible to study such phenomena with normal people, he didn't even put in quotes. It seemed reasonable to focus on delusional systems of belief in the hope that in subjecting them to strain, that would be little to lose and hopefully a great deal to gain. And like, I read that sentence and I'm like, stop there, dude, right, yeah.
That's like the perfect motto for the misguided intentions of this study.
Yeah yeah, he is like, and die himself with that one quote.
Exactly, just right out of the gate. And I read this commentary magazine article from nineteen sixty four by Oh I can't remember who it was. I don't have it pulled up, but he's a famous poet at the time, and he was basically saying, like, you know, surely ro Keach, the guy who's writing the book, well, it understands that roe Keach, the character this doctor is like out of his mind, and he likes he's like slowly realizing, oh wait, this guy, even the author of the book has no idea that the doctor character who's himself has has any idea just how unethical this is. And that's a that's a that's a great example of it, that demonstrates it right off the bat.
Yeah, there's there's a I don't know if you listened to the Snap judgment on this, did you hear that?
No? Huh?
It was good step, you know, great podcast or public radio program turned podcast.
Sure, I've heard public radio before. Yeah, I used to.
I used to listen to a lot more of it.
Same here, fresh Air. I always still love fresh Air. Yeah, but it's one of those things where I just bulk it up and then, like when I'm painting a room in our house, I listened to just fresh Air the whole time or something, you know what I mean?
Yeah, what is dairy GROW's going to have us on? Do we need to get to twenty years? Would that do it?
Yeah? I wouldn't even begin to bother her until we hit twenty years and then maybe yeah, and.
Then we just start asking basically hi, Terry Hi.
Yeah.
So in that Snap judgment, they pointed out that he that Roki actually read a Harper's article about two women who believe they were the Virgin Mary, and that put an idea into his head. And I know that. In his book he also talked about being inspired a little bit by some stuff that Voltaire wrote about it.
Right, Yeah, there was a man in the seventeenth century that Voltaire wrote about named Simone Morin who was deranged in the parlance at the time, and he thought that he was Christ. And so he was locked up in a mad house and he met in that place, in that institutional asylum, another man who thought he was Christ. And Simone Morin saw just how like crazy this guy seemed and was like, wait a minute, maybe I'm crazy. And in confronting this other guy who claimed to have the same identity, he regained his sanity to a certain extent, and unfortunately he relapsed and ended up being burned at the stake for heresy. But there was a moment there where he had kind of like been knocked out of his delusion. That's a huge deal. Like if you have schizophrenia or delusional beliefs, like if your mental disorder is to the degree where you hold delusions, and we should say a delusion is not like, you know, a made up belief where you know you made your belief up, like this is what you think is real. It is real to you, and you will defend it when it's challenged. So the idea that somebody who was delusional could be knocked out of their delusion by being confronted with somebody else who had the same delusion, that is groundbreaking. And I can see why roe Keach was like, there we go, that's it, there's my there's my methodology for this or for this this experiment.
Yeah, and I'm sure he was, you know, he was turned on a little bit about the idea of three Christs or however many Christs he could find.
He thought so hot.
Well, I mean not even like that, you know what I mean though, But as a social psychologists he was probably like, you know, this would make for a pretty mind blowing experiment.
Plus a great book title. It's one of the great understated book titles of all time.
Yeah, it was not like the three Richard Nixon's of his Bilante.
No, And I mean like Yipsilani is like this just this town outside of ann Arbor where you know, that's where one of the mental asylums were in Michigan at the time, And it's just like you know, it might as well be Walla, Walla or Lakawana, or it's just an unusual name in a town that doesn't really have much of a claim to anything, you know what I mean.
Yeah, I'm sure all three of those towns are like, is he insulting all of us or none of us?
No, No, it's not an insult. It's just it's just it's not like a hot happen in town and it's been like the Three Christs of New York that loses something or the Price of London. It's just a rather generally unremarkable place, guys, ipsil Any if you live there and you don't know that it's generally unremarkable, I'm sorry to be breaking this news to you. I don't mean it in an unkind way at all.
I know you don't. And I think generally back then, that's where a lot of these institutions were because they needed like lots of land. And so they'll just leave it at that, and okay, maybe take a break.
Okay to let everybody really stew on what I said that we'll.
Take a break and we'll find out how he found his pacetions right after this, all right, So we're back. There were twenty five thousand total patients in the system in Michigan State, in Michigan State hospitals, and he went through all of these, you know, he sort of tried to cull them down to ideally to Christ figures. He'd found a man who thought he was Cinderella, he found a Missus God, and then about six people who thought they were Christ. And three of them were really into this idea and really consistent with belief that they were Jesus. And two of them happened to be at Hipsolani. So he was like, this is perfect, I'll just transfer the third in and we'll get going.
Yeah. And so these guys being inmates of the state at a time where Ipsilani had like four thousand people, four thousand patients in just this one institutions. And if you were already like on the margins society and then moved into a place where you're with four thousand other people on the margins of society, it's a really good place to get lost, to not get any real help. And so one of the things that was part of this experiment design is to make participating in these discussions. This group of these three Christs as attractive to these three men as possible. So they were moved toward d twenty three. They were given their own private day room to eat in, to sleep or not sleeping, but to hang out in away from everybody else. They got some like place to stretch out and to have some company. We got a lot of attention, a lot of perks. Like basically their lives were changed in like incalculable ways by being part of the study. And so when they say like these were voluntary meetings and these men were voluntary members of the study, that's that's definitely true. There were voluntary participants, but the perks on offer were just so amazing they like you would you could not turn down you know, participating in some degree.
Yeah, exactly. So they were willing participants insofar as yeah, they got these great perks worth running out. So he changed the names of the guys to protect their families and to protect them to some degree. But we should go over sort of the bios of the three men. Should we say who played them in the movies? Willout help people?
I don't think so? Okay, I don't want to disparage those great actors' names.
Again, Well, I mean the acting, they did a good job. It was just the material. They're all great actors, you know, Sure, yeah, I know, it's just when you write it. I don't want to call out the scriptwriter. But it wasn't there good.
So let me ask you this, because I didn't see the movie. Was it like and I loved the fact that they made a movie about Freddy Mercury and the other members of Queen, But was it like in the in the movie what was the name of that movie.
The Queen Movie? That's what I called it.
Okay, well in but Heymian in Mars City, that's right. Do you remember like every time like Freddy Mercury did something brilliant, they would have Brian May, they'd do a pan in close up of him just looking like in awe and astonished. And that's maybe pushing it doing that once in a movie, but they did that every like fifteen or twenty minutes. Was it kind of like that same sentiment?
It wasn't so much that, And again I only watched the first act before I realized it was just it was just really sanitized and like a feel good type of thing.
Got so, yeah, so you're similar, yeah, right, exactly. This is not a this is not a feel good story. I wonder if it was performance art you accidentally stumbled upon.
I mean, was there was some tough stuff in there. It's not like it was completely like, hey, this is great, but it kind of reeked of like an Awakenings kind of thing.
And I liked Awakening I got it all right, all right, I liked Awakenings too, But it sounds like what you're describing is more along the line of the Greatest Showman, like that kind of sanitization. I didn't see that, Okay, did you no? But he did that episode just tearing it apart. Yeah, yeah, we hadn't even seen it.
More comfortable doing that at times.
Yeah, kind kind of.
So. The first guy was in his late fifties, Joseph Kassel fifty eight. He had been in the hospital for about twenty years and was Canadian born and raised in Quebec. And he was named after his after Josephine, his female relative in his family named Joseph, And I think the big takeaway from his childhood was that it was not good. A very abusive father, very quick tempered man who abused his mom, and his mom actually died while giving birth to her ninth kid, and so he had a rough go of it from the beginning.
I think his name actually was Josephine as well, and he went by Joseph. So he wanted to be a writer. I think, did you say he was fifty eight at the time, Yeah, okay, and he did not really take to working outside of the house. He and his wife did not have a very good relationship. Necessarily, he didn't want kids, she did. They ended up having three daughters, and he later on came to believe that they were not his children after all, and that may have been correct. But then things started to take kind of a turn for the worse, and that he started to become really paranoid. He started to accuse people of poisoning his food. He became a bit of a hoarder, especially with books, and probably the greatest crime a man could commit in the mid century America, he did not want to work right, So that was basically that he ended up getting sent to an asylum in Canada and then on to Ipsilany eventually, and he'd been been in Ipseilany for I think about twenty years, or at least in and out of the hospital system for about twenty years, and for about ten of those years he had been he had decided that he was God or Jesus Christ or both.
Yeah, And by the time he got around to Rokeach, or Rokeach found him, he was in a pretty bad state. After those twenty years, he had about half of his teeth left in his mouth. He was still hoarding books, carrying around books everywhere, and when, you know, when asked who he was, he said his name was Joseph, and he said that I am God, and I guess Rokeach said, well, you'll do just.
Fine, very splendid. Yeah. So Joseph, despite you know, his inability to take care of himself and you know the fact that he hoarded and all of that, he was a very sharp person. So yeah, remember remember to keep that in mind. Like that he was. He was very sharp and a good writer as well. Clyde and these are these men's names were changed. Clyde Benson. He was seventy, he'd been hospitalized for the last seventeen years.
He was in pretty rough shape.
He really was. And I wrote, Keatch definitely starts to recognize that pretty quickly after meeting Clyde, and ends up almost letting him just stay in the group even though he's not really participating any longer. But Clyde was apparently raised in an overprotected manner and didn't really learn how to make his own decisions and kind of ended up stunted as a result. Which you can make your way through life like that if you if you want to. But he ended up turning to alcohol and became a really hardcore alcoholic to where it was starting to wreck his life. And apparently that came into collision with a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia at some point.
Right, Yeah, And you know, it seems like the drinking was the anytime you have an undiagnosed condition like this and you pour alcoholism on top of it or any kind of you know, drug addiction, it's gonna it's just gonna be even worse. And eventually he was arrested for public drunkenness. It was a pretty violent arrest and in jail he was violent, and he was saying he was Jesus Christ, that he was God, and that he was reborn through his first wife. Surely I believe she had passed away, and he did get remarried, and it was surely the queen of heaven. And at this point they committed him to a mental hospital when he was fifty three, where he got that diagnosis, and he was the one that was easily the most far gone and toughest to reach and sort of walked around mumbling. He also didn't have many, if any of his teeth, but occasionally would like still have that violence in him where he would have these sort of violent outbursts but then kind of calm down again.
Yeah, And when he did, he was very direct and to the point. And I don't think he was actually physically violent, was he.
I don't think so. I think it just could be scary at times.
Right, So he would say things like I am him. See now understand that, Like that was the extent of how he would explain that he was God. He didn't need it to be challenged, and if you did try to challenge it, he would just shut you down kind of thing, in a very yeah, like you said, kind of a scary way.
So Leon was perhaps one of the saddest of the three cases, and that he was had only been hospitalized for about five years. He was younger, he was thirty eight years old, and he was the snap judgment is great because they had his two initial graduate assistants on, Richard Bonnier and Ron Hoppey, so like real firsthand experience on the podcast, and they were saying that he was the one that broke their heart the most because he was the one that most likely could have been rehabilitated, and it just tore them up that they and they liked him a lot. He was a real personable guy and it was very engaging with his stories and they really thought that they could have helped him had it not been you know, in part by what happened with Rokeach.
Which is sad because that means that Rokeach made things much much worse. Yeah, these people, and that's something to really understand. That there were three men who were living, you know, their delusional lives in this statemental hospital, but they were generally unmolested until they were dragged into this study and messed with like in ways that you just don't do to other people, you know, and that their lives probably were worse, far worse than they would have been had they never met Milton Roki.
Yeah. So Leon's deal was his mother was almost certainly schizophrenic as well. And had delusions, religious delusions. So he was raised in a household with these with basically a religious fanatic, and that impacted him from the very beginning. Of course, he was ended up diagnosed with schizophrenia as well, but growing up, I mean in that kind of environment, definitely, I think led to the Christ thing for sure.
Yeah, And he had like there was a time where he was living a normal life. He served in World War Two, he worked at different jobs back in Detroit, he tried to go to college. He was trying to make a life for himself, but he suffered from fatigue, which I looked up is apparently a really tough comorbidity with psychotic disorders, and it's like got a terrible positive feedback where you know, the more tired you get, the worshier disorder is, and the worship disorder is, the harder it can be to sleep, and it's just not good. So he had that, and then he also started hearing voices himself that we're telling him that he was Jesus Christ, and that didn't really jibe very well with his mother's own religious fanaticism because he saw that she was, you know, worshiping these other what he considered idols, and he went on a bit of a violent tear once, removing all the pictures of the saints and breaking all of the figurines and all that stuff, and demanding that his mother worship him as Jesus Christ, and threatening that as she didn't, he would strangle her. And so that was enough to get him locked up for good. He'd already been locked up one time for a brief period, and then about six months after that he was locked up from then until the time that he met Milton roe Keach, right.
And that was Walton goggins.
Man.
Sorry.
So he he went by not Leon, and again Leon was a fake name that ro Keach gave him for the book. But he went by doctor Domino Dominorum at rex reserum simplest Christianist, purist mentalist doctor, which is Latin for lord of lords, king of King's simple Christian boy psychiatrist. But he asked everyone to call him Rex for short, and.
They said thanks sure.
And he was he was, like you said, like the most probably the most personable. He liked Joseph. He was very sharp too, but also like from a very early stage he saw quite clearly what Roe Keach was trying to do, and he thought that it was morally repugnant, that it was not a nice thing to do to somebody, that you shouldn't mess with people like that, and he said as much multiple times throughout the study.
Yeah, so this is when he hires those two grad assistants, is when he finds the guys, gets this experiment going in earnest and you know, his hypothesis was that if I can have these three men confront one another about them being the real Christ, that it could rock them into what he saw as reality and get them out of these delusions. And that didn't happen. Well, it didn't happen at all through the experiment, But initially they what they did was they really dug in, and they each had their own way of doing so, but they each dug in and said no, no, no, I am the real Christ. And they each had different sort of methods of dealing with the others, but none of them wavered initially.
No. And it was really, really it was kind of in and of itself, just that finding that not only did they not have their identity shattered, but they just rebuilt and reinforced their identities. However, they could find a way to do it to their own satisfaction. That's a pretty big psychological finding in and of itself, you know, although it doesn't seem worth putting these men through that just to find that out.
You know, Yeah, for sure, I think Joseph said. Joseph was more one to sort of laugh it off. He said, there's nothing wrong. Yesterday I knew I was what I am. Today, I am what I am. I'm not worried about losing my identity. And we also should point out that Joseph, and this was portrayed in the movie too by Peter Dinklage. He was spoke with an English accent. He thought he was convinced himself that he was from England, that he was descendant of royalty, and that the hospital was an English stronghold.
Don't think I didn't notice you just slipped Peter Inklige in there.
I know that only leaves one more, so I don't need to do the third.
So one of the other things about Joseph was his interpretation of why they were there in this study. Why the three of these men had been brought together was so that they could sort out with the other two that they weren't Christ, that he was the one who was actually Christ, so he could do his work here on earth better without having these two basically harassing him or whatever. So then Leon, like I was saying, Leon, was the one who kind of saw the most through ro Keach's saw ro Kech's intentions and saw that they were just wrong. And like Clyde, I think Clyde said that that they were a rerise, that's what he considered the other two, or a hick. Joseph said, you know, I am who I am, and also, by the way, we all know that I'm really God. And the Leon he said that, he said the the other two were instrumental gods. They were hallowed out gods. They were possibly dead already, and machines were operating them and making them say these things. But even in that like, he wasn't attacking them personally. It was what he felt forced to explain his position, and so that's what he said his position was. But as he was saying this, he would turn to Joseph. He would turn to Clyde, and he would say, you know, I mean this, you know, respectfully, I don't mean to be to tear you down. Whatever your belief is your belief and I don't want it. I'm not trying to take it from you. I have my beliefs and you have your beliefs, and that's good enough. And so through that kind of like truce that was kind of established between these three men, they basically kept the researchers at bay. The researchers would try to come in and bust things up and get them to like argue or you know, make them confront one another. But if when left alone, those three men just generally did not argue about who was God. They avoided the subject altogether and just let the other ones be and just kind of entered this live and let live kind of position, which I think is pretty heartening, you know it is.
And that was one of the things that came through on that snap judgment with the two research assistants was that their take was that these men were generally, like after the initial sort of denial stuff, that they were generally pretty respectful and wanted to give each other the space to believe that they were christ if they wanted to. And what that showed was empathy and that's something that none of them saw coming at this point. Rokeach is being kind of hassled by these two grad assistants saying, hey, listen, man, these guys are kind of okay with this, and you're taking this thing too far. And eventually he was he ignored them basically, and eventually they quit before this phase starts. Oh okay, And because they didn't agree with what was going on, because they saw these three guys that were generally respectful for one another, they saw ro Kech would do things like a journalist wrote a story about them at one point that was obviously not flattering at all to the three Christs, and Rokeach read this aloud to them like he was just trying to push their buttons and initiate this conflict, and the two grat assistants eventually are like, we're out of here.
Yeah. That story, in particular, it was about how ro Keach was treating three psychotic men who thought they were christ and to read that to them is it's really mean. Again. He was trying to see what would happen if they were confronted with their identities being considered delusional by other people, and Leon in particular didn't like that. He said that a doctor is or a person who's supposed to be a doctor, is supposed to lift up, build up, guide, direct inspire. He said that what you've just done is deploring, and roe Keach said, you know, deploring. I've try leveled seventy five miles in snow and storm to come see you. And Lee had said, yes, but what was your intention in coming to see me, sir? And so he didn't put up with Roketch's bs at all, which is pretty cool, you know, to hold delusions and to have your delusions attacked like that, and then to be able to push back but also in still a respectful way. Is I think Leon's one of these one of the great unsung heroes of twentieth century America.
Totally. Should we take a break before phase two?
Yeah, I say we take a break man, all right.
We'll be right back. So before stage two starts, when things get really unethical, well not before this was kind of part of the unethical. The two grat assistant assistants had left, and he hires this new young pretty woman as a grad assistant and basically tells her to flirt with Leon and to see if he can make her make him fall in love with her. And that's exactly what happened, and Leon fell in love with her and was destroyed when he basically came to realize on his own that that was never gonna happen for him.
Man, it's just brutal keeps getting better and better.
Yeah.
Yeah, when those when those grad assistants said you've gone too far, I think Rokeach probably said something along the lines of too far. I haven't begun to go too far. Richard gears to watch What's next? Yeah, but there was like.
Upbeat music, Yeah, like Salisbury Hill.
Exactly. That is exactly what I was thinking of. Thank you for putting it into words, Chuck.
So what happened next?
So what happened next is as follows. They're Rokets basically saw like, these guys are not going for this. For this, the level of prodding that I've been doing, I'm going to really kind of turn up the heat. And he wondered if you took the members people that were part of these patient's delusional belief systems and personified them, like pretended you were them, say he started communicating with them through letters or whatever, Yeah, what would happen? Could you conceivably get these people to abandon their delusions under the guidance of these authority figures that were actually part of their delusions. It's really kind of mind boggling when you lay it out in like a float chart like that.
You know, yeah, that this like just kept getting worse and worse. So he identified these authority figures in all three of them. I guess to his credit, he laid off of Clyde because, I mean, I don't know if it was so much empathy as it was, he knew he wasn't getting very far with.
Clyde, or maybe he was scared of what would happen if Clyde.
Maybe yeah, because Clyde was definitely could be a little scary. But so he laid off of Clyde. But he found that Joseph said that a superintendent of the hospital named doctor Yoder yod E r. Was his dad. And Leon said that he had a wife. He had a couple. His wife the Blessed Virgin Mary, who was an uncle reincarnated as Michael, the archangel archangel arch angel.
Those are two different. So he was married to the Blessed Virgin Mary and had that uncle.
Yeah, he had those two.
But there was he wasn't married to his uncle. He had another wife later on named Madam Yetti Woman after he stopped being married to the Blessed Virgin Mary because his uncle, Michael the Archangel married Blessed the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Right, it sounds a little confusing, but when you're dealing with stuff like this, I think it just has to be a little confusing.
Well, the upshot of it is Rokeach started posing as as Madame Yetti Woman and started a letter writing campaign as Madame Yetti Woman, basically reaching out to say, Hey, Leon, I just want to say hi, and I'm thinking of you and let's start talking. So there was correspondence that was established as as Leon's delusion like wife Madame Yetti Woman.
Yeah, and we should point out that he supposedly had gotten not supposedly, I think he did get the hospital's permission to sign off on this as long as he said, listen, it's all going to be positive stuff. I'm not going to be writing them letters saying to go start a fight or anything like that. So I'm gonna send them positive message messages and I'm going to stop if this becomes upsetting to these guys. And so they said, sure, go.
Ahead, yeah, and so he did. He did go ahead first with Leon, I believe, and by this time Leon had One of the things that he had done to transform his identity was to become doctor Righteous Ideal Dung or doctor ri I Dong. And apparently the head nurse asked him directly, like can I please not call you doctor Dong? And he said, yes, you can call me Ri, but everybody else called him doctor ri I Dong. And he did this, Rokeach concluded, to basically make himself not worthy of being harassed anymore. But he was still secretly god, like he knew he was God. He was just pretending to be something else. And during that period he became married to Madame Yetti woman. So ro Keech started addressing letters is to doctor ri I Dong and basically saying, you know, here's a dollar, why don't you go buy yourself something nice in the hospital store and then share the change with Clyde and Joseph and or. One of the things that they would do is they would take turns between the three patients. Is who was going to lead the session that day. And one of the things you did when you led the session was you chose what song everybody sung at the beginning and at the end of the session, which is adorable, and so Madame Yetti Woman suggested that he choose Onward Christian Soldiers, and he chose Onward Christian Soldiers, and so like to rokech he's seeing like there's this there's like an actual influence that is being exerted by this delusional figure. And also it demonstrates that that Leon is showing like he definitely believes Madame Yetti Woman's a person for sure.
Yeah, And eventually what broke it was as posing as Madame Yetti Woman asked Leon to stop using the name doctor Dung. The name thing seems to have been a sticking point with a lot of people. Or maybe he just thought that that would since he held onto that so strongly, that would have been like the toughest thing to make him do.
And.
That was sort of it. He was asked about the letter, and Leon doesn't really say anything about asking to be to drop the name doctor Doung. He just starts talking more and more about God being both male and female, insane and insane and said I don't care for the insanity of God, and then said I don't want any more letters and basically kind of shut it down.
And so with those with Leon's letters in particular, there was a couple of like really sad things, like the whole thing was sad to begin with. But there's this passage in the book where Leon gets a letter and roe Keach realizes that he's holding back tears and he starts to ask him, like, why are you, like, you know, are you happy? He said, yes, I'm very happy. It's a very pleasant feeling to have someone think of you like like he was. He was moved to tears by the idea that Madame Yetti woman was writing to him and talking about caring for him and sending him money to go buy himself things with. And rather than just say like, oh, we might want to back this off, ro Kech used it to step that up and arranged for a meeting with Madame Yetti Woman. Yeah, but there was no Madame Yetti woman who was supposed to show up. He was just he was going to get stood up from the outset. But still Leon went to go meet Madame Yetti Woman and had his heart broken. I think it was after that that he stopped responding to the letters.
Yeah, and you know, when he said I don't want these letters anymore. I don't want to receive them. You would think that that's when Rokeach would say, all right, well, let's just stop this all together. But he didn't because he remembered that Leon had another authority figure in his life, which was his uncle, George Bernard Brown aka the archangel Michael, and so he said, hey, I'll have someone call and pose as his uncle now. And this didn't work from the beginning, Leon, I guess the voice was just so far off, or maybe Leon was just really wise to it at this point said you know, no, no, no, this isn't this is even close to the voice, goodbye, and hung up. And then they asked him about the call, and he said, I don't believe in mental torture, sir. So it seems like he was sort of onto him at this point, or you know, it was on to him from the beginning, but onto him about this ruse.
I don't think he was on to him from the beginning.
I think that he no, I mean from the beginning of the experiments, he was wearing, Oh.
I gotcha, I see what you're saying. But yeah, but it's really easy to forget because you're reading roe Keach's accounts that these men weren't in on the idea that it was from roe Keach. They believed that these letters were coming from sure their delusional figures.
Yeah, that's the whole point, which makes it.
Just even more gut wrenching when you stop and remember that, you know.
Yeah.
So then he says, okay, all right, Leon's done. I'm done writing letters to him. Who can I write letters to next? And he moves on to Joseph.
Right, Yeah, so this was the one where the superintendent, the fictional doctor Yoder, was the authority figure for Joseph, who he saw as a father figure. And so of course Rokeach is gonna play up this whole father figure thing in the letters, saying that he loved him like his son. He just wanted the best things for him. And if you remember from the original sort of quick bio, Joseph's father was awful and abusive, So he's really playing into his deepest sort of insecurities here.
Yeah, he said, be assured that I will always love you, just exactly like a father who deeply loves his own son.
It's really tough to even research this stuff.
Yeah. So so just like with Leon, through these letters, as doctor Yoder, he tried to get Joseph to start doing stuff, innocuous stuff at first, like saying stop. He didn't, he stopped saying that he was from England and he was from Quebec, started going to church services, that kind of stuff. So there was an influence on Joseph, just like there was on Leon, using their delusional characters or delusional friends, authority figures, whatever. And I think even doctor Yoder prescribed for the fake Doctor Yoder prescribed placebo for Joseph's stomach ailments. He had, like digestive problems or stomach hurt, and these placebo pills just fixed him right up.
Yeah, so the stomach pills placebo supposedly worked. And then he said, all right, well that worked, so I'm going to give you pills to basically cure your mind. And if you want to fix fix yourself for good, take these pills. Which is I mean, this is so far off the charts of unethical, like I can't even describe how far off the charts it is. And he said, basically, I think he said he gave him an ultimatum. He says I'm only going to continue to give these pills that will supposedly make your mind right if you admit that you're in a mental hospital. And it's not an English stronghold. And Joseph finally said, like, sign something, and Joseph said no, I'm not going to sign this, and he cut off this placebo medication that he believed might be fixing his brain. And it kind of petered out after that, and it was just like, it's just brutal to think about these guys going through this like hope that they're getting better and it was all fake.
Yeah, he apparently stopped writing to doctor Yoder and moved on to JFK, started writing letters to JFK asking to be one of his speech writers, because remember he was a writer as well, right, So ro Keech is like, okay, all right, let's see what's next. Oh, nothing's next. This is the end of the line. He finally realized, like, okay, this is not going anywhere. Not only had he not at all moved Clyde's delusions or Joseph's delusions. The only persons whose delusions had changed at all was Leon's, and his had just gotten more complex and intricate, certainly not any closer to reality. They got further away from reality because of this influence from ro Kechen is his experiment, and he has like a pretty rich little admission in the book that he says that we do not know to what extent our very presence, behavior and questions may have influenced the results obtained, which is bizarre to say, because the whole point of the experiment was to influence these people through this experiment. So it's a really weird thing that even put it in there from some of the stuff that I've read kind of picking apart this book at the end, it really just kind of peters out and like he's just kind of slashing in the air with his sword trying to figure out, you know, what the point was of all this stuff, and even without like a satisfying conclusion or end, and ended up getting published in nineteen sixty four and became like a really big success in the field psychology, but also got widely criticized right out of the gate because even though this was mid century America and we're talking about mental patients in mid century America who have very little rights or were treated very poorly, like there was still like a lot of people around, Really, you don't do this to human beings. This is not okay, not everybody did, but some, you know, some critics definitely came out immediately.
Yeah. It took Rokeich a long time, though, to really kind of come to terms with what he had done, and he eventually did though, about seventeen years later. They reissued the book in nineteen eighty one, and he wrote a new ForWord. He admitted in interviews in other places as well, that he was also, you know, innocent, suffering from godlike delusions and that he was playing God with these men and regretted it. He regretted publishing. He said, I regret having written and published a study when I did. I don't know if that means that he wishes he could have reflected more on it or what.
But yeah, I don't know either.
He did sort of recant and say he didn't do the right thing. It's worth pointing out that this was six years into his suffering from spinal cants, so I don't know if that had, you know, knowing the end was near for him had something to do with his sort of self reflection. But he eventually died in nineteen eighty eight at the age of seventy after a thirteen year battle with spinal cancer, and you know, left the social psychology world sort of rocked. Like like I said, I studied this in college, and it became sort of like the Stanford prison experiment, right, it became worth studying, but not for the reasons that they initially launched the study to begin with.
No, he finally figured out the point of the book, and the point of the book where was for him to figure out that it was unethical what he was doing, and you finally come to terms with what he'd done to these poor men, and that you have a right to just be left alone and not have your identity challenged no matter what you believe you are who you believe you are. And so he actually changed his methods. His general belief in the idea of belief systems remained the same, but he changed his tactics in that he got involved in self confrontation, where you try to present people with you know, self examination where they would examine what their values were, what their beliefs were, and then they would kind of be challenged on that like, Okay, you believe in freedom, you place a high value on freedom, but you also rated equality pretty low. But isn't equality freedom for everybody? So you care about your freedom but not other people's freedom. How does that really jibe? And then the hope was that they would go back and self reflect and be like, no, I really do care about freedom, I do care about other people. Maybe I should care about more about equality and improve as a person. And that's ultimately how he ended up making his name starting in the seventies.
Yeah, and I gotta tell you, when you read some of his regret about it, he says things like or he said things like you know, and in the end, someone was cured and it was me. It's it just that all bothered me a little bit too. How he he still made it about himself somehow, even though he did say he regretted it and everything. I just I never heard as much regret about these three men and just and putting them in the positions of like they were the ones who helped me out in the end. It was just I didn't like that.
I know exactly what you mean. It just it's still smacks of self involvement. And you get to see, Yeah, and also like what happened to these men. After the experiment was done, they're just cast right back into the general populations, right, like used clean nex basically to deal with what they'd just been through. It's just it's just rotten all around for sure. And at the very least it does exist to make Milton Roekeach feel better. Right, You got anything else? No?
I mean, if you want to see some of his later work that you were talking about the value stuff, there are all kinds of really wacky YouTube videos from people about that stuff.
Nice And if you want to see the movie that they remade about this, don't. Yeah, Well, since I said don't see that movie, it's time, of course for listener mail everybody.
I'm gonna call this a guy who has the same step on a crack thing as I do. Okay, this is from Jared Miller. Hey, guys, I gotta say, Chuck is the only other person I've heard to express the same compulsion that I have. If I step on a surface that is different from the majority of where I'm walking, I try to get my other foot to have the same sensation. This can be the line between the sidewalk segments, or a traction sticker, an unpaved patch, et cetera. I gotta say, Jared, it's the same with me. It's not just cracks, can be anything, sure, even which part of the foot is affected. Same with me, Dude. If I do it on my heel, I have to do the next one with my heel. It's very interesting. I've even found myself doing it with the colors of tiles on a patterned floor. Same here for me. It's about symmetrical sensations. I sometimes realize I'm doing it when I'm eating and have equal chewing time on each side. I don't do that.
Once a chill like cherry, you're so weird.
Yeah, you're really out there. Once I became aware of it at a fully conscious level, I also became self conscious about it and tried different things to break myself of the habit. At times, it's been an extreme, as extreme as forcing myself to maintain an even gait no matter what. Yeah, I've done that while consciously reminding myself that sensations are temporary and that it will even even out or go away, especially if I ignore it. Thanks for all the hours of entertainment you were in early discovery of mine in the podcast world back in two thousand and nine, and almost none of the shows I started listening to back then are still going. That's our mono, Jared, just keep doing.
It no matter what. If everybody tells you to stop, please God stop.
Don't quit.
You just you don't listen.
So that's Jared and Anaheim by way of Idaho.
Way to go, Jared from all over the.
Place or was it Iowa? I don't remember, Sorry Idaho, I know how. The worst thing to confuse apologize.
So let's see. If you want to get in touch with this, like Jared did, please email us, won't you? You can send us an email to stuff podcast at iHeartRadio dot com.
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