Understanding Undue Influence
…died in 2004. I began by asking the class how many of them had heard the phrase “drink the kool aid.” They all had, of course, although none acknowledged ever…
…died in 2004. I began by asking the class how many of them had heard the phrase “drink the kool aid.” They all had, of course, although none acknowledged ever…
…terrible? Several things helped convince me. I heard two television hosts – one liberal, the other conservative – say, “They shouldn’t drink the Kool Aid.” I became furious. How can…
…culminated with the publication of Jonestown: Don’t Drink the Kool Aid, which is available in paperback form, as an e-book, and as an audio book. The audio book is produced…
…Crime” stories. He is also the author of Jonestown: Don’t Drink the Kool Aid, which is available in paperback form, as an e-book, and as an audio book. His 2014…
…in a mass suicide. Many went along with his order to drink cyanide laced Kool-Aid. Many gave it to their children first and then drank it themselves. Others died, being…
…all, the people would’ve been alive. “Don’t drink the Kool Aid” would not be an expression, a joke that should’ve never been a joke. However, it did happen. And I…
…When everyone was sitting at the tables ready to eat, Jones asked everyone to make a toast with the lime Kool-aid. After everyone took a drink, Jones said everyone was…
…The People of Peoples Temple, by Sarah Rex (2023) Jonestown: “Don’t Drink the Kool-Aid“, by Will Savive (2014) Articles by Will Savive New Book Goes Beyond Façade of “Official Version”…
…certainly that it was murder. Another thing Carter said that stayed with me was about the statement “Don’t drink the Kool-Aid”. I had heard of that saying before, and I…
…deceased. While the American press screamed about the “Kool-Aid Suicides,” Dr. Mootoo was reaching a much different opinion.[29] This is understandable: Mootoo was on-site and the press wasn’t. Initially, the…