REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Monsters.

POSTED BY: WULFENSTAR
UPDATED: Sunday, November 8, 2009 16:59
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Monday, November 2, 2009 10:59 AM

STORYMARK


Quote:

Originally posted by Wulfenstar:
"I don't recall reading anything about "her screaming." Maybe you are assuming? Hearing them in your head to trigger your violent reaction, a way of giving your violence permission, free reign, violence that you know would not be questioned if a young women were screaming?



Well, now that we know the facts, it's clear someone was assuming, it just turns out it was you.

"I thoroughly disapprove of duels. If a man should challenge me, I would take him kindly and forgivingly by the hand and lead him to a quiet place and kill him."

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Monday, November 2, 2009 11:07 AM

BYTEMITE


Gasp! DT hasn't read The Watchmen?

I apologize, but now there must be a prerequisite period of scorning. *scorn* *scorning* *still scorning*

Okay, good.

How to explain it... Basically, it's a graphic novel about "capes." Rorschach is the only one who isn't a complete tool, though he has ISSUES.

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Monday, November 2, 2009 11:10 AM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Originally posted by Wulfenstar:
I don't know what others see...

but I just see X-rays of the pelvic region.

lol



Bugs, people, faces, and particle physics.

Or possibly a complete, enlightened commentary on politics.

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Monday, November 2, 2009 12:49 PM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


"Basically, it's a graphic novel about "capes." Rorschach is the only one who isn't a complete tool, though he has ISSUES."

Amen.

lol

He was also the only one who never quit. Never backed down, never bent his knee.

Even tho it cost him everything. Sanity, life, faith.

But in the end, he was also the only one who was right.

This world is so fraked up.

*sigh

ETA: The new name to the thread "What do you see?" Is surprisingly appropriate.

I would just add... "Now, what are you going to do about it?"

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Monday, November 2, 2009 1:46 PM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


http://abcnews.go.com/WN/pastor-california-gang-rape-victim-speaks/sto
ry?id=8974280


"The victim of last weekend's attack ...whose friends say had been looking forward to the homecoming dance for weeks."

This makes me want to scream and cry at the same time.


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Monday, November 2, 2009 2:33 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Wulf, Go back to my most previous post.... you're near to being full-on delusional. You may be a danger to those closest to you, particularly your wife. Please get help before you hurt someone.

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Monday, November 2, 2009 3:38 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

The worst nightmare of most liberals (sorry) is a white boy taught in the streets and the ghettos of our country.



That would make me the worst nightmare of most liberals (sorry). Except that I'm a liberal (sorry). So am I their nightmare, or their dream?

And what was your point again?

Mike

Let the wild rumpus start!

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Monday, November 2, 2009 3:40 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
Gasp! DT hasn't read The Watchmen?

I apologize, but now there must be a prerequisite period of scorning. *scorn* *scorning* *still scorning*

Okay, good.

How to explain it... Basically, it's a graphic novel about "capes." Rorschach is the only one who isn't a complete tool, though he has ISSUES.



If I can't quite summon outright scorn, will a stern look and a cross word suffice?

Mike

Let the wild rumpus start!

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Monday, November 2, 2009 4:01 PM

BYTEMITE


Perhaps, but it would have to be very stern. Like summoned from a pentagram stern.

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Monday, November 2, 2009 4:57 PM

DREAMTROVE


I have not read the Watchmen

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Monday, November 2, 2009 5:03 PM

BYTEMITE


It's actually pretty good, one of the first (and at this point, I think only) graphic novels to actually be awarded any literary awards.

But, I imagine you have a lot of other stuff you'd rather read first, so I don't hold it against you. :)

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Monday, November 2, 2009 5:09 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


We won't hold it against you, but there may be stern looks. Just so you know.

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Monday, November 2, 2009 9:06 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Sig, was your
Quote:

Wulf, Go back to my most previous post.... you're near to being full-on delusional. You may be a danger to those closest to you, particularly your wife. Please get help before you hurt someone.
actually in response to Wulf's
Quote:

"The victim of last weekend's attack ...whose friends say had been looking forward to the homecoming dance for weeks." This makes me want to scream and cry at the same time.
I find that confusing...unless I'm missing something, he seemed to be expressing the same emotions I feel about that sentence.

DT: No, around here people actually DON'T feed the wildlife...intentionally that is. Can't count the bandits ('coons) getting at some pet's food bowl...etc. Marin is a strangely savvy place when it comes to animals; very pro-pet, more pro-controlling-your-pet than many places; and very "leave the wildlife alone". I've never seen or heard of anyone feeding wildlife, and I've been here thirty-some years.

Of course doesn't count backyard wildlife; I put out squirrel, hummer and bird food (but as long as I do it consistently, don't think it harms anything, the squirrels don't overpopulate and we need all the birds we can get, as the one thing where there still ARE idjits is keeping cats in--backyard bird predation has affected the population).

None of which has anything to do with the topic at hand, except to say I can't locate the coyote thread, so if you know where it is, I'd be grateful.

Wulf, I THINK I know what you're intimating with
Quote:

The worst nightmare of most liberals (sorry) is a white boy taught in the streets and the ghettos of our country.
but I can't see how that would be a liberal's nightmare. It's certainly not mine...I think you're assuming without understanding on that one--or just lashing out.

Byte'n'all: I haven't read Watchmen either, but my excuse is I don't read graphic novels (except for V for Vendetta, originals of which I got but haven't read past the first one). So scorn away, dear, to your heart's content, s'okay by me

________________________
Together we are greater than the sum of our parts

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 5:13 AM

DREAMTROVE


Nik,

someone always will. Every county has its free tibet crowd

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 6:54 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


NIKI: My advice to Wulf was about the entire content of his posts here. The point about being delusional was addressed to his comments about being a librul's worst nightmare (heh) and his ideas about intervening in a situation against 15 people. Wulf IS a bomb looking for a place to go off. He's a gang-banger at heart- his solution is STILL murder and mayhem. He grinds on his rage every day, looking for someone to hurt. The only thing he's done is change his intended victims in a way that makes his rage feel justified. And he wants us to rage along with him so he can feel even more accepted, and is disappointed when some of us don't.

What I suggested still holds- I think he needs to find some poor beaten-down dog and love it back to happiness. Or something. That rage - especially if he still sees it as the answer and keeps looking for an excuse to fan it into white-heat every day- is going to get him into deep, deep trouble. He will prolly wind up doing something he really regrets which he can never undo, in addition to landing him in jail (which will be the least of his troubles). He may not see it that way, but that's the problem.

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 8:49 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Signy: Yup, agreed on all of it.

And Wulf, DO find a dog to rescue. You might be amazed when you discover that the dog is actually rescuing YOU.

Mike

Let the wild rumpus start!

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 9:14 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Wulf had a question which nobody has addressed How can we keep it from happening again?. In a burst of irony, I think Wulf's solution to violence is to arm all the students and kill all the gang-bangers. Of course, I have a different set of solutions. But right now I'm too busy to finish that thought...

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 10:19 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


So, to get back to the topic. I know Wulf will find my ideas to be "fuzzy-headed liberalism", but here goes....

You have to deal with the problems multi-generationally. And you have to do it all at once, because if you focus on one age group they will with time be influenced by the others anyway.

But it boils down to: JOBS. OWNERSHIP. EDUCATION. DRUG TREATMENT. COUNSELING. MEDICAL CARE. Until and unless you feel invested in your neighborhood and your life, you will not work to improve... anything.

For some, jail is the only solution. There are different levels of participation in gangs. Most kids join for self-protection. But all gangs have enforcers and recruiters; peeps who are crazier than shithouse rats. Once those enforcers are gone, the gang falls apart.

We need to legalize pot. And we need to so something about our endemic drug problem, which creates the market which feeds the gangs.

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 2:07 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Wulf had a question which nobody has addressed How can we keep it from happening again?. In a burst of irony, I think Wulf's solution to violence is to arm all the students and kill all the gang-bangers. Of course, I have a different set of solutions. But right now I'm too busy to finish that thought...




Well, you could have 24-hour surveillance and live in a police state. That would probably curb crime a bit. But as I understand it, you don't want that, do you, Wulfie?

Sad to say, but part of the "freedom" you want for all of us involves the freedom for monsters to behave as monsters. We can't necessarily PREVENT this from ever happening again, at least not without severely curtailing the rights of everyone in the process. About the best we can hope for, it seems, is to punish the wrongdoers afterwards. Unless you're a big believer in punishing people for the crimes they MIGHT commit in the future. Are you?

Mike

Let the wild rumpus start!

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 5:20 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Wulfenstar:
No, Kwick.

This is about a group of (and forgive me for not being able to call them human) PREDATORS/ANIMALS/NONHUMANS, raping a girl for HOURS. While some of the same evil animals stood by and watched.



It's an interesting thing that we do, isn't it? Dehumanising people when they do abhorrent things. The issue that we can't seem to face is that they are human, same as you or I, they bleed, they hurt, they have emotions.

Made me dig out an interesting article.

Quote:

Criminals are abused children, lost as adults

The perpetrators of crime are victims too, says author John Marsden.

These days we have all the sympathy in the world for abused children. We weep for their loss of innocence. We understand how it is that many (in some cases all) of the pillars of their lives have been knocked out from under them. We support them with counselling and care. That's how it's supposed to work anyway. In many cases it does work like this.

Almost in the same breath we denounce child abusers. We call them scum, filth, animals, monsters. We talk about how they should be castrated, locked up for life, executed. "If I could get my hands on those mongrels. . ."

At the extreme are those terrible scenes ofhysterical adults surrounding a police wagon containing a child molester and rocking it backwards and forwards, or the mob attacking the house of a child molester who has been released from prison.

One of the ways we justify this rage is by telling ourselves and each other that we are showing our solidarity with the abused children. But one of the truths about this complex issue is that the abused child for whom we show such support, and the child abuser for whom we show such hatred and contempt, are the same person.

We claim to feel love for the abused child but when, inevitably, some abused children grow up and start acting out the consequences of their abuse, we react to them with rage and hatred.

That abused child who has had the pillars of his life knocked out from under him will, without support and understanding, grow up continuing to feel frightened and lost. To allay these feelings, he may try to recreate any situation in which he felt "held", and these may include encounters where he was literally held, as he was beaten, or seduced into a sexual encounter.
It is impossible for a loved, secure person to commit a serious crime.

At those times, the adult created a little world that just the two of them inhabited, where all other concerns ceased to exist, and where the child, no matter how bizarrely, felt something like security. If, as an adult, that same child finds himself in a world that is frightening and insecure, a world in which he has no real connections with anyone, he may try to recreate those moments of illusionary security.

It's a difficult process to understand. And it's not an inevitable process. Many, perhaps most, people who are abused as children go on to lead secure and well-balanced lives, often because the abuse took place out of context.

In her book Banished Knowledge, Alice Miller referred to a survey of American prisoners that showed that about 90 per cent had been abused as children. She commented that the other 10 per cent would have been abused too - it was just that they had not yet been able to admit it.

The prisons of Australia are also full of abused children. Those same children whom we profess to care about when they are 10 or 12, but whom we stop caring about when they are 16 or 18.

All crime is illness. All those who commit serious crimes are ill. The more horrifying the crime, the greater the illness of the perpetrator. It is impossible for a loved, secure, happy person to commit a serious crime.

Shame on politicians who use "getting tough on law and order" as an election slogan. They are exploiting these abused children to gain power.

It would dramatically alter our society if we treated criminals as people with serious illnesses. We could do better by them, and we could do better for ourselves and our community, if we stopped calling them scum and looked after them as the confused and lost children that they are.

The cheap, shallow and easy response to all this would be to sneer, "Oh yes that's right, we'll let them all off just because they had unhappy childhoods". Why do people need to think and speak like this? Why are they so hostile to such an obvious truth: that criminals are themselves victims of other people's serious crimes, crimes which often went unreported.

I recognise that some criminals may be so badly hurt that they are unable to control themselves and, therefore, cannot be allowed back into the community. But they are not monsters.

We say we care about abused children and we obviously do. But that means we have to care for them, and it's not so obvious that we do that. It also means that we have to care for them when they become adults, even if they are confused and mentally ill adults. It's horribly obvious that we're not doing that.



http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/11/29/1070081592602.html?from=s
toryrhs



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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 9:25 AM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


"Sad to say, but part of the "freedom" you want for all of us involves the freedom for monsters to behave as monsters. We can't necessarily PREVENT this from ever happening again, at least not without severely curtailing the rights of everyone in the process. About the best we can hope for, it seems, is to punish the wrongdoers afterwards. Unless you're a big believer in punishing people for the crimes they MIGHT commit in the future. Are you?"

No, I neither want a police-state or to punish people for crimes they might commit.

You know what would be nice?

If you are acting in the protection of a victim, you are automatically free from prosecution by those committing the crime.

I.E. You can't be sued, OR charged with anything by the state, if its proven that you were acting in the defense of someone else.

Call it the Superman law, or the Mr Incredible law.


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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 10:47 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Nice article, Magonsdaughter.

Wanted to add something I hope you'll find interesting: Strangely, it was this board which turned me into an (almost) pacifist. Years of hearing Death to all potential terrorists! and End violence with guns and Protect our freedoms by spying on citizens! made me sensitive to the whole "ends and means" question. Many discussions with people on both ends of the spectrum made me realize how irrational the concept is that you can create a good outcome from nefarious dealings. I've lived long enough to see blowback come right back at us from when we took the expedient way out. You can't make people love you by hating them, you can't impose freedom tyrannically, nor create prosperity from greed.

The other thing I noticed here: Pounding on people NEVER does any good. While tit for tat may work in prisoner's dilemma games, it assumes that the responder is capable of learning unemotionally. But what I've observed is that responding to snark with snark just sets up a dynamic which swirls down the drain pretty quickly. Given my snarky nature, this is a hard thing for me stop doing, but I try.

Reading people's posts about the tyranny of government... and the (many) cases in which people were railroaded into a conviction ... made me realize that the death penalty was too great a power to give to the government, and that no matter WHAT your ideology, if you have to reach for a gun to convince someone to do things your way, you have already lost in the marketplace of ideas.

I guess in the end it comes down to this: There are no monsters, only people. Damaged people, possibly even dangerous people, but still people. Calling people monsters may be a good outlet for anger and rage, but it doesn't solve the problem, its still part of the SAME problem.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 11:07 AM

FREMDFIRMA



Wulf, there are many good-samaritan clauses in state law, problem is that we live in a society so strangled by conflicting laws deliberately worded vaguely enough to mean just about any damn thing, and our court systems are naught more than a feeding frenzy pool of caviar for the lawyers.

As I mentioned, my theological beliefs do not allow me to interfere with the imminent death of another person save in particular circumstance - which means means I won't be givin CPR to someone, right ?
Mind, this is a huge oversimplication, it's way more complex than that but it'd take too damn long to explain.

Well, *because* of the fact that it would take an hour or so to explain, I simply allow folk to believe that I take no lifesaving action due to threat of lawsuit - and the fact that said excuse is both accepted and entirely credible should be enough right there to illustrate part of the reason folk do not intervene.

I know it's your natural inclination to do so, and it's a credit to you despite the flaming you take, but again - you ALSO have a responsibility to not further endanger the victim or bystanders, which gunfire does have a tendency to do, whether intentional or not.

While several well meaning suggestions have been thrown in the most vicious and insulting way possible (something which I personally have found offensive as hell, cause they have exactly the opposite effect in that case), do not discredit that there ARE issues you need to work through because as I pointed out, my "edge" in crisis situations comes from reducing opponents to exactly that rageful-vengeful mindset where they react without thinking, putting them in a re-active, rather than pro-active, posture.

Tis why I suggested a martial arts instructor, or a patient hunter, to teach you that restraint which would allow you to assess the situation and take the most effective action with the least risk, instead of re-actively charging in headfirst, something which took me a damn long time to overcome as well, and not without a price, neither - the physical consequences of such youthful indiscretion are a bitch when you start gettin old, believe it.

I'll even take that a step further, and suggest that if you do take the martial arts route, look for a Judo or Akido teacher, someone who's concept involves turning superior force against itself - you might find it frustrating at first, but as you learn the application the control will come with it, trust me on this...

Of course, if you're enough like I was in that respect, you'll prolly learn the hard way, by winding up on your ass every time your temper gets the better of you - but it's still worth it, well worth it.

Learn to THINK, then act.

-Frem

There always has to be a price.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 11:24 AM

FREMDFIRMA


And yes, Alice Miller's work is critical to any kind of understanding about the hows and whys.

While handling our created monsters is a matter up for much debate - not creating them in the first damned place would be a good start to a resolution, wouldn't it now ?

Although in specific situations I will say that a "good" outcome can technically come from nefarious dealings, but it carries such a terrible price that it should be avoided unless there is utterly, absolutely, no available alternative - that's why I more or less retired and left things to Justin, because the situation of the hellcamps and their equivalents within the juvenile justice system no longer needs a wrecking ball, but a negotiator - cause such situations where it MIGHT do more good than harm are tremendously rare, and once you start drinking from that poisonous well, it contaminates every action that flows from it.

Which eventually, unchecked, becomes the very problem is was meant to solve - look at how our intel goons have become a greater threat to us than the folks they were set against, classic example.

There's also that violence damages the user as well as the recipient - like a hammer pounding nails, no matter how tough the hammer is, it takes a beating too, and will eventually break for it - that's a lesson I learned a hell of a lot later than I woulda liked to.

The best route is not allowing things to come to a crisis point where all the alternatives and the opportunity to use them have been wasted - which is why I go after the enablers of tyranny and try to steer them off their course, if you prevent the machine from being built you never have to smash it, yes ?

-Frem

There always has to be a price.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 11:29 AM

DREAMTROVE


sig,

if you don't want stuff like this to happen, don't support the institution.


Magonsdaughter,

I've heard this argument all my life, and I don't buy it. Here's why: I've watched it happen, a lot, and it doesn't look anything like this. The serial rapists, serial killers, and criminals I have known that do the most damage are golden boys who could do no wrong, not abused children. The abused children who commit crimes are often people who see power, they're a minority of people, but they're just like other people, they identify the source of power as abuse, and violence. These people bully and even kill, but they don't form packs and attack. Still, regardless of what someone has been through, I have no sympathy for these people at all. A monster is a monster regardless of how they were made. They value only one thing: Themselves.

More complicated characters are more complex. Tormented souls. They can be insane, violent or criminal, but they're not of the same stripe. I knew a kid who was abused, and very violent. He stabbed a girl, abused a young boy, was generally a destructive force, but he was a mess inside, not a gang organizer. He was constantly looking for outside approval, and then lashing back against those who didn't give it. The boy he abused grew up to be a much more serious abuser, but completely unsympathetic. He would rape and steal and rat on everyone. He was a master manipulator who cared about himself, and no one else. If you gave him your approval or a sign that you cared, then you were a sucker that could be easily manipulated, and he's gladly take you for all he could get.

Yeah, I get the point, monsters are made, not born, but still, there's a difference. Some people decide that the world consists of them, and long before anything happens to them, they're going to be liabilities. One part here I think Freud was right on: This is an early stage, and some people never get out of it. If later, that person discovers violence as the answer to problems, they will be a violent destroyer, if they see money as the power, they'll be an economic destroyer. Any way you slice it, this person made a choice not to evolve, and they make that choice every day: Other people don't matter. Well, hell, if other people don't matter to them, I'm sorry, they don't matter to me.

And people know that I have tolerance for a lot of things and have dealt with a lot of people with vary serious mental problems. This is about assholes. Their mental illness is selfishness, and they didn't learn that anywhere: we were all born with it, and the rest of us just got over it.

*some people encourage it, and create new useless people.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 11:36 AM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


I would add to all off this:

In the end, you have to choose. You either help as much as you can, or you watch.

Right vs wrong.




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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 11:36 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Sig, thank you for clarifying, I kinda thought that was the case. And I have to say I agree with every single WORD of all three of your posts...except I came to my pacifism in a different way than you. But other than that, your remarks on everything, Wulf, what you see here, people who do bad things...I'm with you 100%.

Please, Wulf, don't get a dog. Given your temperament, I could only cringe at what would happen to the dog. Dogs aren't psychotherapy, and might only give you an outlet for your hate. If you follow any suggestions, choose among the others. Tho personally I don't think you'll ever seek any help, I think you LIKE your mindset too much. Just my opinion.

________________________
Together we are greater than the sum of our parts

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 12:05 PM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


http://media.www.kentnewsnet.com/media/storage/paper867/news/2009/11/0
3/News/Police.Use.Taser.On.Kent.Resident-3820639.shtml


Ahh yes. Call the police. They are the ones we pay to help, so that us little cowards don't have to get our hands dirty.

Right?

Right?


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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 12:23 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Niki

I too think Wulf LIKES his mindset too much to seek change.

After all, what would you rather believe - that you are special and always right, and everyone else who doesn't agree with you is not even human ? Or that you are a damaged product of your environment, an insignificant person and completely ordinarily human in every way ?

If anything at all drives him to seek change, it will be the (increasingly rare) moments of clarity in which he looks on his memories and realizes he is living in an insane morass of fear, hate and violent fantasy.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 1:18 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


DT
Quote:

sig, if you don't want stuff like this to happen, don't support the institution.
WHICH institution? Schools? Government? Capitalism? "Them"?


Also, I've known many people and read about many other who were slipping into a life of violence and hate until... until they identified with something or someone outside of themselves who was weaker or less fortunate... a disabled kid, an abused dog, a younger sister... The funny thing was, once they took that step they were ready to look on themselves with empathy.

I'm not saying that this works for everybody. SOME sociopaths are born and not made. But for the most part, behavior is a combination of inborn personality and environment. We can see this by the extreme differences in crime rates from one nation to the next. Shouldn't we try to change our environment so as not to create so many violent people?

(I can hear Wulf now... yeah, a society of sheep who are ready for slaughter. A society which has not learned how to protect itself, which NEEDS a violent hero in order to save them ....)

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 1:20 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


"Any way you slice it, this person made a choice not to evolve, and they make that choice every day: Other people don't matter. Well, hell, if other people don't matter to them, I'm sorry, they don't matter to me."

The statistics re those who are in jail are pretty indicative that abuse does tend to lead to abusers.

The very rich have concerns all their own - and tend to not see most people as human at all - and they then pass this on to their chidren.

I don't know how anyone can 'decide' at an early age (2, or 3 at the most) whether or not other people 'mean' anything to them. It's far too early for them to be thinking per se. And once past that point, I'm not sure that empathy v none is under their control.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 3:04 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by dreamtrove:
sig,

if you don't want stuff like this to happen, don't support the institution.


Magonsdaughter,

I've heard this argument all my life, and I don't buy it. Here's why: I've watched it happen, a lot, and it doesn't look anything like this. The serial rapists, serial killers, and criminals I have known that do the most damage are golden boys who could do no wrong, not abused children. The abused children who commit crimes are often people who see power, they're a minority of people, but they're just like other people, they identify the source of power as abuse, and violence. These people bully and even kill, but they don't form packs and attack. Still, regardless of what someone has been through, I have no sympathy for these people at all. A monster is a monster regardless of how they were made. They value only one thing: Themselves.

More complicated characters are more complex. Tormented souls. They can be insane, violent or criminal, but they're not of the same stripe. I knew a kid who was abused, and very violent. He stabbed a girl, abused a young boy, was generally a destructive force, but he was a mess inside, not a gang organizer. He was constantly looking for outside approval, and then lashing back against those who didn't give it. The boy he abused grew up to be a much more serious abuser, but completely unsympathetic. He would rape and steal and rat on everyone. He was a master manipulator who cared about himself, and no one else. If you gave him your approval or a sign that you cared, then you were a sucker that could be easily manipulated, and he's gladly take you for all he could get.

Yeah, I get the point, monsters are made, not born, but still, there's a difference. Some people decide that the world consists of them, and long before anything happens to them, they're going to be liabilities. One part here I think Freud was right on: This is an early stage, and some people never get out of it. If later, that person discovers violence as the answer to problems, they will be a violent destroyer, if they see money as the power, they'll be an economic destroyer. Any way you slice it, this person made a choice not to evolve, and they make that choice every day: Other people don't matter. Well, hell, if other people don't matter to them, I'm sorry, they don't matter to me.

And people know that I have tolerance for a lot of things and have dealt with a lot of people with vary serious mental problems. This is about assholes. Their mental illness is selfishness, and they didn't learn that anywhere: we were all born with it, and the rest of us just got over it.

*some people encourage it, and create new useless people.


Well I think the evidence is oretty clear that most people who commit acts of violence have had a background of childhood abuse and/or neglect. The jail statistics are well documented. Doesn't mean that you will automatically be violent, but the causality is pretty strongly linked.

That's not to say people shouldn't be held responsible for their actions, that being abused as a child should be used as a defense - that's not what the author is saying either. But if we want to break the cycle of violence and abuse we have to start thinking a bit differently about crime and punishment. One of the major problems is the lack of rehabiliation that takes place in jails - in fact, people are hardened and trained into expert criminals by the time they have done their time. They've learnt more about how to use violence and abuse to survive and then let loose on society once again. Crazy stuff.

I don't hold with dehumanising anyone, not even Hitler or Stalin or Pol Pot who were responsible for monstrous deeds because that's exactly WHAT THEY DID and how they justified their own heinous deeds. Humanity is not all good - we need to take on board our own capacity for doing terrible stuff before we can start to fix things.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 3:13 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
I'm not saying that this works for everybody. SOME sociopaths are born and not made. But for the most part, behavior is a combination of inborn personality and environment. We can see this by the extreme differences in crime rates from one nation to the next. Shouldn't we try to change our environment so as not to create so many violent people?


I guess the only way they could be born sociopaths is brain damage - alcohol fetal syndrome, some inutero trauma perhaps. I still think it's unlikely - the 'empathy' wiring takes place after birth - and even missing neural pathways can be formed at least into your thirties and possibly longer.

Sociopaths are created - again, child abuse, neglect, war, early institutionalisation, exposure to drugs,alcohol, violence in the home. The infant is not soothed, does not learn to self soothe, does not learn to depend on another to meet basic needs of comfort, feeding, safety and love.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 4:12 PM

BYTEMITE


Sociopaths are created. Psychopaths are born with chemical imbalances, or possibly brain damage. Either way, they're people who need help, understanding, and outreach. Eventually they can develop a sense of empathy.

That doesn't absolve them of the damage they cause to other people. Rape is horrible, and if any of these gang members are psychopaths or sociopaths, they should not just be forgiven for what they've done.

But I think it's far more useful to try to give psychopaths/sociopaths therapeutic treatment, instead of the usual crime prison recidivism cycle. And then, if they are able to demonstrate control over their tendencies, they should be given chances to have a life, because otherwise they're just driven to repeat offend.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 4:35 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


"I still think it's unlikely - the 'empathy' wiring takes place after birth - and even missing neural pathways can be formed at least into your thirties and possibly longer."

This is an intersting topic to me, which I will continue to think on for years to come.

Sociopaths apparently don't learn anything from punishment/ pain (not even avoidance). Though there is some thought that sociopaths are missing mirror neurons, it seems to me they are observant enough to be able to easily manipulate others. Maybe what they are missing is making the connection with pain - their own or others. And that leads to abhorant behavior that disregards the pain of others.

I think many that we might call sociopaths are latent normals though. What they have going on the some other over-riding concern - survival or affiliation for example - that blocks out the normal response to another person's pain.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 4:57 PM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

I think many that we might call sociopaths are latent normals though. What they have going on the some other over-riding concern - survival or affiliation for example - that blocks out the normal response to another person's pain.



I do think that over-riding concerns can block empathy. Although I think we ought to be careful about calling some of these people latent normals, that almost suggests, without intervention, that all children would turn out like them.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 5:57 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

That's not to say people shouldn't be held responsible for their actions, that being abused as a child should be used as a defense - that's not what the author is saying either.
Quote:

That doesn't absolve them of the damage they cause to other people. Rape is horrible, and if any of these gang members are psychopaths or sociopaths, they should not just be forgiven for what they've done.
Funny thing is, I even find the language all wrong. Holding? Defending? Absolving? Forgiving?

That's not the point.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 6:00 PM

FREMDFIRMA



I once wrote a paper (under a surname) on learned sociopathy as a defense mechanism and how that devolves within the institution of public school and creates, as some say... "monsters".

They learn it by emulating the successful and powerful people in our society, and once that path is trained in so deeply, it becomes the path of least resistance for them, especially the earlier they learned it.

That's DIFFERENT from someone born with a misfire, it's something treatable, but the earlier you get to it, the better chance of fixing it - especially if you don't amplify it by chemical suppression, causing an isometric escalation of the behavior.

The real irony of that paper, which was recieved about as well as you'd expect by folks who'll look for ANY excuse that doesn't involve their own complicity in the mess...

Was that I wrote the damn thing when I was thirteen and seeing the exact things I was writing of from point blank range every single day.

-Frem
"Your grievance shall be avenged!"

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 6:42 PM

DREAMTROVE


Kathy

Quote:


The statistics re those who are in jail are pretty indicative that abuse does tend to lead to abusers.



not really. 1) abuse is very common among the non-criminal, and 2) playing up sympathy is the defense attorney's job.



Sig,

School. Also, listen to your inner Wulf. He may be wrong, or at least overly intense, but he's not 100% wrong. You're suggestion, when you add Wulfoid skepticism, results in Frem's world view, which is not that far off. The problem is that

1) yes, you're correct, we should design such a society... but
2) History has proven 100,000 times that peace society is fine until it meets violent society which kills it.

Any society with a better design plan will need to be able to defend itself. I just disagree that this defense will be guns in school. I don't actually see guns in my vision of the future, but I definitely do see their point.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 7:39 PM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Quote:

That's not to say people shouldn't be held responsible for their actions, that being abused as a child should be used as a defense - that's not what the author is saying either.
Quote:

That doesn't absolve them of the damage they cause to other people. Rape is horrible, and if any of these gang members are psychopaths or sociopaths, they should not just be forgiven for what they've done.
Funny thing is, I even find the language all wrong. Holding? Defending? Absolving? Forgiving?

That's not the point.



I'm not sure I follow you.

I made damn sure that I don't ever forgive the shit I've done, and I'm a better person for it.

...I think.

Anyway, I wasn't talking about all that in the sense of punishment, 'cause I don't think that works.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 4:26 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Huh.

Okay, I see a big difference that needs explanation and prolly more thought. Guilt and forgiveness, punishment and reward, behavior and modification. They're not always tied together.

The question is: how do we modify violent criminal behavior?

Most of us are constrained by guilt and some of us are constrained by fear, but that constraint requires a number of mental processes.

1) You have to be able to put yourself in another's shoes. But if you're like my daughter, who is brain-blind to different points of view, you'll lack that capacity. (BTW- she doesn't lack sympathy. If someone is hurting, right in front of her, she responds.)

2) You have to remember the past. Some peeps don't. Nuff said.

3) You have to be able to project the future. Children younger than about five, and people who're brain-damaged (again, like my daughter) lack the capacity.

4) You have to be able to learn from pain. According to Rue, sociopaths don't. They don't even apply it to themselves.

5) You have to acknowledge a social hierarchy.

Guilt is a complex emotion. It doesn't work for many people for a variety of reasons. The MAIN reason, I believe, is that most people with PTSD... basically, people who've been abused when young and/or grew up in life-threatening circumstances... often don't even care about themselves. Its that nihilistic POV which says - when you confront a gang-banger wannabe with the horror they are creating- I don't think I'm gonna live past 25 anyway and I don't care. But, as I listed, there are many other reasons why guilt (which is self-punishment) and punishment don't work.

You'd think... wouldn't you?... that if you had to spend a week in jail, much less a year... that you'd do everything in your power not to repeat the experience! The mistake that people make is that they keep projecting themselves and their responses on others. But if you look at the recidivism rate of violent criminals, it's CLEAR that punishment doesn't work for them!

I had to take a parenting class bc my dd was so terribly ADHD when young. I had to learn that I couldn't treat her like a "normal" kid because her responses weren't "normal": ADHD kids crave attention and excitement, even punishment, if that's the only attention they get. We had to modify her behavior through reward. And yanno what??? In my experience as a parent, as a supervisor AND as an employer, reward works quite well.

Anyway, my point is that while punishment and self-punishment work for a lot of people... I daresay even most... they don't work for everybody, and if you want to modify violent criminal behavior you have to look for a new paradigm. Something not involving guilt and forgiveness

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 5:47 AM

BYTEMITE


I think perhaps you're right, and my word choice wasn't the best, so I'll explain what I meant better. You have to remember that I'm coming from the place of once having violent, psychopathic tendencies myself, and I can be harsh in my self-assessment.

What I meant by "not forgiving" myself is more I think that it's important to keep a record of behaviour so that certain patterns that might indicate relapse can be observed.

Unfortunately, in keeping this record, and notifying people close to the person in question, you also risk alienating people who have difficulty integrating in society in the first place. Their problems can also come with a potential stigma in regards to getting jobs and them rebuilding their lives.

This is a very difficult issue for a person with violent and psychopathic tendencies to discuss, because at least in some of us there's some concern about rejection. Some of us respond by deciding to not care what others think and pre-emptively becoming defensive about it, which is itself an aspect of psychopathy, while some us just try to keep it secret.

So far, I've found that the best way for a recovering psychopath to try to address this problem is to admit their past history by notifying any people they may have long-term contact with. By being willing to warn people in advance of the possibility of relapse, not as a threat, but rather out of responsibility or even concern, this helps foster trust and can also allow the person to get help if they're showing signs of relapsing before they do something bad.

Of course, there's also problems with this. Psychopathic sex offenders who move into a neighborhood I've heard are required to give a door-to-door notice. As far as I know, this is an example of where the notification is necessary, but damages the rehabilitation of the individual by alienating them further. In a better world, no one would commit sex-related offenses, because in the case of rape, it's pretty much inexcusable. Prevention also has to be a key element in the fabric here.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 6:11 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


DT hopefully this will catch you b4 you go on hiatus
Quote:

1) yes, you're correct, we should design such a society... but
2) History has proven 100,000 times that peace society is fine until it meets violent society which kills it.
Any society with a better design plan will need to be able to defend itself. I just disagree that this defense will be guns in school. I don't actually see guns in my vision of the future, but I definitely do see their point.

Which is why its important to acknowledge the societies at Mohenjo-Daro, on Thera, and centered around Caral. As far as archeology can tell, none of these civilizations were violent or warlike: they lacked ramparts, armories and the like. Also, apparently, they lacked slums. And as far as archeology can determine, they lasted several hundreds of years and were NEVER overtaken by war... no charring, no mass burials etc. They were apparently felled environmental changes: river bed shifting (Mohenjo-Dar and sister cities), catastrophic volcano (Thera), and deforestation (Caral and sister cities).

Also, game theory suggests that once a certain threshold is reached, cooperation is self-sustaining.

What you think of as "defense" I think of as "feedback". HOW do you build in sufficient feedback- both positive and negative- to make the society responsive to changing circumstances, both internal and external? Feedback can come in a number of ways... a million people taking one step, or 10,000 people going the ultimate distance. Violence is not always necessary... possibly, it is NEVER necessary.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 6:16 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


BYTE: Hmm... there's definitely history there... which I'm certain you don't care to share any further. But that gives me insight into your POV.

I think the idea that we're both tending towards is acknowledge and accept.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 6:36 AM

BYTEMITE


Yes, that's a good way to put it. I think that acknowledgment of a violent history and concerned vigilance would help prevent relapses, and that acceptance is ultimately what would help rehabilitation. Alienation results in defensiveness, which can then bring psychopathic tendencies back out. Acceptance fosters trust, which comes hard to psychopaths, and also calms the feeling that one is under attack and needs to lash back out.

Violent thoughts or imaginings can't always be repressed, but the psychopath can learn how to not act on them despite how gratifying the imagined violence can feel. To be honest, I'm not sure so much if the imaginings are less an element of my psychopathy and more an element of psychosis in my case, but I decided to consider them related because they could result in a psychopathic reaction, and I prefer to treat this as the worst case scenario to cover any risks.

The important thing to remember is that not every psychopath is at the same level of progress. I never really had the psychopathic tendency to manipulate people, to consider everyone an enemy and/or a sucker to be taken advantage of, I was mostly just violent and antisocial. And over the years, I managed to develop an ability to feel regret and to empathize with other people. If I find myself imagining violence, I become disturbed because I can now recognize right and wrong and that I would be hurting people, which I don't want to do.

There are some people who still have yet to develop to this degree. I'm not sure how to help them because I'm not entirely sure how *I* snapped out of my psychopathic behaviour patterns.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 6:46 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


BYTE: It seems to me that you're one of the most consistently reasonable people here. I'm not sure I could put in that effort. Hell, I have a hard time controlling my snarkiness.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 7:02 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Byte

A study was done many years ago on people in jail and their siblings, but sadly, never followed up on.

As I recall people were divided up into four groups - consistently violent, episodically violent, NEVER violent (as I recall, they really did mean never - never once did anyone recall that the person was violent, even as a very young child), and the fourth group - I forget, unfortunately.

The person who did the study was extremely careful to get good results - and what he did was to get hair samples and run mineral profiles on them. The four groups did completely and cleanly divide up into separate quadrants on a chart, depending on the various concentrations of minerals in their hair (lead, calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium etc). What I recall of the chart was that there was not even a near overlap between groups. They were completely distinct.

It may be that there are people such as yourself, who are wholly capable of empathy, but who are (episodically) subject to violent reactions under particular stresses - especially ones that get interpreted as a threat to survival. And those situations are learned, so that while they may not actually BE a physical threat, the emotions react as if it was.

I'm glad to know that you got past that, and that you are working toward stability, happiness and peace.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 7:09 AM

BYTEMITE


I honestly used to be a lot like Wulf, at least in the wanting to take down evil and be heroic sense. I considered myself a champion of sorts, getting revenge and hurting people who hurt me or the few people who I possessively considered to be my friends. I imagined the world to be against them, and me, my violence was directionless.

When I came to my senses, it was a rather extreme shift, and there were some unusual circumstances involved.

You mentioned nihilism, I suppose I still have some of those tendencies, since I mentioned earlier that I WOULD try to run in and break up the gang. And I'd probably do so violently, rather than thinking about the gang members or that I'm hurting them, possibly even crippling them, because I can be vicious and brutal.

But now I do normally try to understand other people's perspectives. When I stop thinking as other people as people, I've learned to catch myself, and force myself to consider their perspective.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 7:37 AM

BYTEMITE


Could be, and the minerals thing is intriguing. Was lead found to be a major component in violent behaviour? That could suggest impacts from not just the social environment, but the environment in general.

The weird thing is, I was never really had to deal with any survival situations. Sometimes I felt emotionally neglected, but never was actually really in any condition I could consider actual neglect, or a betrayal of trust, or traumatizing. When I imagine violence I'm not drawing from past experiences (though I used to get into a lot of pretty serious fights), but rather more constantly analyzing my environment for potential threats and how I would respond.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 7:52 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Byte

It was so long ago that I don't remember the specifics - but yes, lead factored into it. As I recall, what the researcher did was ratio certain minerals that are known to act in opposition biochemically: lead to calcium (or the other way around); sodium : potassium; and I forget the others.

Yes, love which is WITHHELD could be a factor - children live by their ability to affect the parents - to elicit care. Children who are made to feel excluded from what COULD be available can react as if their lives are threatened.
This is opposed to families where, for example, everyone gets treated like shit. Or where no one gets love. In some ways that is easier.

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Silence is consent.

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