John Calhoun was an ethologist and animal behaviorist who had had a long standing interest in how rodents interact and create societies. Starting in 1947, Calhoun began experimenting with rats and mice on a rural property in Rockville, Maryland in order to investigate the behavioral effects on the animals when provided with unlimited food and resources; essentially a rodent paradise. One of his main interests was the potential effects of overcrowding on human society and behavior, which was seen as a very real potential problem in the post-war 1940s, where worldwide populations were growing rapidly. In his early experiments, Calhoun observed a colony of Norway rats for 28 months, during which time he provided the animals with as much food as they needed as well as total safety from predators. It was expected that the population would skyrocket uncontrollably to around 5,000 animals during this period of time, however, the population oddly never went past 200. He also noticed that the colony split into smaller, separate groups of no more than 12 individuals per group.
Intrigued by these results, Calhoun continued his work with rats and mice, and finally in 1958 he created his own lab in the second floor of a barn from which to launch his most ambitious series of experiments yet, which consisted of creating a series of what he called Universes which were habitats designed to be rodent utopias, free of disease, predators, and providing unlimited resources. In each instance, the rodent populations experienced a rapid rise in population followed by a levelling off that seemed to go hand in hand with a variety of unusual, deviant behaviors, before finally the birthrate screeched to a halt, after which the rodent society would implode and cease to exist.
Calhoun would write a prominent paper on the experiments in 1962 called Population density and social pathology, which was published in Scientific American and outlined his observations of the effects of overcrowding on rodent behavior. In the paper, he coined the term behavioral sink, which referred to societal collapse in the face of behavioral degradation and signifying a point of no return leading to extinction marked by a reversion to deviant acts caused by overcrowding. The paper would put the sobering potential effects of overpopulation into the public consciousness and people were already comparing the findings made in these early experiments to human society. This paper became incredibly influential in the field of psychology and is still heavily referenced to this day.
http://mysteriousuniverse.org/2015/03/th...nt-utopia/
Wait a minute. This sounds awfully familiar...
wounding of old
aggressive behavior of females
passivity of non-dominant males
females ceased to reproduce
inability of dominant males to maintain the defense of their territory and females
Do you see the connection yet?
wounding of old: This refers to the way today's society treats old men. I'm sure you're aware of it already. It could also refer to the flawed ways women are brought up. i.e. the entitled attitude.
Inability of dominant males to maintain the defense of their territory and females:" Known as the pussification of men. Read "The pussification of the western male" by Phazzle.
females ceased to reproduce: They be alpha widowin'. Read "What is an alpha widow and why does it matter?
Aggressive behavior of females: Feminism and the 'empowered womyn.' Remember that post about how feminism cannot exist without the resources and social structure provided by the patriarchy? Yup. Read "The Civilization and The House: How feminism is a function of the patriarchy"
passivity of non-dominant males: Their male counterparts withdrew completely, never engaging in courtship or fighting. Otherwise known as... That's right, the Sexodus!
They ate, drank, slept, and groomed themselves all solitary pursuits: This should hit you harder than a train at full speed. This represents everything most men (including me) do on a daily basis. Porn, laziness, video games, depression & apathy, plus other "beta" behaviors. I'm sure I don't have to explain this one to you. After all, you've either been there, or are still there.
Calhoun saw the fate of the population of mice as a metaphor for the potential fate of man.
https://www.reddit.com/r/TheRedPill/comm...teresting/
Escaping the laboratory: The Rodent Experiments of John B. Calhoun and Their Cultural Influence.
https://eprints.lse.ac.uk/22514/1/2308Ramadams.pdf