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Why Does the World Feel Wrong? by Will Groves Exclusive to STR January
27, 2009 Consider
these events:
Overt
criminality by leaders and passive, unclear thinking by the proles have
become the norm. The two go
together, creating a symbiotic ecosystem of tyranny.
Fraud, theft, and murder have become widespread, just as the scale
of lies told and believed have reached new heights.
Irresponsibility has become socialized while people in the honest
pursuit of good get thwarted. Those
of us who want little more than peace and freedom don’t run the world.
Pursuing freedom contradicts controlling others, so we can reason
that people who pursue power have some motivations separate from our own. I
have not fully comprehended the implications of this until recently.
Despite all the evidence to the contrary, I had assumed that
the people who wield power feel similarly about moral issues as I do—I
just couldn’t see why they commit and justify unethical behavior.
I already knew that states operate according to a code that the
rest of us don’t follow in our own lives.
Nevertheless, I assumed that a man who acts without regard to moral
laws must feel guilty about it. Then,
one day, I stumbled onto this idea: Suppose he doesn’t. With
only small ambitions, he probably behaves like a common criminal, a
predator. He lies to gain
advantage, uses force to get his way, and steals without conscience. Not
feeling guilty about unethical behavior motivates him to instigate further
criminal acts. Small
crime operations have one big problem, namely, the risk of getting caught.
The prospect of prison appears
unappealing, yet even with the high likelihood of arrest and capture
during a career, common criminals approach their field with little
sophistication and often pay the price.
Other like-minded people see ways to avoid these problems.
Just as normal people develop interests growing up and figure out
how to pursue them at higher levels, a criminal mind can do the same.
With greater intelligence and patience, he can pursue an ambitious
career of criminality. With
this objective in sight, one can easily see the state as the most
expedient means to accomplish it. Once
a criminal joins forces with the state by becoming an employee, he can lie
to his advantage, use force to get his way, and steal without conscience,
just as the small-time operator does.
The opportunities for mischief have no limits through thoughtful
job selection. For example, if
a man took pleasure in making innocent people squirm, he could become a
police officer and plant evidence. For
another, if he wanted to murder people, he could become a military officer
and “accidentally” call in the coordinates of a house he’d like to
see bombed. Whatever they do,
the state shields them from the natural consequences of their actions.
In all likelihood, if smart, they never get caught, never get
punished, and probably get commended. Too
often, I have assumed that the people working for the state take the jobs
only because of the easy hours and good pay, benefits, and retirement.
For the predator, though, it offers all these things with the
appetizing fringe benefit of satisfying their criminal urges without the
risk of retribution. It
turns out this personality type has a scientific name:
psychopathic.
Lest you think I merely kid you, I quote from Scientific
American: Superficially
charming, psychopaths tend to make a good first impression on others and
often strike observers as remarkably normal. Yet they are self-centered,
dishonest and undependable, and at times they engage in irresponsible
behavior for no apparent reason other than the sheer fun of it. Largely
devoid of guilt, empathy and love, they have casual and callous
interpersonal and romantic relationships. Psychopaths routinely offer
excuses for their reckless and often outrageous actions, placing blame on
others instead. They rarely learn from their mistakes or benefit from
negative feedback, and they have difficulty inhibiting their impulses. This
seems like a nearly perfect description of those who seek political power.
That same article goes on to say that fields over-represented by
psychopaths may include “politics, business and entertainment.
Yet the scientific evidence for this intriguing conjecture is
preliminary.” It turns out
that much stronger evidence for this exists than the article lets on.
In
the book Political Ponerology,
Andrew Lobaczewski claims that about 6% of the people within a population
have psychopathic characters. The
implications of this, which he recognized soon after World War II, stagger
the mind. Moreover, he
suggests that another 12% of the population has high susceptibility to
psychopathic thought. In a
world dominated by hierarchical structures, these people sieze control of
the key positions and create a so-called “pathocracy.”
Lobaczewski continues, writing in ways that clearly anticipate the
current reality: Within
this [pathocratic] system,
the common man is blamed for not having been born a psychopath, and is
considered good for nothing except hard work, fighting and dying to
protect a system of government he can neither sufficiently comprehend nor
ever consider to be his own. An ever-strengthening network of psychopathic
and related individuals gradually starts to dominate, overshadowing the
others. Normal
people have not considered the possibility that some people who seem
ordinary could have no moral inhibitions.
They default to believing that their leaders have good intentions.
Employees of psychopaths thus carry out plans of their bosses
blinded to the reality. No
matter the scope of the “failure,” the leadership can always point
back to their stated good intentions and shield themselves from the
gallows. In fact, the more
harm they create, the stronger the call becomes to vest more power in
their failed agency so they can “prevent” anything of the sort from
ever happening again. Their
MO focuses on figuring out how much they can get away with, and we see no
signs they have begun to approach the limits the public will accept.
Irrespective of the ordeals they create, the vast majority of
people give them the benefit of the doubt time and time again and continue
in their support of the system. This
belief among good people led to the democide of the 20th
Century that continues unabated today. After
considering the possibility that psychopaths have taken control of
society, we find volumes of evidence to support the hypothesis.
Did Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and Pol Pot sympathize with their victims
or have any sense of guilt? More
recently, among Bush, Cheney, Rove, Rumsfeld, or It
suggests people like this have control over the levers of power
everywhere. We live at a time
when the population at large cannot achieve its wants, yet few seem to
know why. As one example,
polls consistently indicate that educational matters concern the public,
yet decade after decade, schooling gets quantitatively worse.
What a mystery! Evidently,
if we believe our well-meaning masters, 2,000 years of Western
civilization has not yet determined effective ways to transmit key
knowledge to younger generations.
However, what happens if we suspend our belief in their benevolence
for a moment and consider other possibilities?
If schools fail to achieve their stated goals over several decades,
might some groups see this as a success? Inhibiting
critical thinking in the masses obviously benefits the state and psychopaths.
When overtly self-serving, irresponsible, illegal, immoral,
irrational behavior gets treated as normal, we can conclude that the
educational system works quite well for our masters.
I have given but one example, yet the multitude of state functions
exists to provide every variety of psychopathic interest with a job.
Moreover, we should consider that the state not only acts like a
recruitment center for psychopaths, but that psychopaths probably invented
the state to take advantage of the rest of us.
I can give you no better explanation for the existence of an
organization that fails in every ethical dimension and invokes
psychopathic thinking at every turn than this. Our battle for liberty appears not just as a conflict between those who want freedom versus those who want control, but instead as the battle between normal people and the psychopaths. I have found incredible explanatory power of our world within the psychopathic hypothesis: The world feels wrong because psychopaths run it. In a country trained to discount and ridicule all ideas more than a standard deviation from the average, coherent explanations of observable social phenomena don’t get much press. Without understanding physical laws, we would never have gained the massive improvements in our quality of life from technological developments. Similarly, without understanding our social systems, we will never escape from the tyranny unleashed on us by psychopaths. We should spread the word and explore this rich vein of thought with vigor. Will Groves is an
old-school craftsman who knows good work when he sees it. |