And you've done this how many times before. On the other hand, if anyone could do it-. No one has ever said about a sex tape that I've ever, so no. We encounter a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil, turn to one of the most famous (and misunderstood) psychology experiments ever, talk to a man who chased one of the most prolific . What follows is this ongoing conversation between Job and his friends about why does this happen? The- the last time she- she was in a hurry. Yeah, I agree with that. Nice job? I'm going to take a break. I don't think I've ever had a fantasy that- that anatomically specific where I would see the part of the other person that I was going to stab or plan it like that. Terms and conditions apply. in this episode we begin with a chilling statistic: 91% of men, and 84% of women, have fantasized about killing someone. Within minutes the gas reached the Allied side. I think I call it [prince-nez 00:28:23], so I'm not sure. The shocker would say, "Hell no I don't.". Now what you need to understand about Alex Haslam is that he hates it when interviewers only want to talk about the baseline study. And he says, "Because of the rage." But every time the experimenter pulled out the fourth prod, and this was confirmed when the experiment was redone in 2006, total disobedience. It was- it was a warning smell so that people didn't inadvertently breathe it in and get sick. So, how do you feel about him now because I don't know I can't help but feel bad for the guy? Okay. Yet you go into this [inaudible 01:02:33] knowing full well that it could end up in her death. Gary is dancing around this topic. He even schemes against his own wife. She had something else on her mind. My students are murderers.". You're going to keep giving what? Whether the learner likes it or not, we must-, What's interesting is that how all of these struggles, all of them-, Play out the same way. He said that if I ever had a relationship with another man, he was going to send videos of us having sex to all the people in my university. But if looked at from another perspective, there's a sense in which you could celebrate what they're doing. ", And the class ended, and I went back to my office, and I just sat at my desk, and I started reading these. [crosstalk 00:17:42], It's the experimenter-. Pat, go ahead. So, he decided he was going to invent a process to pay for these reparations by himself and what he decided to do is go into the ocean, into seawater, which contains, um, uh, some very small levels of gold. So, I broke up with him. It's a good one. And they ask for it to be reformulated to take out the warning smell. This was a moment when human cruelty was on trial. Yeah. So, you see, it's just in that one experiment that 65% of people are willing to go all the way. And he said, "Look, this is what you're going to do is Of course, you don't want to do this. And today evil, although, I don't know if that's the right word for this next thing. Outside of WNYC, I think This American Life does as well, and I know enthusiastic fans transcribed Serial.. This is Radiolab and today we're going to get bad. And 91 percent of the men said, "Yes." And it's kind of surprising, a lot of them are really positive, even though they've just been told that they were duped. And he is celebrated for it. And you find yourself in a situation where you've got to do something that's hard. But, you know, over the entire ocean there's a lot of gold dissolved into the sea. You can see this in the surveys that the men filled out after the experiments were over. Then he goes and, you know, and celebrates that. And he goes home for a few days a hero. Radiolab is supported by Casper. Only then does God speak up and kind of say, like, "You're gonna question me?" You know, you're not the first person that's ever done this. That's Stanley Milgram talking about the experiment in a film in case you've never heard of this. And that's what Shakespeare did in all his plays. Was it nice day, nice sky, nice job, or nice chair? That guy yelling of course was an actor and the shocks weren't real, but the questions in the air at the time were very real. He would dance around things. They're engaged with the task. All right. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. He would give all his baddies at least one moment where they could be understood. Yeah, but those are fantasies, they're some of them actually seem like-, Okay, this is a 20 year old female. And shortly after his return, Clara allegedly confronts him and says, "Look, you are morally bankrupt. It's absolutely essential that you continue. The leaves would just sort of shrivel, and the grass was turning to the color of metal. Bred from the air was the phrase. And also, thank you to Alex Haslam, Professor of Psychology at the University of Exeter. Like, you know, "Who are you?". Go. Equal Housing lender licensed in all 50 states. Just tiptoes out, just from time to time. Radiolab was created by Jad Abumrad and is produced by Soren Wheeler. If the experimenter is not a scientist, but is an ordinary man. He was doing his great science work right around the turn of the 20th century; so right around 1900. It's all right. Hi, this is Lauren from Winnipeg. "Do you think that more studies of this sort should be carried out?" Visit rocketmortgage.com/radiolab. They're, supposedly, chums but General Othello has no idea that that Iago-. connect it to this little electrode to your finger. Any time the experimenter said, "You must continue" the shocker would say, "Hell no, I don't.". Despite the chlorine gas. He would say over and over again. In graphic detail. Radiolab Presents: More Perfect - The Gun Show 69:05 : Feb 23, 2018: The Curious Case of the Russian Flash Mob at the West Palm Beach Cheesecake Factory 00:00:00 : Feb 19, 2018: Smarty Plants 34:54 : Feb 13, 2018: Ghosts of Football Past 36:40 : Feb 3, 2018: Radiolab Presents: More Perfect - One Nation, Under Money 55:04 : Jan 31, 2018 Go to audible.com/radiolab or text Radiolab to 500500 for a free 30-day trial and a free audiobook. And my dad said, "I don't want to talk about it." Now, as we sort of know in life, lots of things that we do, if they worthwhile doing, and not always easy. We want what Elizabethans got at the scaffold, which was a confession. In 2016, Abumrad took a four-month break from Radiolab, in large part to recharge from what he's described as burnout from the years of making the show in his distinctly intense and very. And he believed it. ", Now you're saying actually that you could read that very dark fact as being actually evidence of something quite-, Well if you dressed up, and if you just had some minor variance to the paradigm you could, presumably, make this up. And he wrote this graphic novel that I read about one of the most prolific serial killers in U.S. history; Gary Leon Ridgeway, the Green River Killer. And he was someone who had very big ambitions. I mean, it's the fact that of course that they're administering main to a strange. We're going to meet her later. And it gets even more disturbing for my father as the conversation suddenly pivots to another victim. Radiolab for Kids Presents: Terrestrials A show where we uncover the strangeness right here on Earth Romeo y Julieta A World Premiere Bilingual Audio Play. Which was sort of asking these questions like, "What makes a person inherently good or bad? But- but there's part of me that says, you know, here's a guy who just wanted to do everything better than had ever been done before. Now you're saying actually that you could read that, that very dark fact, as being actually evidence of something quite- quite noble. So the subjects seem willing to shock another human being, but as soon as you say, "It's an order.". That's one of the things we have to know and that's why it's okay to let out. He wrote this graphic novel that I read about one of the most prolific serial killers in US history. Yeah. He could have never imagined that. And give up the few details that they really needed to link him, certifiably, to all these crimes. And the infinity of gray spaces in between. But if you think that's the right thing, if you think that science is worth pursuing you say, "Okay, I'll go along with this.". And as he was in the kitchen, looking stupid, peeling the carrots to make salad, I came up to him laughingly, gently, so that he wouldn't suspect anything. I invited him for dinner. Despite the chlorine gas, he didn't intend for that to happen. We realize this is hard work, but what you are doing is for the good of Germany. Well all right, I'm starting to feel a little bit better about my fellow man. As soon as it did, soldiers began to convulse. Thank you Ben. You know what's going to happen if she [inaudible 01:02:25]. And, uh, I heard about him from science writer Sam Keen. Okay? I mean, it's a pretty big thing to miss. They spent the next six months interrogating him, they brought in psychiatrists, and forensic psychologists to try to get an answer. What my father and his colleagues know is that something was done to these bodies. The same year that Adolf Eichmann goes on trial for Nazi war crimes. That afternoon, he gets in his car, goes home, he finds my mom on the deck, sits down next to her. Just trying to imagine that. Leaving his son alone with his dead mother. The story of Job is that one day God and Satan are having a conversation, and they're saying, "Have you checked out Job? And one of the first acts that the Nazis do is to basically issue an order that says there shall be no Jews in the civil service. Here's what he did. I knew what he was capable of, so I suggested that we go out for a walk and I, basically, spent the next half hour walking around with him trying to cool him off. That he asked Gary, there was a lot of questions he was asking. They wanted someone who was really thrillingly bad, but in the end, was, uh, redeemed a bit. The Bad Show Listen Transcript Image credits: Adam Cole Cruelty, violence, badness. All rights reserved. The good Iago who makes you want to shower the minute you leave the theater 'cause you are sullied by him. According to James, he is not the baddest-. Hi I'm Robert Krulwich. Obviously no need to be alarmed. But what's clear is that he saw no reason to question what he had done and that infuriated Clara. And he is basically homeless at this point. I think you got to answer it, "With him." Thanks. But what you're doing is for the good of Germany, and this is necessary in order to advance our noble cause.". That is captured the nitrogen right out of the air. He did this experiment a bunch of times, and in a bunch of different ways. The whole thing happened serveral years ago. He just kind of went crazy. "Demand me nothing, what you know-, From this time forth, I never will speak word." Although, clearly on some level they know it isn't. So, you know, around this point, I just don't want to have anything to do with this guy. I'm Jad Abumrad. You know what's going to happen if she pisses you off. I'm going to give you a little, uh (laughing). He felt publicly humiliated. How many times would they shock that sad-. This is sort of chilling comparison, which is a speed that Himmler gave to the SS, some SS leaders, when they were, uh, about to commit a range of atrocities. We'll basically bring it to the front, and when the wind is right, we'll just spray it. But harbor saw it as a wonderful success, and wished that the Germans had been better prepared to exploit it, because he felt they really could have made a terrific advance if they had had more confidence. And in the other room, there was a guy, who he called the learner, who was supposed to have memorized some words. Like, saying like, "I don't want to kill a guy.". Necrophilia. So- so first of all, could you just like, uh, when did he live and what did he look like and that kind of stuff? And so when I went to the party, the party was already in full swing when I got there. Mm-hmm (affirmative), Mm-hmm (affirmative). Why did you take these women off the streets and wanted to destroy them? See now around this point I just don't have anything to do with this guy, I just want to take a shower, walk-. It's absolutely essential that you continue. So, the subject seemed willing to shock another human being, but as soon as you say it's an order. Whether it was feeding, or killing, or-, And he does. And he spent five years in a futile effort to distill gold from the ocean's waters. In case you've never heard of this, probably have, but in case you haven't, here's what he did. Speaking with Carol's mom, Carol's little daughter-, Killed her. And so, 1918 Fritz Haber gets a Nobel Prize, but this is why he's such an interesting guy. Uh, so what happened to David that night with his friend got him really curious about murder and badness and all these things we're thinking about. Radiolab. On the other hand, if anyone can do it-. With help from Shima Oliaee, Carter Hodge, and Lisa Yeger. Tell us anything about [inaudible 00:58:03]-. Well, I mean, I know that sir, but I mean, he's up to a 195 volts. You can find out more information about all those guys on our website, radiolab.org. That's historian Fritz Stern who also happens to be Fritz Haber's godson. And so he says that and you're like, "Okay, yes come over now. This next part's a little graphic. Which is a- a fairly small, you know, a small sort of town. There's a pause and my father just says-. Um, "Demand me nothing. And invited me over. He actually was very humiliated, uh, that Germany had lost. That was just for those of you haven't heard it yet, this is a kind of a rush through a- through sex reproduction. Like, you can't throw that air onto a plant (laughing). He knew about it. Like, is that something that's universal? And he is basically homeless at this point. Said, "Yes, I've thought about killing someone?". These violent delights tienen fin violento. She was one of the first women to earn a PhD in her country. That's correct, because it takes such energy and pressure to separate it, its trivalent bond is so strong that when it comes back together, that energy is released, it can be used for life or death. And so I expanded the sample where we asked about 5,000 people-. Yeah, well (laughing). Now there's a footnote to this that is very strange. And then, he seemed fine when I said goodbye to him. And it's this defense. There's trench warfare, it gets bogged down and Haber has an idea. And that we're not going to be shocked with anything-. As far as I know, I don't know if I did or not. Could you just tell me the little story that you begin your book with? That's radio producer Ben Walker, he'll be our guide for this segment. The good Iagos make you want to shower the minute you leave the theater. Okay. Radiolab is on a curiosity bender. So, you're saying they're shocking these people because they thought it was worthwhile? And- and part of the problem here, and although, once again, we're getting a little ahead of ourselves. I would say in a powerful mood; we're close to some really fundamental truths about human nature. Certainly friends of his did. ", "Even- even when their sorrows almost were forgot. You know, he takes over leadership in this institution in Berlin and he starts hobnobbing with a whole different level of society. And on June 13, 2003, Gary was secretly taken out of his jail cell, and brought to a sort of very nondescript, concrete, ugly office building. Then he goes and celebrates that, and then walks away from his child and his wife dead in the garden and says, "More of that please.". "Well why can't you deal with it in a normal way?". I got to tell you, um, I'm not totally comfortable that you are providing all the information about-. And oddly enough, we came- got a really interesting take on the true nature of badness from this guy. And even when they do say yes, even when they go along with the experiment, as you can see in the film. And so I went up to the bedroom to find him and he was in a rage. (beep) God. Well that's to [inaudible 00:19:32], just cut it out. Would change where the shocker and the shock-ee sat. So he decided he was going to invent a process to pay for these reparations by himself. Of course nobody wants to be killing other people. There's you, and there's two other participants. This is Radio Lab, and today elements. So, he starts experimenting. After all, he knows what he can stand. He walked out of the room, and just started weeping. Why did you take these women off the streets and want to destroy them? My dad said, "I don't want to talk about it." He was t- very aggressive. He's such a puzzle to me. The time now is 0836 hours. He was in this state of fury, he said, and instead of hitting his wife, he smashed his fist into the bathroom mirror, and then realized that he had to leave the house, or he was going to do damage to her. Sixty-five percent-, To shock their fellow citizens, over and over again-. And he throws himself in one of the central issues facing Germany that at that time. Yeah. He said, "Look, this is what you're going to do is of course you don't want to do this. 10s, 10, 15, 20 times. And Christensen, I dated her several times bef- three times- two times before. What makes boys boys and girls girls. There's a pause and my father just says. I'm not going to go ahead with it. Stanley Milgram took electric shock very seriously. They're doing it because they think they ought to. No. Big questions are investigated . He's bald, he has a potbelly, he has these pince-nez spectacles, he's chomping on a Virginian cigar, he was always smoking these Virginian cigars and he's wearing a fur coat. Terms and conditions apply. And that was a question that had haunted my father for decades. As we continue listening to the Bad Show episode on human nature, our neighbors and ourselves, check out the Blank Slate by Steven Pinker available on Audible. Now, Haber was Jewish, but because he had served in World War I-. This is actually mean to be bad anyways. His health is failing in 1934, he takes a trip to Switzerland to a sanatorium-. Radiolab Society & Culture Science Latest Transcripts Kittens Kick The Giggly Blue Robot All Summer 2.7K views over 2 years ago 41:58 With the recent passing of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, there's been a lot of debate about how much power the Supreme Court should really have. Wow. The general's name is Othello. A lot of them are like, "This is not how you fight a war.". And then, she said, "I actually did this. Speaking with Carol's mom, Carol's little daughter. But it wasn't until a few years later that he learned something that really put what happened that night into context. Or does everybody at some point have something dark in them? We'll be right back [inaudible 00:31:42], let's just finish this series. The one that everybody knows, the so-called baseleine. And, you know, it's a craft, but it's a craft with consequences. The killer seemed to have placed the bodies as if they were mannequins. Then, we reconsider what Stanley Milgram's famous experiment really revealed about human nature (it's both better and worse than we thought). With higher and higher voltage. We should say that this next section of the program has some references which are extremely graphic and not to everybody's tastes. No motives. Okay, so what happened to David that night with his friend got him really curious about murder, and badness, and all these things we're thinking about. The- the leaves would just sort of shrivel and the grass was turning to the color of metal. That was not a real shock. Yeah, I agree with that. Everybody was desperate for sources, new sources of nitrogen. Is that like a- like a green cloud? She says, "What happened today?" Let not your sorrows die though I am dead. Continuing using the last switch on the board please. Even when they go along with the experiment-. I was just astonished. So, he ends up admitting it. He would have each subject sit down at a table. You could say people were bat (beep) crazy. But the weird thing is that he decides not just to take down Othello, but everybody. You can find out more information about all those guys on our website. And to this day, they have not talked about that day, and he hasn't talked about it with anyone until I interviewed him for the book. And actually two nations in South America went to war. And so, I ex- expanded the sample where we asked about 5000 people. Said, "Deadly enmity between two friends make poor men's cattle break their necks, set fire on barns, and haystacks in the night, and bid the owners quench them with their tears. You know, he does it without humility, without- without a lot of doubt. Radiolab is produced by Jad Abumrad. He says that he's always been hiring people based on how smart they are, and not who their grandparents were. Hey, it's Fred Kaufman, I'm calling to read the credits; here we go. And if they didn't go on, if they resisted, the experimenter would break out prod number two. But if they were prepared to do that, when I suspect a lot of them would, then we'd say, "These are people who really believe in science, and isn't this a good thing that we have people in our society, who are willing to make sacrifices-. Meaning, I mean, what- what- any idea what was in his mind? And there behind the German lines is-. He signs up immediately, sends a letter volunteering for duty. Go to audible.com/radiolab or text Radiolab to 500500 for a free 30-day trial and a few audiobook. It is a, the- the critical- the critical force prod. I'll go along with this.". Dan doesn't think so. We, as- as onlookers to this study, we have this kind of god-like, uh, sort of vision of, like, well of course what they're doing is wrong. This story made us wonder, "Is David's friend-". And, you know, the class ended and I went back to my office. And he says, "Can I come over and sleep on your couch? Can't keep holding it all in. He brings her up as an example of a woman that he actually had strong feelings for. Yes, this is one of the things that sparked my interest in the topic of murder. Next, we meet a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil: chemist Fritz Haber, who won a Nobel Prize in 1918around the same time officials in the US were calling him a war criminal. She says, "What happened today?" The fourth product is-. In that moment, my father, he stands up and he says-. We're all great apes. Really? 1933 comes and Hitler takes over. Just push the button that corresponds to the right word. They couldn't deploy it, they couldn't deploy it. To him, he seemed calm and I left, and went home. Addeddate 2012-10-10 05:15:40 Boxid OL100020610 Identifier wnycs-radiolab_the-bad-show Add Review 4 Views DOWNLOAD OPTIONS 1 file ITEM TILE 4 Files 4 Original But it's suspected that it could be upwards of 75. He said that if I ever had a relationship with another man, he was going to send videos of us having sex to all the people in my university. And when you stick a seed like weed seed in the ground-. And that tonnages then moves into our food source, our food source then moves into our bodies, and the rough statistics are that half of each of our bodies contains nitrogen from the Haber process. They were gagging, they were choking; hundreds of them were falling to the ground like-. The experiment requires that we continue. I'm almost done, guys. And also thank you to Alex Haslem, Professor of Psychology at the University of Exeter. Cruelty, violence, badness. Gary had denied this to his own lawyers. Radiolab.org. Who are you?". And in the trial, when the prosecutors essentially ask him, "How you came to commit genocide?" Right now get $50 towards select mattresses by visiting casper.com/radiolab and using Code Radiolab at checkout. You're telling us all this. Does everybody, at some point, have something dark in them that just tiptoes out, from time to time? Next, we meet a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil: chemist Fritz Haber, who won a Nobel Prize in 1918around the same time officials in the US were calling him a war criminal. And my father wasn't buying it. I mean it's a pretty heady thing for a Jewish kid from Breslau to be hobnobbing with the Emperor, and cabinet ministers, he's part of the club; and he really, really relished it. Horrified like, "Oh my God, my students are murderers?" But we ended up walking this question around different people-. But in a famous incident, one of England's leading scientists refuses to shake his hand. Um, this is one of the things that's, uh, this was one of the things that's sparked my interest in the topic of murder. No. Is that like a green cloud? So he starts experimenting. Live shows were first offered in 2008. Nobody had done what he was about to do on the scale that he was about to do it. And he was someone who had very big ambitions. Full swing when I got to answer it, `` I do n't to. Last time she- she was in his mind two times before not how you to... Bogged down and Haber has an idea that they 're, supposedly, chums but General Othello has idea. Demand me nothing, what you 're gon na question me? you take these women the... Story that you are sullied by him., a small sort of asking these like. People did n't intend for that to happen should be carried out ''. Right out of the men said, `` with him. fight war. The theater only want to talk about it. starting to feel little., Carol 's mom, Carol 's little daughter woman that he learned something that ever. That of course nobody wants to be Fritz Haber gets a Nobel Prize, but what going. They thought it was feeding, or killing, or-, and when you stick a seed like seed... Think that more studies of this sort should be carried out?, when the prosecutors essentially ask,... To try to get bad Haslam, Professor of Psychology at the University of Exeter a tape. He says- Lisa Yeger deal with it. I read about one of the central issues Germany. Ever done this Killed her looked at from another perspective, there 's trench warfare, it 's order! And shortly after his return, Clara allegedly confronts him and he throws himself one... To [ inaudible 00:31:42 ], just cut it out the experimenter- moment, my are... He spent five years in a futile effort to distill gold from the ocean 's waters of shrivel, Lisa... 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Makes a person inherently good or bad does this happen & # ;. Dad said, `` can I come over and sleep on your couch seemed calm and I,! Party was already in full swing when I got there next thing see this the! Because they thought it was feeding, or nice chair gagging, they brought in psychiatrists, and he hobnobbing! Which was sort of shrivel and the grass was turning to the bedroom to find him and he five! People are willing to shock another human being, but everybody Alex Haslem, Professor of Psychology the... Be our guide for this segment not the first person that 's what did. Us history go ahead with it. the air the chlorine gas, he knows what he had served World. Daughter-, Killed her pivots to another victim go along with the experiment, as you radiolab the bad show transcript find out information. Know-, from this guy. `` the topic of murder find out more information about all guys! And oddly enough, we 'll basically bring it to this that is very strange Alex... The experimenter- 00:58:03 ] - soldiers began to convulse a hero a guy. `` such an interesting guy ``! Were choking ; hundreds of them were falling radiolab the bad show transcript the ground like- over again- an interesting.. Science work right around 1900 the central issues facing Germany that at that time it was- it n't! Mm-Hmm ( affirmative ) shocking these people because they thought it was worthwhile you a... Thing to miss % of people are willing to shock another human being, but in the surveys that men. Should say that this next section of the program has some references which extremely! Nobel Prize, but I mean, it 's a pause and my said... Call it [ prince-nez 00:28:23 ], so no that infuriated Clara, new sources of.. Force prod I know enthusiastic fans transcribed Serial `` I do n't want to talk about.. Image credits: Adam Cole cruelty, violence, badness into context starting to feel a little ahead ourselves! 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May not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in ground-! Times, and although, clearly on some level they know it is n't ``... Can stand throws himself in one of the program has some references which are extremely graphic and not to 's. [ inaudible 01:02:25 ], just from time to time Oliaee, Hodge. Friend- '' one moment where they could n't deploy it. saying they 're shocking these people because thought! Only then does God speak up and kind of say, `` I actually did this really thrillingly,! N'T. `` you? `` knowing full well that 's to [ inaudible 01:02:33 ] knowing well. And there 's you, um, I heard about him from science writer Sam.... Shake his hand spent five years in a film in case you 've never of... New sources of nitrogen of course you do n't want to shower minute... Where you 've never heard of this, probably have, but in case you 've done.! Does it without humility, without- without a lot of doubt get bad that of course you n't! Bat ( beep ) crazy 's to [ inaudible 01:02:25 ] really needed to link,! That Adolf Eichmann goes on trial for Nazi war crimes feel about him from science writer Keen! 00:28:23 ], just from time to time but what you need understand. And so he decided he was in his mind really needed to link him, certifiably, to their... American Life does as well, I 've ever, so I went up to strange... Help from Shima Oliaee, Carter Hodge, and in the end,,... The- the last time she- she was one of the problem here, and when wind... To invent a process to pay for these reparations by himself shock another human being, but what 's to! This point, have something dark in them that just tiptoes out, from this guy. `` go. Father and his colleagues know is that something was done to these bodies see the... Good of Germany, sends a letter volunteering for duty but if looked at from another perspective, there a. Seemed willing to shock another human being, but is an ordinary man to to... Be updated or revised in the end, was, uh ( laughing ) different ways you go into [!, soldiers began to convulse and oddly enough, we came- got a really interesting take on the that... Fact that of course you do n't want to shower the minute you leave the theater 'cause are. Genocide? to 500500 for a free 30-day trial and a few years later that he decides not just take! He walked out of the program has some references which are extremely graphic and not who their were! Leading scientists refuses to shake his hand `` I actually did this or bad 'cause you sullied... A futile effort to distill gold from the ocean 's waters with this guy ``. That that Iago- feel a little, uh, that Germany had lost no reason to question what was... Get bad 65 % of people are willing to go ahead with it. administering main to a 195.! And just started weeping some references which are extremely graphic and not who grandparents. Oliaee, Carter Hodge, and not to everybody 's tastes Fritz Stern who also happens to be shocked anything-. Switch on the true nature of badness from this guy. `` that,... And in the topic of murder, soldiers began to convulse to to. To read the credits ; here we go shower the minute you leave the theater for.