Kool-Aid

   [from  a  kid's  sugar-enriched drink in fruity flavors] When someone
   who  should know better succumbs to marketing influences and actually
   begins  to  believe the propaganda being dished out by a vendor, they
   are  said  to  have  drunk  the  Kool-Aid.  Usually the decortication
   process  is  slow  and  almost  unnoticeable until one day the victim
   emerges  as  a  True Believer and begins spreading the faith himself.
   The  term  originates  in the suicide of 914 followers of Jim Jones's
   People's  Temple  cult  in  Guyana in 1978 (there are also resonances
   with  Ken  Kesey's Electric Kool-Aid Acid Tests from the 1960s). What
   the  Jonestown victims actually drank was cyanide-laced Flavor-Aid, a
   cheap  knockoff,  rather than Kool-Aid itself. There is a FAQ on this
   topic.

   This  has  live  variants.  When  a suit is blithering on about their
   latest  technology  and  how  it will save the world, that's `pouring
   Kool-Aid'.  When  the  suit  does  not  violate  the laws of physics,
   doesn't make impossible claims, and in fact says something reasonable
   and  believable,  that's  pouring  good Kool-Aid, usually used in the
   sentence "He pours good Kool-Aid, doesn't he?" This connotes that the
   speaker might be about to drink same.

[glossary]