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  • Ep. 57 — Does Manifesting Actually Work? The Psychology of Belief, Persistence, and Mental Rehearsal
    2026/05/26

    "Just believe it and you'll achieve it." You've heard it from every entrepreneur online but is there real science behind it, or is it just motivational fluff?

    In this episode of Second Thoughts, Dr. Roger Hall breaks down the psychology of manifesting into three evidence-based mechanisms: optimism, mental rehearsal, and self-fulfilling prophecy. No quantum mysticism. No vague inspiration. Just the research that explains why mindset genuinely moves the needle and where its limits are.

    You'll hear the story of being stranded at Chicago O'Hare with a canceled flight, no rental cars, and a 8am business meeting and what it reveals about the one quality that determines success more than talent, education, or genius.

    💡 What You Can Learn from This Episode:

    🔹Why pessimists are statistically more accurate than optimists — yet optimists live longer, build more friendships, and achieve more
    🔹What happens in your brain during mental rehearsal and why it's nearly as effective as actual practice
    🔹How NBA legend Wilt Chamberlain used "mental movies" before every game to dominate opponents
    🔹The mental rehearsal technique U.S. Olympic downhill skiers use before every run
    🔹How self-fulfilling prophecy works — and why your internal narrative sets your ceiling before you even begin
    🔹The "illusion of control" experiment: why believing you're in control — even when you're not — drives greater persistence and results
    🔹What Calvin Coolidge got right about persistence that still outperforms talent, genius, and education
    🔹Why visualizing the process beats visualizing the outcome — and what entrepreneurs get backwards
    🔹How staying in the game when everything falls apart is the one move that changes everything

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    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

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    32 分
  • Ep. 56 — Science Is Lying To You — And The Scientists Know It
    2026/05/19

    What if most of what you learned about human behavior was built on a foundation that hasn't been properly tested? In 2015, a landmark project revealed that when 270 researchers attempted to replicate 100 of psychology's most celebrated studies, only 36% produced the same results. That isn't a minor footnote — it is a fundamental challenge to how we understand the science of the human mind.

    In this episode of Second Thoughts, host Roger Hall — psychologist, behavioral expert, and author — sits down to unpack one of the most uncomfortable questions in modern science: how much of what we call psychological truth is actually just well-funded assumption?

    Roger brings decades of clinical and research experience to a conversation that is equal parts eye-opening, practical, and surprisingly funny. From the hidden financial incentives driving academic fraud, to why ancient dietary traditions were solving public health problems centuries before double-blind studies existed, this episode will permanently change the way you read a headline, evaluate a study, and think about the wisdom passed down through generations.

    💡 What You Can Learn from This Episode:

    🔹Why 64% of landmark psychology studies failed to replicate
    🔹How traditions like kosher dietary laws were doing public health science long before labs existed
    🔹The real reason researchers commit fraud — and why most of them aren't even bad people
    🔹What ego depletion is, why it makes sense, and why the study testing it was fundamentally flawed
    🔹The difference between a statistically significant result and one that actually matters in your life
    🔹Why "blind" peer review isn't really blind — and how academic politics kill honest research
    🔹How universities shifted from educating students to chasing million-dollar grants
    🔹The padlock theory: why accountability only works on certain kinds of people
    🔹Why discounting your grandmother's wisdom might be one of the biggest intellectual mistakes you can make

    NOTABLE MOMENT:

    "Did grandma run a double blind placebo controlled study? No. But we shouldn't discount the wisdom gained through centuries because we don't understand the explanation today." — Roger Hall

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    Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
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    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

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    34 分
  • Ep. 55 — Stop Blaming the Economy — The Real Reason You're Not Building Wealth
    2026/05/11

    Is the economy actually broken or have our expectations just completely changed?

    In this episode of Second Thoughts, Dr. Roger Hall sits down for a raw, unfiltered conversation about wealth, generational opportunity, and why the next Amazon is waiting to be built by someone willing to take the risk.

    From $5 lattes to 14% mortgage rates, we break down what's actually driving the economic frustration of younger generations and what history tells us about where real opportunity still hides in today's market.

    💡 What You’ll Learn:

    ✅ Why $5 coffee has nothing to do with inflation and everything to do with supply and demand
    ✅ The real reason wealth feels locked up across generations and why that's not permanent
    ✅ How every major economic disruption from electricity to plastics to AI created a new wave of millionaires
    ✅ The river and eddy analogy that explains exactly where free market opportunity still exists today
    ✅ Why the housing market pain for young people will not last and what history actually proves
    ✅ The one thing you can control that no economy, government, or older generation can ever take from you
    ✅ What the Sears and Amazon story tells us about building wealth in the next decade
    ✅ Why crony capitalism and true free market economics are not the same thing

    Send us Fan Mail

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    Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
    If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.

    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

    Follow me on socials:
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    18 分
  • Ep. 54 — Are You Prepared for the Shocking Reality of Wealth Inequality?
    2026/05/04

    Baby boomers control $83.3 trillion, more than half of all U.S.
    wealth. But is the frustration younger generations feel actually
    justified, or is something deeper going on?

    In this episode, Dr. Roger Hall and his co-host unpack one of the
    most charged conversations in economics today: generational wealth,
    resentment, and whether the system is truly broken or whether
    our perception of it is.

    Roger draws a sharp distinction between envy and jealousy, explains
    why wealth is not a finite resource, and introduces the concept of
    ergodicity — the idea that the wealthy of today are not guaranteed
    to be the wealthy of tomorrow.

    They also tackle the housing crisis head-on, discussing why home
    prices have outpaced wages, what role large investment firms play,
    and whether a correction is on the horizon.

    Honest, grounded, and thought-provoking. This is the generational
    money conversation worth having.

    💡 What You’ll Learn:
    → Why $83 trillion in boomer wealth doesn't mean what you think
    → Jealousy vs. Envy — a distinction that changes everything
    → Why "the rich get richer" is mostly an inflation illusion
    → The concept of ergodicity and wealth rotation
    → Housing costs: legitimate crisis or shifting expectations?
    → Why the quality-of-life baseline has transformed for everyone

    Subscribe to Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall wherever you
    listen to podcasts.

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
    If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.

    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

    Follow me on socials:
    X - @DoctorRogerHall
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    Linkedin - @Dr Roger Hall
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    Rumble - @SecondThoughts

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    28 分
  • Ep. 53 — The Psychology of Jonestown: Why Smart People Follow Dangerous Leaders
    2026/04/28

    On November 18th, 1978, 918 people died in the jungles of Guyana because one man told them to. Over 300 of them were children.

    But here's what nobody talks about — the people who followed Jim Jones were not stupid. They were not crazy. They joined a legitimate civil rights movement that was actually changing lives. Feeding the poor. Integrating churches, restaurants, and hospitals. Real work. Real impact.

    And then slowly, step by step, it became something else entirely.

    In this episode of Second Thoughts, Dr. Roger Hall sits down to unpack the real psychology behind Jonestown — one of the most chilling and misunderstood events in modern history. This isn't just a history lesson. It's a warning. And it's personal.

    The uncomfortable question isn't "How could those people be so dumb?"

    The real question is: What would it take for YOU to end up there?

    The answer might be a lot less than you think.


    💡 What You Can Learn from This Episode

    Why smart, good-intentioned people joined Peoples Temple — and how the manipulation was gradual, not sudden

    The difference between persuasion and coercive persuasion — and where the dangerous line is

    Why power without accountability is the real root of evil — and how Jim Jones is less of an outlier than we'd like to believe

    The "second dancer" phenomenon — how one additional voice of dissent could have saved hundreds of lives

    How to build your own personal guardrails before you're ever in a position to need them

    Why saying "I could never do that" might actually make you more vulnerable, not less

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
    If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.

    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

    Follow me on socials:
    X - @DoctorRogerHall
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    21 分
  • Ep. 52 — Why Do Smart People Make Terrible Decisions Together? The Science of Groupthink
    2026/04/21

    Why do smart groups make dumb decisions and what can you do about it?

    In this episode of Second Thoughts, Dr. Roger Hall breaks down the psychology of groupthink: the invisible force that causes intelligent, well-meaning teams to take on more risk, ignore warning signs, and rationalize catastrophic choices.

    From the Bay of Pigs invasion to the Challenger disaster to the Boeing 737 Max, groupthink has left a trail of preventable failures throughout history. Dr. Hall explains the behavioral science behind why this keeps happening and more importantly, how leaders can break the pattern before it costs them.

    Whether you're leading a team of two or two hundred, this episode will change how you run your next meeting.

    💡 What You’ll Learn:
    • What groupthink actually is and why it makes group decisions worse than individual ones
    • The risky shift phenomenon: why groups consistently underestimate danger
    • How diffusion of responsibility gives everyone plausible deniability
    • The real story behind the Bay of Pigs invasion and how JFK overhauled his decision-making process before the Cuban Missile Crisis
    • Why NASA launched the Challenger despite six months of written warnings from engineers
    • How to use a devil's advocate (gadfly) to protect your team from its own blind spots
    • Why deadline pressure is one of the biggest drivers of catastrophic decisions
    • The "skin in the game" principle and why distance from consequences kills accountability
    • How humans consistently misperceive risk including a beach thought experiment that will surprise you
    • Nassim Nicholas Taleb's Black Swan framework and what Russian roulette teaches us about one-in-a-hundred odds

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
    If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.

    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

    Follow me on socials:
    X - @DoctorRogerHall
    Facebook - @Roger Hall
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    Rumble - @SecondThoughts

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    25 分
  • Ep. 51 — Why Do People Follow Bad Orders: The Psychology of Obedience, Conformity & Moral Courage
    2026/04/14

    What turns ordinary, decent people into willing participants in evil? It's not monsters or sociopaths, it's you, me, and the neighbor next door.

    In this episode, Dr. Roger Hall unpacks decades of psychological research to answer one of the most uncomfortable questions in human history: Why do good people follow bad orders?

    From Adolf Eichmann's chilling "I was just doing my job" defense, to Stanley Milgram's famous electric shock experiment, to a woman murdered on a train while bystanders watched — the pattern is the same. When we are uncertain, we look to others. And when everyone looks to others, no one acts.

    What We Cover:

    • Hannah Arendt's "Banality of Evil" and the Eichmann trial
    • Solomon Asch's conformity experiment — why 72% of people deny what they can clearly see
    • The Milgram obedience experiment and why 65% of ordinary Americans shocked a stranger to near death
    • The Kitty Genovese murder and the Bystander Effect
    • Why group decisions make moral failure even worse
    • The helicopter pilot who single-handedly stopped the My Lai massacre
    • One simple trick to get help when stranded on the highway


    What You Can Learn from This Episode:

    🔹 Evil is often ordinary — Everyday people, not monsters, carry out atrocities simply by going along with the crowd

    🔹 You conform more than you think — Social belonging overrides personal judgment more than we want to admit

    🔹 The Bystander Effect will affect you — The more people present, the less likely anyone acts because everyone assumes someone else will

    🔹 Groups make moral decisions worse — Collective thinking diffuses personal responsibility and makes harmful choices easier to justify

    🔹 One voice can flip everything — A single person saying "this is wrong" dropped group compliance from 90% to 10%

    🔹 Personal responsibility is the antidote — The moment you decide "it is up to me" you break the spell of the crowd

    The bottom line: Society does not need everyone to be a hero. It just needs a subset of people willing to say "Oh hell no" when it matters most. This episode might make you one of them.

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
    If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.

    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

    Follow me on socials:
    X - @DoctorRogerHall
    Facebook - @Roger Hall
    Instagram - @DoctorRogerHall
    Linkedin - @Dr Roger Hall
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    Rumble - @SecondThoughts

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    34 分
  • Ep. 50 — Moral Licensing: Why People Feel Entitled to Destroy Others Online
    2026/04/07

    Description:
    What makes someone feel justified in attacking others online—especially when they believe they’re “doing the right thing”?

    In this episode of Second Thoughts with Roger Hall, Dr. Roger Hall and Nation unpack the psychology of moral licensing—the hidden mechanism that allows people to act harshly, self-righteously, and even destructively while believing they are morally justified.

    Using real-world examples, including a controversial public incident involving Tourette’s, they explore how virtue signaling, online outrage, and lack of accountability create a culture where people become judge, jury, and executioner—with zero personal cost.

    They also dive into:

    • Why good intentions can lead to harmful behavior
    • The rise of dogmatic thinking in online spaces
    • How social media removes “skin in the game
    • The psychological need to appear morally superior

    If you’ve ever questioned why online discourse feels so extreme, this episode breaks it down with clarity and depth.

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
    If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.

    🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
    🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
    📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!

    Follow me on socials:
    X - @DoctorRogerHall
    Facebook - @Roger Hall
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    22 分