I'm coming into this late (and only very temporarily), but I thought I
had to weigh in on this. We are not all innocent, frankly in one sense
we are all Eichmanns.  At least that what Stanley Milgram's research
in the psychology of obedience found. In a result of a series of
experiments on obedience to authority which he conducted at Yale
University in 1961-1962. He found, surprisingly, that 65% of his
subjects, ordinary residents of New Haven, were willing to give
apparently harmful electric shocks-up to 450 volts-to a pitifully
protesting victim, simply because a scientific authority commanded
them to, and in spite of the fact that the victim did not do anything
to deserve such punishment. The victim was, in reality, a good actor
who did not actually receive shocks, and this fact was revealed to the
subjects at the end of the experiment. But, during the experiment
itself, the experience was a powerfully real and gripping one for most
participants.

These results have been duplicated world wide in many different
nations including Israel. For more information see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment.

Accordingly, we are not all that innocent. You or the person beside
you may be another Eichmann.

larry

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