Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Using the Delphi Technique to Achieve Consensus [or How the Left builds consensus]
Eagle Forum ^ | November 1998 | Lynn Stuter

Posted on 12/07/2006 9:39:55 AM PST by Antoninus

The Delphi Technique and consensus building are both founded in the same principle - the Hegelian dialectic of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis, with synthesis becoming the new thesis. The goal is a continual evolution to "oneness of mind" (consensus means solidarity of belief) -the collective mind, the wholistic society, the wholistic earth, etc. In thesis and antithesis, opinions or views are presented on a subject to establish views and opposing views. In synthesis, opposites are brought together to form the new thesis. All participants in the process are then to accept ownership of the new thesis and support it, changing their views to align with the new thesis. Through a continual process of evolution, "oneness of mind" will supposedly occur.

In group settings, the Delphi Technique is an unethical method of achieving consensus on controversial topics. It requires well-trained professionals, known as "facilitators" or "change agents," who deliberately escalate tension among group members, pitting one faction against another to make a preordained viewpoint appear "sensible," while making opposing views appear ridiculous.

In her book Educating for the New World Order, author and educator Beverly Eakman makes numerous references to the need of those in power to preserve the illusion that there is "community participation in decision-making processes, while in fact lay citizens are being squeezed out."

The setting or type of group is immaterial for the success of the technique. The point is that, when people are in groups that tend to share a particular knowledge base, they display certain identifiable characteristics, known as group dynamics, which allows the facilitator to apply the basic strategy.

The facilitators or change agents encourage each person in a group to express concerns about the programs, projects, or policies in question. They listen attentively, elicit input from group members, form "task forces," urge participants to make lists, and in going through these motions, learn about each member of a group. They are trained to identify the "leaders," the "loud mouths," the "weak or non-committal members," and those who are apt to change sides frequently during an argument.

Suddenly, the amiable facilitators become professional agitators and "devil's advocates." Using the "divide and conquer" principle, they manipulate one opinion against another, making those who are out of step appear "ridiculous, unknowledgeable, inarticulate, or dogmatic." They attempt to anger certain participants, thereby accelerating tensions. The facilitators are well trained in psychological manipulation. They are able to predict the reactions of each member in a group. Individuals in opposition to the desired policy or program will be shut out.

The Delphi Technique works. It is very effective with parents, teachers, school children, and community groups. The "targets" rarely, if ever, realize that they are being manipulated. If they do suspect what is happening, they do not know how to end the process. The facilitator seeks to polarize the group in order to become an accepted member of the group and of the process. The desired idea is then placed on the table and individual opinions are sought during discussion. Soon, associates from the divided group begin to adopt the idea as if it were their own, and they pressure the entire group to accept their proposition.

How the Delphi Technique Works

Consistent use of this technique to control public participation in our political system is causing alarm among people who cherish the form of government established by our Founding Fathers. Efforts in education and other areas have brought the emerging picture into focus.

In the not-too-distant past, the city of Spokane, in Washington state, hired a consultant to the tune of $47,000 to facilitate the direction of city government. This development brought a hue and cry from the local population. The ensuing course of action holds an eerie similarity to what is happening in education reform. A newspaper editorial described how groups of disenfranchised citizens were brought together to "discuss" what they felt needed to be changed at the local government level. A compilation of the outcomes of those "discussions" influenced the writing of the city/county charter.

That sounds innocuous. But what actually happened in Spokane is happening in communities and school districts all across the country. Let's review the process that occurs in these meetings.

First, a facilitator is hired. While his job is supposedly neutral and non-judgmental, the opposite is actually true. The facilitator is there to direct the meeting to a preset conclusion.

The facilitator begins by working the crowd to establish a good-guy-bad-guy scenario. Anyone disagreeing with the facilitator must be made to appear as the bad guy, with the facilitator appearing as the good guy. To accomplish this, the facilitator seeks out those who disagree and makes them look foolish, inept, or aggressive, which sends a clear message to the rest of the audience that, if they don't want the same treatment, they must keep quiet. When the opposition has been identified and alienated, the facilitator becomes the good guy - a friend - and the agenda and direction of the meeting are established without the audience ever realizing what has happened.

Next, the attendees are broken up into smaller groups of seven or eight people. Each group has its own facilitator. The group facilitators steer participants to discuss preset issues, employing the same tactics as the lead facilitator.

Participants are encouraged to put their ideas and disagreements on paper, with the results to be compiled later. Who does the compiling? If you ask participants, you typically hear: "Those running the meeting compiled the results." Oh-h! The next question is: "How do you know that what you wrote on your sheet of paper was incorporated into the final outcome?" The typical answer is: "Well, I've wondered about that, because what I wrote doesn't seem to be reflected. I guess my views were in the minority."

That is the crux of the situation. If 50 people write down their ideas individually, to be compiled later into a final outcome, no one knows what anyone else has written. That the final outcome of such a meeting reflects anyone's input at all is highly questionable, and the same holds true when the facilitator records the group's comments on paper. But participants in these types of meetings usually don't question the process.

Why hold such meetings at all if the outcomes are already established? The answer is because it is imperative for the acceptance of the School-to-Work agenda, or the environmental agenda, or whatever the agenda, that ordinary people assume ownership of the preset outcomes. If people believe an idea is theirs, they'll support it. If they believe an idea is being forced on them, they'll resist.

The Delphi Technique is being used very effectively to change our government from a representative form in which elected individuals represent the people, to a "participatory democracy" in which citizens selected at large are facilitated into ownership of preset outcomes. These citizens believe that their input is important to the result, whereas the reality is that the outcome was already established by people not apparent to the participants.

How to Diffuse the Delphi Technique

Three steps can diffuse the Delphi Technique as facilitators attempt to steer a meeting in a specific direction.

Always be charming, courteous, and pleasant. Smile. Moderate your voice so as not to come across as belligerent or aggressive.

Stay focused. If possible, jot down your thoughts or questions. When facilitators are asked questions they don't want to answer, they often digress from the issue that was raised and try instead to put the questioner on the defensive. Do not fall for this tactic. Courteously bring the facilitator back to your original question. If he rephrases it so that it becomes an accusatory statement (a popular tactic), simply say, "That is not what I asked. What I asked was . . ." and repeat your question.

Be persistent. If putting you on the defensive doesn't work, facilitators often resort to long monologues that drag on for several minutes. During that time, the group usually forgets the question that was asked, which is the intent. Let the facilitator finish. Then with polite persistence state: "But you didn't answer my question. My question was . . ." and repeat your question.

Never become angry under any circumstances. Anger directed at the facilitator will immediately make the facilitator the victim. This defeats the purpose. The goal of facilitators is to make the majority of the group members like them, and to alienate anyone who might pose a threat to the realization of their agenda. People with firm, fixed beliefs, who are not afraid to stand up for what they believe in, are obvious threats. If a participant becomes a victim, the facilitator loses face and favor with the crowd. This is why crowds are broken up into groups of seven or eight, and why objections are written on paper rather than voiced aloud where they can be open to public discussion and debate. It's called crowd control.

At a meeting, have two or three people who know the Delphi Technique dispersed through the crowd so that, when the facilitator digresses from a question, they can stand up and politely say: "But you didn't answer that lady/gentleman's question." Even if the facilitator suspects certain group members are working together, he will not want to alienate the crowd by making accusations. Occasionally, it takes only one incident of this type for the crowd to figure out what's going on.

Establish a plan of action before a meeting. Everyone on your team should know his part. Later, analyze what went right, what went wrong and why, and what needs to happen the next time. Never strategize during a meeting.

A popular tactic of facilitators, if a session is meeting with resistance, is to call a recess. During the recess, the facilitator and his spotters (people who observe the crowd during the course of a meeting) watch the crowd to see who congregates where, especially those who have offered resistance. If the resistors congregate in one place, a spotter will gravitate to that group and join in the conversation, reporting what was said to the facilitator. When the meeting resumes, the facilitator will steer clear of the resistors. Do not congregate. Instead gravitate to where the facilitators or spotters are. Stay away from your team members.

This strategy also works in a face-to-face, one-on-one meeting with anyone trained to use the Delphi Technique.

Lynn Stuter is an education researcher in Washington state. Her web site address is www.learn-usa.com/.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: brainwashing; consensusbuilding; delphi; delphitechnique; grouppsychology; hegeliandialectic; visioning
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-79 next last
To: Antoninus

Exactly - see "Global Warming"


41 posted on 12/07/2006 11:01:53 AM PST by Triple (Socialism denies people the right to the fruits of their labor, and is as abhorrent as slavery)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Billthedrill
You do see this a lot on the 'net and occasionally on FR, usually practiced by someone who only asks questions, a technique also prevalent within the "Critical Thinking" curricula.

I have been to a number of "critical thinking" workshops, and indeed just conducted one where I work. In principle, and in the hands of an honest teacher, it is not only anodyne but produces better citizens. Students learn to ask questions like "What is the quality of the evidence?", "Are there any emotional words that are not defined?", etc.

Alas, the harm comes when what students are asked to be critical of never changes. For the higher-ed crit-think community (and it is fairly large) "critical thinking" always seems to amount to arguments for bigger government, encouragement to reason purely in terms of group identities rather than individuals, etc. Invariably, recognizably conservative arguments are used as raw material for "critical thinking." It's really sort of scandalous.

When I first started to seriously engage in that kind of Socratic interrogation in my classrom I used to use mostly arguments from the left as raw material. I eventually decided that, as satisfying as it was, the ideal teacher in this kind of critical-thinking process is one whose politics are unknown to the student. It is of course easy to say and hard to do.

42 posted on 12/07/2006 11:06:55 AM PST by untenured
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 31 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

I've run across those same people. However if you push them enough, more than a few lapse into name-calling and irrelevancy which totally outs their lib mindset.


43 posted on 12/07/2006 11:12:35 AM PST by cinives (On some planets what I do is considered normal.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 40 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

Thanks, I'll ping the list later. I've been sitting here waay too long. Duty calls.


44 posted on 12/07/2006 11:17:21 AM PST by little jeremiah
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

Delphi technique bump. School superintendents are experts at this.


45 posted on 12/07/2006 11:20:52 AM PST by Aquinasfan (When you find "Sola Scriptura" in the Bible, let me know)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

"I remember him. I can think of about a dozen other current frequent posters who refuse to be nailed down on any issue, but happily excoriate those they consider 'extremists'. These 'extremists', not surprisingly, are almost always the social conservatives among us."

Where's the "Hammer Meets Nail" graphic when you need it!


46 posted on 12/07/2006 11:22:01 AM PST by little jeremiah
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 40 | View Replies]

To: Aquinasfan
Delphi technique bump. School superintendents are experts at this.

Good point. This probably needs to be bumped to the home school list as well....
47 posted on 12/07/2006 11:22:44 AM PST by Antoninus (Rudy as nominee = President Hillary. Why else do you think the media love him?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus
"In group settings, the Delphi Technique is an unethical method of achieving consensus on controversial topics. It requires well-trained professionals, known as "facilitators" or "change agents," who deliberately escalate tension among group members, pitting one faction against another to make a preordained viewpoint appear "sensible," while making opposing views appear ridiculous."

aka the MSM

48 posted on 12/07/2006 11:31:05 AM PST by LZ_Bayonet
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Lurker

I've seen it in action in NC local politics.

Just keep asking the same question, it drives them nuts.


49 posted on 12/07/2006 11:33:29 AM PST by TC Rider (The United States Constitution © 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

Interesting technique. Bookmark for later printing.


50 posted on 12/07/2006 11:39:55 AM PST by IrishCatholic (No local communist or socialist party chapter? Join the Democrats, it's the same thing.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus; Robert A. Cook, PE
Just added to my bookmarks so I don't lose it again...

Good idea. I should ping this thread when I have a few others. I've been seeing this crap in our politics since the 1960s. An alternative title is "How the left became so moonbat."

51 posted on 12/07/2006 12:26:00 PM PST by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 28 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

Bumping for later reading.


52 posted on 12/07/2006 12:34:47 PM PST by soundbits
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

Thanks for the ping. This was an interesting read. Sounds exactly like what the Left is doing, especially with the topic of "same-sex marriage." My husband and I often have discussed how clever they are and how gullible the general public is.


53 posted on 12/07/2006 1:08:23 PM PST by Tired of Taxes (That's taxes, not Texas. I have no beef with TX. NJ has the highest property taxes in the nation.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Tired of Taxes
Thanks for the ping. This was an interesting read. Sounds exactly like what the Left is doing, especially with the topic of "same-sex marriage." My husband and I often have discussed how clever they are and how gullible the general public is.

You should have seen how they manipulated the McGreevey thing here in NJ. If you watched the news, you would have thought that people were actually proud of him for coming out and abandoning his wife and child. It was all the fault of an intolerant system that he couldn't continue to serve as governor.

Very little mention of the fact that he was buggering an Israeli national who he then promoted to a sensitive state security post. The man is an absolute disgrace.
54 posted on 12/07/2006 1:19:36 PM PST by Antoninus (Rudy as nominee = President Hillary. Why else do you think the media love him?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 53 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus; All
titled "Have You Been Delphi-ed?".

THE DELPHI TECHNIQUE

55 posted on 12/07/2006 1:40:26 PM PST by backhoe (Just an Old Keyboard Cowboy, Ridin' the Trakball into the Dawn of Information)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Lurker

There are a number of infiltrators on this board who masquerade as 'questioning' conservatives purely aiming to divide us and to get each other to fight with each other. They're probing to find out what works, what doesn't, what makes us fight amongst ourselves and which of their lies will work.It is very subtle and, now, they will be 'funded' to maintain this strategy throughout the next election at which time they won't need it anymore because they will have all three branches.


56 posted on 12/07/2006 1:45:37 PM PST by Gaffer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: untenured
Many thanks for a fascinating reply. I have long held that critical thinking bears the same relationship to Critical Thinking as libertarian does to Libertarian. If it's certified and wrapped in a package it probably isn't entirely the real thing.

I'd love to have taken one of your classes!

57 posted on 12/07/2006 1:45:59 PM PST by Billthedrill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 42 | View Replies]

To: Freedom4US

Agreed.

But, it COULD still be used by conservatives in a conservative way for conservative goals. Just as conservatives can use communist plumbing when touring Moscow.


58 posted on 12/07/2006 2:26:55 PM PST by Quix (LET GOD ARISE AND HIS ENEMIES BE SCATTERED. LET ISRAEL CALL ON GOD AS THEIRS! & ISLAM FLUSH ITSELF)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 39 | View Replies]

To: Antoninus

I live in NJ. Yes, the way they handled the McGreevey story was absolutely amazing. He knew exactly what speech to deliver to garner sympathy. The Democrats are very talented at being spin doctors.


59 posted on 12/07/2006 4:12:02 PM PST by Tired of Taxes (That's taxes, not Texas. I have no beef with TX. NJ has the highest property taxes in the nation.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 54 | View Replies]

To: Canticle_of_Deborah

Hmmm, I could name a few...


60 posted on 12/07/2006 5:44:37 PM PST by murphE (These are days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed but his own. --G.K. Chesterton)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-79 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson