This article was originally published by Patricia Harrity at The Daily ExposĂŠ.
Dr William Makis has reviewed 8 published papers that clearly show the techniques employed by governments worldwide to ensure vaccine uptake. From punishments and threats to employment and reputation to rewards for complying, studies show that the COVID-19 vaccine rollout was aided by the greatest psychological fear campaign in human history using tried and tested brainwashing techniques.
Propaganda Series â Brainwashing Techniques Used to Increase COVID-19 Vaccine Uptake â 8 papers reviewed, looking at the psychological manipulation of the masses
This article originally appeared on makismd.substack.com by Dr. William Makis

Papers Reviewed:
- 2023 Jun â Steffens et al â âTesting persuasive messages about booster doses of COVID-19 vaccines on intention to vaccinate in Australian adults: A randomized controlled trialâ
- 2023 Apr â Kleitman et al â âThe Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australiaâ
- 2023 Mar â Limbu et al â âWhy Some People Are Hesitant to Receive COVID-19 Boosters: A Systematic Reviewâ
- 2023 Jan â Fisher et al â âImpact of a physician recommendation on COVID-19 vaccination intent among vaccine-hesitant individualsâ
- 2021 Dec â Erin James et al â âPersuasive messaging to increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake intentionsâ
- 2021 Sep â Kachurka et al â âPersuasive Messages Will Not Increase COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptanceâ (Polish people say fuck you to propaganda)
- 2021 Jun â Scott Ratzan et al â Missing the Point â How Primary Care Can Overcome Covid-19 Vaccine âHesitancyâ
- 2021 Feb â Stacy Wood et al â âBeyond Politics â Promoting Covid-19 Vaccination in the United Statesâ
2023 Jun â Steffens et al â âTesting persuasive messages about booster doses of COVID-19 vaccines on intention to vaccinate in Australian adults: A randomized controlled trialâ
- four propaganda messages were tested:
- 1. Personal health benefits â booster gives you protection
- 2. Community health benefits â booster reduces your risk of giving the virus to your family, or people in the community who could get sick and die
- 3. Non-Health Benefits â travel, go to weddings, see family and friends, getting a booster reduces the chance that restrictions will return
- 4. Personal agency â getting a booster is a personal choice that gives you control of your health and lets you protect people you care about.
- RESULTS:
- âmessages emphasizing non-health benefits of getting a COVID-19 booster dose, like traveling, enjoying family occasions like weddings, and seeing family and friends, may increase intention to vaccinate, especially in hesitant populations.â
- âAt the time, the Australian population had endured almost two years of public health restrictions, including lockdowns and international and domestic border closures. Being able to live more normally, free from restrictions, may have been top of mind, and hence what participants found the most persuasive.â
- âmessages emphasizing personal agency may have negative impacts, especially with hesitant individuals.â
- âHesitant individuals may have reacted negatively (psychological reactance) to suggestions about how they ought to behave, and what others approve or disapprove of regarding vaccination decisionsâ
2023 Apr â Kleitman et al â âThe Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australiaâ
- Latent Profile Analysis (LPA) identified three subgroups: Acceptant (61%), Hesitant (30%) and Resistant (9%).
- Hesitant and Resistant groups were less worried about catching COVID-19, used fewer official sources of COVID-19 info, checked the news less, were lower on the agreeableness personality dimension, and reported more conservatism, persecutory thinking, amoral attitudes and need for chaos.
- The hesitant group (30%) also reported checking the legitimacy of information sources less, scored lower on the openness to new experiences personality dimension, and were more likely than the Resistant and Acceptant groups to report regaining freedoms (e.g., travel) and work requirements or external pressures as reasons to get a booster
- The resistant group (9%) was higher on reactance, held more conspiratorial beliefs, and rated their culture as being less tolerant of deviance than the Hesitant and Acceptant groups


2023 Mar â Limbu et al â âWhy Some People Are Hesitant to Receive COVID-19 Boosters: A Systematic Reviewâ
- COVID-19 Booster Vaccination Hesitancy Rate:
- North America is highest at 41%
- Europe 35%
- Asia 28%
- South America 28%
- younger people more reluctant to take boosters
- single or never-married adults were more likely to be booster-hesitant
- research on education and men vs women is mixed
- Compared to other occupations, healthcare workers, allied health professions, housewives, administrative staff & service workers were more likely to be booster hesitant.
- Vaccine Adverse Events were the most frequently reported predictor of hesitancy
- Reduced booster hesitancy:Â government mandates, booster recommendations from family or health care and community workers
- Increased booster hesitancy: when social networks or social media served as an important info source or other factors:
- political messages discouraging boosters
- belief in natural immunity
- boosters are unnecessary
- personal health is in Godâs hands
- COVID-19 is similar to seasonal flu
- âinterventions that can harness normative social influence should be powerful. For example, information campaigns that rely on recommendations from celebrities, political figures, or groups trusted by the target audience should be more effective at reducing hesitancyâ
- âAdditionally, campaigns can explain how to overcome booster hesitancy among family and friends by providing information and strategies for effective normative influence on the booster hesitant from those close to them.â
2023 Jan â Fisher et al â âImpact of a physician recommendation on COVID-19 vaccination intent among vaccine-hesitant individualsâ
- Physicians and other healthcare providers are the most trusted source of information about the COVID-19 vaccine
- Recommendation from a physician has consistently been associated with higher rates of vaccine uptake for other vaccines such as the human papillomavirus (HPV) and influenza vaccines
- strong recommendations from a physician or healthcare provider may be influential in increasing COVID-19 vaccine uptake and an important tool in fostering COVID-19 vaccine acceptance
- A presumptive style recommendation (e.g., âYou are due for a flu shotâ) is associated with increased vaccine uptake compared with a participatory style recommendation (e.g., âAre you interested in getting a flu shot?â)
- Results:Â 33% became less hesitant following a doctor message
- 39% âas safe as the flu shotâ message was most effective in reducing hesitancy
- 36% âI acknowledge your concerns, Iâve reviewed the studiesâ message
- 35% âprotect othersâ message
- 34% âI recommend that you get itâ
- 20% âWhat do you think?â message was least effective in reducing hesitancy
- Conclusion: âEncouraging physicians to provide an explicit recommendation is a promising means of increasing COVID-19 vaccine uptake in the USâ
2021 Dec â Erin James et al â âPersuasive messaging to increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake intentionsâ
- âVaccination is both a self-interested and pro-social action â people protect themselves, but they also reduce the chance of spreading disease to othersâ
- âPeople view vaccination as a social contract and are less willing to cooperate with the unvaxxedâ
- âhighlighting the reputational costs of choosing not to vaccinate could be an effective strategy for increasing uptakeâ
- âappeals to herd immunity and the pro-social aspect of vaccination have been shown to increase uptakeâ
- âmessages that explain herd immunity increases willingness to receive a vaccineâ
- âeffective public health messages would also increase peopleâs willingness to encourage those close to them to vaccinate and to hold negative judgments of those who do not vaccinateâ
- âby encouraging those close to them to vaccinate, people are both promoting compliance with social norms and increasing their level of protectionâ
- âby judging those who do not vaccinate more negatively, they apply social pressure to others to promote cooperative behavior.â
- âfree riders should be punished or ostracized for their past actions, to encourage pro-social outcomesâ (a FREE RIDER is an unvaxxed person who is getting a âfree rideâ by getting protection from herd immunity that was created by the vaccinated around them who did the right thingâ)
THE EXPERIMENTAL PROPAGANDA MESSAGES:
- baseline info = to end the COVID-19 outbreak, one must get jabbed, stop transmission, be safe and effective, save millions of lives
- self-interest = reduces your risk of getting sick and dying, or long term disability
- community interest = reduces the risk that members of your family and community could get sick and die (vaccination is a cooperative action to protect others)
- community interest + guilt = how guilty would you feel if you didnât jab and gave COVID to someone you care about? (invoke emotion)
- community interest + embarrassment = how embarrassed and ashamed would you be if you didnât jab and give COVID to someone you care about? (emotion)
- community interest + anger = how angry would you be if you didnât jab and give COVID to someone you care about? (invoke emotion)
- not bravery = military, doctors, and firefighters risk their lives to serve others, thatâs bravery. Not getting jabbed is reckless, you risk the health of your family, friends, and community. To get jabbed is to show strength. (reputation, social image concerns)
- trust in science = unvaxxed are ignorant or confused about science, and youâll show others how ignorant or confused you are (reputation, social image concerns)
- personal freedom = unvaxxed increased risk we lose our freedoms or govt lockdowns will return. We all keep our freedom by getting jabbed.
- economic freedom = unvaxxed increased risk of govt lockdowns returning, getting jabbed means we all keep our ability to work and earn a living.
- community economic benefit = getting jabbed strengthens the national economy
Most effective brainwashing techniques:
- to increase your willingness to jab:Â embarrassment, community, not bravery
- Guilt and embarrassment were most effective in increasing your willingness to advise a friend to vaccinate
- Not bravery message was most effective to increase your negative judging of the unvaxxed.
- women responded more to the Trust in Science and Embarrassment than men
- men responded more to the Not Bravery and Community Interest (without embarrassment) messages.
- Democrats were most easily brainwashed and responded to all messages
- Republicans appeared to react only to Community Interest, embarrassment
- Those high in vaccine confidence responded to all messages (all types of brainwashing)
- those low in confidence responded only to the Community Interest messages
- CONCLUSION: Experiment findings support the âidea that vaccination is often treated as a social contract in which people are expected to vaccinate and those who do not are sanctionedâ
- âmessages that invoked reputational concerns were successful at altering judgment of those who would free ride on the contributions of othersâ
- propaganda must be tailored to target women differently than men
2021 Sep â Kachurka et al â âPersuasive Messages Will Not Increase COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptanceâ (Polish people reject propaganda)
- 6000 Polish internet users were sampled
- Propaganda Messages tested:
- reputation of vax makers: theyâre American Pfizer and German Biontech
- efficiency:Â over 90%
- safety: European Medicines Agency confirms theyâre safe, mild side effects
- others want it: 75% of people want to get jabbed as soon as possible
- Science authority: scientists say itâs the only rational choice
- vaccine passport convenience: vaxxed will be able to travel, not wear masks, not quarantine, will make everyday life easier
- scarcity: not enough jabs for everyone
- thoroughly tested: over 100,000 people were tested in clinical trials
- Price (they show you one): jab is free, and you get 15 Euro, costs 2 EUR, costs 15 EUR
- RESULTS:Â 45% of respondents were unwilling to get vaccinated
- none of the messages were effective in reducing this hesitancy
- politically aligned left or center meant 60-80% were willing to get jabbed
- politically right or âultra-rightâ or ânoneâ or âotherâ 30-50% were willing to get jabbed
- up to 70% said they didnât trust the government.
AUTHORS SUGGEST METHODS TO INCREASE VACCINE UPTAKE:
- 1. Focus on individual reasons â have their doctors try to convince them.
- 2. Turn those willing to be jabbed into âchampions of the campaignâ â through Facebook stickers and physical stickers â and encourage them to talk to family and friends
- 3. Use reminders to ensure those who want to vaccinate actually follow through.
2021 Jun â Scott Ratzan et al â Missing the Point â How Primary Care Can Overcome Covid-19 Vaccine âHesitancyâ
- Among unvaccinated patients, there is a spectrum of vaccine âhesitance,â ranging from being âvaccine readyâ to âvaccine neutralâ to âvaccine resistant
- âvaccine readyâ â must have ready access to vaccine to get them vaccinated
- âvaccine neutralâ â may accept vaccination when seeking care for other problems, if vaccine is available and they get a ânudgeâ from a trusted clinician
- âvaccine resistantâ â they must have âregularly scheduled doctor visitsâ â family doctors have a âcore responsibilityâ to make preventive services including vaccination available and persuade patients.
- âPrimary care clinicians and trusted health care organizations often have the working relationships with community leaders to create solutions that fit local needs and preferences.â
- when boosters come, must put more focus on doctors, nurses, and community leaders who know how to create access, convey persuasive messages, and deliver care.
2021 Feb â Stacy Wood et al â âBeyond Politics â Promoting Covid-19 Vaccination in the United Statesâ
- âAny successful marketing strategy will be multifacetedâ
- âConsumer research and behavioral economics suggest 12 key strategies for an effective vaccine-promotion effortâ
- 1. Segment public by identity barriers â must tailor propaganda to various groups (some incorporate masks into self-image as a symbol of community responsibility, others see wearing masks as cowardice or weakness)
- 2. Find a common enemy â try to make the virus threat the common enemy
- 3. Use analogy â âwar against COVIDâ
- 4. Increase observability â make vaccine status observable â vaxxed should wear tokens, bracelets, stickers, pins (like those given to voters), or âDIGITAL BADGESâ â such as frames or banners for oneâs social media profile photo â consumersâ ability to observe othersâ choices can increase rate of adoption
- 5. Leverage Vaccine Scarcity â frame early access to vaccines as a mark of honor or respect for people we want to protect (first responders, older Americans, medical staff, teachers, essential workers). First responders who are healthy â getting vaccine priority is a sign of respect awarded to them.
- 6. Predict Negative Attributions â delays can be seen as govt incompetence, deployment in poor neighborhoods can be seen as âexperimentationâ â must address these
- 7. Prompt Anticipated Regret â push fear that someone you love will die from the illness, potential guilt of losing a family member, or guilt of getting Long COVID
- 8. Avoid conveying piecemeal risk info â get bad info out there in one piece, instead of an ongoing trickle of information
- 9. Promote compromise options â coffee shops use three serving sizes because consumer research shows it helps people make decisions â make vaccination a three-option choice to avoid depicting jabs as the most extreme of two.
- 10. Create FOMO (Fear of Missing Out)Â â employees can offer incentives like a day off, Universities can offer tickets to sports events or cultural events, tax benefits, insurance rebates, etc. Create a âfear of missing outâ on perks and benefits.
- 11. Combat Uniqueness Neglect â many people believe theyâre unique, so a one-size-fits-all option to mass vaccinate may not appeal to them â train medical professionals to identify these people, offer them unnecessary modifications to vaccine delivery (create âspecial treatmentâ to trick them into vaccination)
- 12. Neutralize the Case versus Base-Rate Heuristic â people put more weight on anecdotes, especially on vaccine injury â force medical personnel to counter this with their own anecdotal stories (the pregnant woman who died because she didnât get vaccinated, etc)
My TakeâŚ.
I wish I had read this literature early on in the pandemic, to realize and understand how truly evil and psychopathic the COVID-19 Propaganda and the Psychological Warfare on the population was.
From the brainwashing techniques outlined here, some of my observations:
- The appeal to âprotect the communityâ was probably the most effective brainwashing technique â mainly to protect family, friends, the community, and the healthcare system â they knew that this would pressure many vaccine-hesitant to get the shots (especially concern about family members with medical conditions)
- this worked even better when they attached an emotion to it
- âThe increased observabilityâ was the most effective brainwashing technique to get people to adopt a brand new technology (LNP/mRNA), a technique that was used by Apple and its iPod â and this was employed via âDIGITAL BADGESâ on Facebook that we now use to identify vaccine status of the thousands who are dying suddenly from COVID-19 Vaccine injuries.
- This also involved âPHYSICAL BADGESâ which were in the form of vaccine cards that people proudly photographed and displayed on social media
- Finding a common enemy â went from a ânovel Coronavirusâ to the âpandemic of the unvaccinatedâ and this was tied in with:
- judging negatively those who refused to be vaccinated, the âfree ridersâ who benefited from the herd immunity created by the vaccinated
- the unvaccinated once identified as âthe common enemyâ were punished and sanctioned by being excluded from society
- the poor treatment of the unvaccinated undoubtedly forced some to get vaccinated to avoid such a fate
- reputation concerns â doctors and scientists who did not conform to the Propaganda had their reputations smeared and destroyed and were made examples of by mainstream media to keep other doctors scared and sticking to the narrative, even at the cost of their or their own patientsâ lives
- Justin Trudeau created a smear campaign against the unvaccinated, calling them names such as âfringe minorityâ and claiming that they were racists and misogynists
- thus âreputation destructionâ was a strong brainwashing tool that probably forced some to get vaccinated
- vaccine scarcity was leveraged as first responders were given âheroâ status and were the first ones lined up to get the vaccines as a sign of honor and a reward
- they were basically held up as examples for the rest of the population to follow
- REWARDS â the ability to travel, go to restaurants, go to stadiums, concerts, and participate in physical activities and sports â that, for a time, was only given to the vaccinated as ârewardsâ for being âgood citizensâ
- donuts, burgers & fries, ice cream for kids â predatory behavior
- $100 incentive or entry into a million-dollar lottery
- PUNISHMENTSÂ â vaccine mandates, employment termination, removal of unemployment benefits, decreased ability to travel, inability to find new employment, etc.
- Fear of loss of freedoms â this was another major driving factor, people didnât want to lose the freedom to travel, the freedom to enjoy life (restaurants, concerts, sports, stadiums), and the freedom to take care of loved ones
- this is now being contemplated as one of the key fear tactics in getting people to take COVID-19 boosters again.
- people will be reminded of lockdowns and the message will be: âYou donât want us to bring lockdowns back, do you? Then get vaccinatedâ
- Brainwashing by a trusted doctor â this is currently seen as one of the few plausible avenues to bring the COVID-19 vaccine hesitant back into the fold and get them to start taking mRNA vaccines regularly again.
- There will be huge pressure on doctors to get COVID-19 vaccine uptake up to 85% again
- this will be tied to regular doctor visits, physicals, annual doctor visits, etc.








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