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  • Human predators populate our society.”

  •   Stefan Verstappen, Defense Against the Psychopath

  • Psychopaths are human predators.

  • They coerce, manipulate, lie, steal, defraud, abuse, and take life, without feeling guilt

  • or remorse.

  • A leading expert on psychopathy, Robert Hare, estimates that 1% of people are psychopaths;

  • while the clinical psychologist Martha Stout suggests this figure is closer to 4%.

  • Studies indicate that psychopaths are over-represented in the corporate executive world and in politics.

  • In this video we are going to explore the psychology of the psychopath as this knowledge

  • can help us minimize the damage they inflict on us, those we care about, and humanity at

  • large.  

  • “…compared with other major clinical disorders, little systematic research has been devoted

  • to psychopathy, even though it is responsible for far more social distress and disruption

  • than all other psychiatric disorders combined.

  • Psychopaths are found in every segment of society, and there is a good chance that...you

  • will have a painful or humiliating encounter with one.

  • Your best defense is to understand the nature of these human predators.” 

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • Individuals such as Ted Bundy, Charles Manson or Jeffrey Dahmer are who come to mind when

  • most people think of the psychopath and while such individuals are psychopathic, they represent

  • an extreme of this disorder.

  • Most psychopaths, rather than committing violent crimes, engage in immoral acts that fly under

  • the radar of the criminal justice system; they will abuse family members, or neglect

  • their well-being, they will cheat others out of money, pathologically lie, or manipulate

  • others for selfish ends

  • “…many people know nothing about this disorder, or if they do, they think only in

  • terms ofpeople who have conspicuously broken the law many times over, and who, if caught,

  • will be imprisoned...most [psychopaths] are not incarcerated.

  • They are out here in the world with you and me.” 

  • Martha Stout, The Sociopath Next Door

  • The reason most of us refrain from routinely exploiting and harming others is because we

  • possess a conscience.

  • We empathize with the suffering of others, and if we make another suffer, we feel guilt.

  • Psychopaths have no conscience, and they lack the ability to feel empathy and guilt.

  • In fact, a psychopath does not feel love, friendship, or any emotional connection to

  • anyone at all.

  • If psychopaths maintain ties to other people, it is only because they see them as a possession,

  • resource or tool.

  • This emotionless void which exists in the heart of the psychopath makes them capable

  • of repeatedly engaging in acts that harm other people

  • Even experienced and case-hardened professionals find it unnerving when they see a psychopath's

  • reaction to a gut-wrenching event or listen to him or her casually describe a brutal offense

  • as if an apple had been peeled or a fish gutted.”

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • Or as he continues

  • “[The psychopath is] a self-centered, callous, and remorseless person profoundly lacking

  • in empathy and the ability to form warm emotional relationships with others, a person who functions

  • without the restraints of conscience.

  • If you think about it, you will realize that what is missing in this picture are the very

  • qualities that allow human beings to live in social harmony.” 

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • In place of the emotional connections which create meaning in the lives of normal people,

  • the internal life of the psychopath is driven by the pleasure-principle and the need for

  • continual excitement.

  • Many psychopaths are alcoholics, addicted to drugs or sex, and engage in highly risky

  • behaviors.

  • But the most seductive stimulant for a psychopath is power.

  • No matter whether they are a career criminal, an unemployed freeloader, a middle manager,

  • a CEO, a financier, bureaucrat, or politician, the mind of the psychopath is obsessed with

  • controlling other people.

  • Or as Martha Stout explains

  • The prize to be won can run the gamut from world domination to a free lunch, but it is

  • always the same gamecontrolling, making others jump, “winning.””   

  • Martha Stout, The Sociopath Next Door

  • Robert Hare shares a snippet from a psychological report about a psychopath named Earl

  • The most salient thing about Earl is his obsession with absolute power.

  • He values people only insofar as they bend to his will or can be coerced or manipulated

  • into doing what he wants.

  • He constantly sizes up his prospects for exploiting people and situations.” 

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • While from our vantage point the psychopath is suffering from a severe mental disorder,

  • psychopaths see nothing wrong with themselves and are sometimes forthright in stating that

  • theirconditionis a blessing.

  • Their lack of emotional attachments and inability to feel empathy and guilt grant them an unprecedented

  • advantage in what is a dog-eat-dog world - or so they say.

  • Ted Bundy, for example, referred to guilt as anunhealthy social control mechanism

  • thatdoes terrible things to the body.”

  • Given that they see their psychopathy as a benefit, it should come as no surprise that

  • attempts torehabilitatepsychopaths fail miserably.

  • In summarizing the literature on the so-calledtreatmentsfor psychopathy, Robert Hare

  • explains

  • “…many writers on the subject have commented that the shortest chapter in any book on psychopathy

  • should be the one on treatment.

  • A one-sentence conclusion such as, “No effective treatment has been found,” or, “Nothing

  • works,” is the common wrap-up to scholarly reviews of the literature.” 

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • To make matters worse, psychopaths are notoriously difficult to identify.

  • For although inwardly they are as different from us as night and day, outwardly they camouflage

  • their predatory nature with what the 20th century psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley called

  • a “mask of sanity”.

  • Psychopaths are akin to predatory creatures who mimic the appearance and behaviour of

  • their prey.

  • In his article Snake in the Grass, the psychologist Daniel Jones explains that: “There are spiders

  • in Australia that smell and behave like ants: some are so convincing that the ants will

  • allow a spider to live permanently as one of them.

  • This spider will then feast upon its new friends, but it won't eat all the ants, or even a significant

  • number; instead, it extracts resources slowly, sustainably, and over time."

  • (Daniel Jones, Snake in the Grass

  • Like the Australian spider, on the social stage psychopaths often appear normal.

  • In fact, they tend to be more charismatic, charming, and confident than most people.

  • This social allure is partially a function of the fact that psychopaths experience far

  • less stress, fear, and anxiety than the rest of us.

  • But it is also the result of the psychopath's remarkable capacity to lie about their past,

  • their achievements, and their character in a manner which mesmerizes, and sometimes psychologically

  • paralyzes, their victims

  • Most of the victims I have known in my work have reported that their initial involvement

  • with a [psychopathic] person, and their continued association even though she or he caused them

  • pain, was a direct result of how charming she or he could be.

  • Countless times, I have watched people shake their heads and make statements such as, “He

  • was the most charming person I ever met,” or “I felt like I'd known her forever,”

  • orHe had an energy about him that other people just don't have.” 

  • Martha Stout, The Sociopath Next Door

  • Luckily, there are cracks in the psychopath's mask of sanity.

  • One of these cracks is a pathologically inflated sense of self-importance, which psychopaths

  • find impossible to hide.

  • Or as Robert Hare explains

  • Psychopaths have a narcissistic and grossly inflated view of their self-worth and importance,

  • a truly astounding egocentricity and sense of entitlement, and see themselves as the

  • center of the universe, as superior beings who are justified in living according to their

  • own rules.” 

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • The eyes of a psychopath can also reveal their predatory nature, as some victims report that

  • looking into the eyes of a psychopath is akin to looking into the eyes of a reptile; no

  • matter their mood, their eyes are the same - empty, cold, intense, and unsettling.

  • This commonality between the eyes of a psychopath and the eyes of a reptile is one of the sources

  • of the contemporary myth that there exists a race of reptilian humanoids

  • Some people respond to the emotionless stare of the psychopath with considerable

  • discomfort, almost as if they feel like potential prey in the presence of a predator.

  • Others may be completely overwhelmed and intimidated, perhaps even controlled, with little insight

  • into what is happening to them.

  • Whatever the psychological meaning of their gaze, it is clear that intense eye contact

  • is an important factor in the ability of some psychopaths to manipulate and dominate others.“ 

  • Martha Stout, The Sociopath Next Door

  • Another way to see through the psychopath's mask of sanity is to pay attention to their

  • manner of speaking.

  • Psychopaths find it difficult to maintain a coherent narrative; their statements are

  • often contradictory and littered with inconsistencies.

  • They tend to jump from one unrelated topic to the next, and when asked a question they

  • are known to respond in a way that is irrelevant to what was asked

  • Psychopaths are notorious for not answering the question posed them or for answering in

  • a way that seems unresponsive to the question.”

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • Some psychopaths also accompany their speech with exaggerated hand movements.

  • Researchers believe the hand movements of a psychopath are a function of how their brain

  • processes words, ideas, and emotions.

  • But the hand movements also function as a deceptive strategy; they distract listeners

  • and make it harder to catch onto their inconsistencies and lies.

  • Regarding one psychopath undergoing a psychological assessment, Robert Hare explained

  • His narrative was accompanied by expansive hand movements and exaggerated facial expressions—a

  • dramatic display that blinded our interviewer to what was happening.” 

  • Robert Hare, Without Conscience

  • The root cause of psychopathy is unknown, but studies indicate that psychopaths are

  • born with a predisposition to psychopathy; they are, in other words, a product of nature,

  • not nurture

  • “…there is no convincing body of findings linking the core characteristic of [psychopathy]—that

  • is, the absence of consciencewith childhood maltreatment...In fact, there is some evidence

  • that [psychopaths] are influenced less by their early experience than are [nonpsychopaths].” 

  • Martha Stout, The Sociopath Next Door

  • While psychopaths have plagued all societies throughout history, the problem of their existence

  • is amplified by contemporary trends toward political centralization.

  • Governments are reaching their tentacles into ever more areas of life, global institutions

  • are attempting to place the entire globe under the same yoke of tyranny, and developments

  • in technology are creating the potential for a form of totalitarian rule that is far more

  • invasive than anything that has come before.

  • As psychopaths crave power, as they are naturally charismatic, skilled liars, and unconstrained

  • by empathy, fear, anxiety, and guilt, it is reasonable to surmise that some psychopaths

  • gravitate towards, or are actively established in, positions of political power.

  • In his book Political Ponerology, the Polish psychiatrist Andrzej Łobaczewski proposed

  • the name pathocracy for the type of political system in which psychopaths rule, and unless

  • more people are aware of the threat of this predatory class, this type of rule may become

  • a full-blown reality

  • “I shall accept the denomination of pathocracy for a system of government...wherein a small

  • pathological minority takes control over a society of normal people....if an individual

  • in a position of political power is a psychopath, he or she can create an epidemic of psychopathology

  • in people who are not, essentially, psychopathic...Under such conditions, no area of social life can

  • develop normally, whether in economics, culture, science, technology, administration, etc.

  • Pathocracy progressively paralyzes everything.” 

  • Andrzej Łobaczewski, Political Ponerology

Human predators populate our society.”

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