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pillaroflight
1st April 2012, 05:24
The delphi technique and hegelian dialects, or some variation thereof:


This document will give some ugly but useful advice in how to defeat the Delphi Technique. If you"re not familiar with what it is - it is a manipulative method used by Governments, Organizations and Unions to cause a'pre-selected outcome' at a meeting, event, or function. Its usage is also implemented in any on line instrument such as a chat room, forum or newsgroup that has 'Moderators.'

Here is how the delphi technique works (and boy its effective). It is based upon the Hegelian Dialectic of creating ones own opposition in order to manipulate that opposition to a unified consensus. One exposing document fromthe Education Reporter accurately describes it:
In group settings, the Delphi Technique is an unethical method of achieving consensus on controversial topics.

It requires well-trained professionals, known as "facilitators" or "change agents," who deliberately escalate tension among group members, pitting one faction against another to make a preordained viewpoint appear "sensible," while making opposing views appear ridiculous.

So there you have it, - a highly trained change agent or facilitator is brought in whenever a dispute arises where a predetermined outcome is desired. The facilitator will host a meeting (on line or otherwise) to gather input from members of the group. The trick is anyone who disagrees with the pre-ordained plan is segregated, ridiculed and marginalized, while those supporting the ruling powers agenda is encouraged and praised for their 'activism' The
key is that it is important that the members of the meeting or group get involved thus causing them to have the feeling of satisfaction that they have been involved in the change. The sad reality is that the entire thing was only a mass crowd manipulation to a pre-determined end. Here is another example of what it is.

The facilitator begins by working the crowd to establish a good-guy-bad-guy scenario. Anyone disagreeing with the facilitator must be made to appear as the bad guy, with the facilitator appearing as the good guy. To accomplish this, the facilitator seeks out those who disagree and makes them look foolish, inept, or aggressive, which sends a clear message to the rest of the audience that, if they don't want the same treatment, they must keep quiet. When the opposition has been identified and alienated, the facilitator becomes the good guy - a friend - and the agenda and direction of the meeting are established without the audience ever realizing what has happened.

pdf:

http://www.nogw.com/documents/_07_defeating_delphi.pdf

The Delphi Technique — What Is It?


The Delphi Technique was originally conceived as a way to obtain the opinion of experts without necessarily bringing them together face to face. In recent times, however, it has taken on an all new meaning and purpose. In Educating for the New World Order by B. Eakman, the reader finds reference upon reference for the need to preserve the illusion that there is "…lay, or community, participation (in the decision-making process), while lay citizens were, in fact, being squeezed out." The Delphi Technique is the method being used to squeeze citizens out of the process, effecting a left-wing take over of the schools.

A specialized use of this technique was developed for teachers, the "Alinsky Method" (ibid, p.123). The setting or group is, however, immaterial; the point is that people in groups tend to share a certain knowledge base and display certain identifiable characteristics (known as group dynamics). This allows for a special application of a basic technique.

The change agent or facilitator goes through the motions of acting as an organizer, getting each person in the target group to elicit expression of their concerns about a program, project, or policy in question. The facilitator listens attentively, forms "task forces," "urges everyone to make lists," and so on. While s/he is doing this, the facilitator learns something about each member of the target group. S/He identifies the "leaders," the "loud mouths," as well as those who frequently turn sides during the argument — the "weak or noncommittal".

Suddenly, the amiable facilitator becomes "devil's advocate." S/He dons his professional agitator hat. Using the "divide and conquer" technique, s/he manipulates one group opinion against the other. This is accomplished by manipulating those who are out of step to appear "ridiculous, unknowledgeable, inarticulate, or dogmatic." S/He wants certain members of the group to become angry, thereby forcing tensions to accelerate. The facilitator is well trained in psychological manipulation. S/He is able to predict the reactions of each group member. Individuals in opposition to the policy or program will be shut out of the group.

The method works. It is very effective with parents, teachers, school children, and any community group. The "targets" rarely, if ever, know that they are being manipulated. Or, if they suspect this is happening, do not know how to end the process.

http://www.learn-usa.com/transformation_process/acf001.htm

Richard
1st April 2012, 10:16
The Delphi technique can be squelched easily on a forum by alert and intuitive mods by acting quickly and decisively the moment it is recognized.
In our case, our protocols allow for a agitator to get "moderated" so that all posts will need mod review before approval for public viewing.


I personally employ the "off with their heads" technique with some level of enjoyment ;)

InCiDeR
1st April 2012, 14:01
Interesting and important thread pillarofligh, thank you.

Here you also have the other thread that discussed this matter:

http://nexus.2012info.ca/forum/showthread.php?9534-Has-anyone-encoutered-this-The-Delphi-Technique&p=64525&viewfull=1#post64525

seismorg
1st April 2012, 14:08
The first 10-15 mins of this should be enough.
< http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1JhnFG82FQ >
Seis:

Anchor
1st April 2012, 23:13
I personally employ the "off with their heads" technique with some level of enjoyment ;)

One thing the Delphi people cannot handle, is a silly ass like me.

One encounters these herberts in ones profession life..

The only thing they can do is not invite me to the meetings - but there is a limit to how much that can be done before it becomes obvious.

I love seeing the looks on their faces when you hand out some Delphi antidotes and support the people with the opinions that are being crushed, just at the wrong time <evil grin/>