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The Psychological Trick That Keeps you Obedient

Barry's Economics 33:49

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Why do poorer people love Period Dramas like Downton Abbey, that adore the very Privileged aristocracies that kept their great-grandparents in poverty?

Why do we worship Billionaires despite their clear exploitative behaviours?

This is the psychology of how shows about the British class system became comfort viewing for the people it should enrage. And how we fall in love with the Myths of the Super Rich today.

I love Downton Abbey too.
That's the problem.
In this video I use John Jost's System Justification Theory and Robert Sapolsky's research on the neurobiology of inequality to explain why people at the bottom of a hierarchy so often defend it,
and why a beautiful house full of deferential servants works less like escapism
and more like an anaesthetic.

We get into why "poor but happy" stories make inequality feel fair, how years of low status physically rewire the brain and leave you more risk-averse and more attached to whatever stability exists, and the one hopeful catch: the moment you can name what a story is doing to you, it starts to lose its power. You don't haveto stop watching Downton. Just watch it the way a doctor watches a cigarette advert.

CHAPTERS
00:00 The thing I'm not supposed to admit
00:52 What was really happening in a house like this
04:02 System Justification Theory: why we defend the cage
05:52 The "poor but happy" experiment
07:15 The palliative function: why believing in inequality feels better
17:22 Sapolsky's baboons and the neurobiology of inequality
24:46 The system protects itself through the nervous systems of its victims
26:43 The hopeful turn: naming the mechanism breaks it

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Sources & further reading:
Jost & Kay (2003), "Complementary Justice", J. Personality & Social Psychology
Jost & Hunyady (2002), "The Palliative Function of Ideology"
Jost (2019), A Theory of System Justification, Harvard University Press
Sapolsky (1990), "Adrenocortical Function, Social Rank, and Personality Among Wild Baboons"
Friestad & Wright (1994), "The Persuasion Knowledge Model"

#DowntonAbbey #ClassSystem #perioddrama

I’m Barry Ferns – a comedian whose personal journey through failure, homelessness, and rebuilding led me to explore the socio and behavioural economics of inequality.

This channel digs into how systems of power shape our identity, behaviour, and beliefs, and how we can shift the stories we tell ourselves and each other about poverty, inequality, and who’s to blame.

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