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  • Evil is not committed by people who feel uncertain about their righteousness, who question

  • their own motives, who worry about betraying themselves.

  • The evil in this world is committed by the spiritual fat cats, by the Pharisees of our

  • own day, the self-righteous who think they are without sin because they are unwilling

  • to suffer the discomfort of significant self-examination.”

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie Most politicians proclaim themselves to be

  • exemplars of virtue, but many of them compulsively lie, engage in corruption, censor and demonize

  • those who disagree with them, and enact policies that destroy society.

  • Are such politicians aware of their hypocrisy?

  • Do they truly believe in the morally righteous self-image they try to portray?

  • In this video, drawing from the insights of the American psychiatrist M. Scott Peck, we

  • explore the psychology of malignant narcissism in order to better understand the evil that

  • has infected modern politics.

  • M. Scott Peck defines evil asthat force, residing either inside or outside of human

  • beings, that seeks to kill life or liveliness.”, or as he continues:

  • “. . .evil is 'live' spelt backward.

  • Evil is in opposition to lifeSpecifically, it has to do withunnecessary killing, killing

  • that is not required for biological survivalEvil is also that which kills spirit.

  • There are various essential attributes of lifeparticularly human lifesuch

  • as sentience, mobility, awareness, growth, autonomy, will.

  • It is possible to kill or attempt to kill one of these attributes without actually destroying

  • the body.”

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie All of us are capable of committing evil acts;

  • for as Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn notedthe line dividing good and evil cuts through the

  • heart of every human being”.

  • Nonetheless, two types of people are particularly prone to evil actions: psychopaths, and malignant

  • narcissists.

  • The psychopath's potential for evil is well-known, but it is the malignant narcissists who may

  • be responsible for more of the world's evil as they outnumber the psychopaths, and as

  • Peck writes in The People of the Lie:

  • It would be quite appropriate to classify evil people as constituting a specific variant

  • of the narcissistic personality disorderpsychiatrists have begun to pay increasing attention to

  • the phenomenon of narcissism, but our understanding of the subject is still in its infancy.”

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie The central characteristic of narcissism is

  • an inflated sense of self.

  • Narcissists are overconfident and admire themselves to a degree that is not warranted by the reality

  • of who they are, or what they have accomplished.

  • The narcissist's infatuation with a grandiose self-image leads to self-absorption, reducing

  • their capacity to empathize with the feelings and experiences of other people.

  • Narcissism exists on a continuum; some of the milder forms of narcissism, such as identifying

  • with an idealized self-image one creates on social media, are unhealthy, but relatively

  • benign.

  • At the extreme end of the spectrum lies the pathology of malignant narcissism, in which

  • one identifies with an illusory self-image of moral purity.

  • Or as Peck explains:

  • Utterly dedicated to preserving their self-image of perfection, [malignant narcissists] are

  • unceasingly engaged in the effort to maintain the appearance of moral purityWhile they

  • seem to lack any motivation to be good, they intensely desire to appear good.

  • Their 'goodness' is all on a level of pretense.

  • It is, in effect, a lie.

  • This is why they are the 'people of the lie.'”

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie Malignant narcissism is a defensive phenomenon

  • that is rooted in a deep fear of being inferior or inadequate, particularly in matters of

  • morality.

  • Due to childhood trauma, growing up with hyper-critical or narcissistic parents, or for other reasons

  • of upbringing, socialization, or genetics, the malignant narcissist cannot acknowledge

  • that, like everyone else, they make mistakes, behave immorally, and possess a potential

  • for evil that is rooted in human nature.

  • Or as Peck writes:

  • What is the cause of this arrogant self-image of perfection, this particularly malignant

  • type of narcissism?

  • Basically, it is fear.

  • [Malignant narcissists] are continually frightened that they will come face-to-face with their

  • own evil

  • This terror is so chronic, so interwoven into the fabric of their being, that they may not

  • even feel it as such.

  • And if they could, their omnipresent narcissism will prohibit them from ever acknowledging

  • it.”

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie When psychologically healthy people commit

  • an immoral or evil act, they acknowledge their wrongdoing, feel guilt and remorse, and attempt

  • to make amends by returning to the side of the good.

  • Most of us, in other words, have a functioning conscience which places moral constraints

  • on our behavior.

  • The conscience of the malignant narcissist, in contrast, is forced into a state of dormancy

  • by continual acts of self-deception.

  • As the malignant narcissist's identity is anchored in a grandiose self-image of moral

  • goodness, when he morally falters, he resorts to rationalizations, confabulations, and other

  • defense mechanisms to maintain a feeling of moral righteousness, thus bypassing the conscience

  • and escaping feelings of guilt.

  • Because the malignant narcissist silences his conscience with ongoing self-deceptions

  • he can repeatedly lie and behave in ways that oppose life, yet still believe that he is

  • on the side of good.

  • Or as Peck explains further:

  • It is not their sins per se that characterize [malignant narcissists], rather it is the

  • subtlety and persistence and consistency of their sins.

  • This is because the central defect of [malignant narcissists] is not the sin but the refusal

  • to acknowledge itRather than blissfully lacking a sense of morality, like the psychopath,

  • [malignant narcissists] are continually engaged in sweeping the evidence of their evil under

  • the rug of their own consciousnessIt is out of their failure to put themselves on

  • trial that their evil arises.”

  • One of the main self-deceptive mechanisms which the malignant narcissist uses to avoid

  • awareness of his morally imperfect self, is, paradoxically, the very mechanism that leads

  • him to commit some of his most evil acts.

  • This mechanism is scapegoating, which, as Peck notes, “works through a mechanism psychiatrists

  • call projection.”

  • The malignant narcissist unconsciously externalizes the emotions and motivations he cannot accept

  • in himself, attributing them to other people, and he then blames these targets for what

  • in reality are his own moral failings and wrongdoings.

  • “A predominant characteristicof the behaviour of [malignant narcissists] is scapegoating.

  • Because in their hearts they consider themselves above reproach, they must lash out at anyone

  • who does reproach them.

  • Since they must deny their own badness, they must perceive others as badThey never think

  • of themselves as evil; on the other hand, they consequently see much evil in others.”.

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie Narcissistic scapegoating is on full display

  • in the political world.

  • Many politicians today are so desperate to appear morally righteous that they categorically

  • refuse to consider the possibility that their policies, mandates, and social reforms are

  • the primary drivers of much that is wrong with society.

  • When presented with evidence of their catastrophic failures, or when other people challenge their

  • morally flawless self-image, political malignant refuse to accept blame, and instead double

  • down on their policies and heap the blame for society's problems upon their favored

  • scapegoatsbe it other nations, political opponents, or individuals who merely happen

  • to hold differing political views.

  • Or as Peck explains:

  • Strangely enough, [malignant narcissists] are often destructive because they are attempting

  • to destroy evil.

  • The problem is that they misplace the locus of the evil.

  • Instead of destroying others they should be destroying the sickness within themselvesAs

  • life often threatens their self-image of perfection, [malignant narcissists] are often busily engaged

  • in hating and destroying that lifeusually in the name of righteousnessThey sacrifice

  • others to preserve their self-image of perfectionThey create for those under their dominion a miniature

  • sick society.”

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie In observing the sick state of society, we

  • may be tempted to impose the diagnosis of malignant narcissism on any politician we

  • disapprove of.

  • But in doing so we run the risk not only of a misdiagnosis, but worse, of mimicking the

  • malignant narcissist's scapegoating behavior.

  • Or as Peck reflects:

  • Indeed, might I not be guilty of evil myself by so labelling others who disagree with my

  • opinions?

  • Might I not be misusing the concept of evil by facilely applying it to any and all who

  • oppose my judgment?”

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie To avoid misdiagnosing and scapegoating others,

  • we need to become more conscious of our dark side.

  • For the more aware we are of our own moral failures and potential for evil, the less

  • likely we are to project our dark side onto others.

  • Or as Jung writes: “Many projections can ultimately be integrated back into the individual

  • once he recognizes their subjective origin.

  • ” (Carl Jung, Practice of Psychotherapy) But by facing up to our dark side, we do more

  • than withdraw our projections, we also develop a sixth sense to detect the darkness which

  • lurks behind the malignant narcissists' morally pure mask.

  • For as the psychologist Marie Louise von Franz observed:

  • If one knows about the evil possibilities within oneself then one develops a kind of

  • second sight or capacity for getting a whiff of the same thing in other peopleto go

  • down into the depths of one's own evil enables one usually to develop the instinctual recognition

  • of corresponding elements in other people.”

  • Marie Louise von Franz, The Interpretation of Fairy Tales

  • With a heightened capacity to detect evil, we can help others overcome their naivety

  • regarding the reality of human evil.

  • For the reason malignant narcissists are able to gain popular support and persist in positions

  • of political power, is because most people refuse to fathom the fact that someone who

  • tries so hard to appear good, can in reality be morally corrupt.

  • Most people, in other words, do not recognize that evil has a tendency to cloak itself in

  • the good.

  • Or as the psychologist Erich Fromm observed:

  • “…the main fallacy which prevents people from recognizing potential Hitlers before

  • they have shown their true faceslies in the belief that a thoroughly destructive and

  • evil man must be a deviland look his part; that he must bear the sign of Cain so

  • visibly that everyone can recognize his destructiveness from afar.

  • Such devils exist, but they are raremuch more often the intensely destructive person

  • will show a front of kindlinesshe will speak of his ideals and good intentionsHence,

  • as long as one believes that the evil man wears horns, one will not discover an evil

  • man.”

  • Erich Fromm, The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness As more of us become aware of the political

  • evil that is dividing and destroying society, we should try, as much as possible, not to

  • let anger and hatred sully our attempts to be a force of good.

  • Malignant narcissists are easy to hate, but harboring hatred only nourishes their malevolence

  • and makes us easy targets of scapegoating.

  • Hatred also harms us through the stress it generates in the mind and body.

  • Rather than stewing in hatred, we should focus our energies on spreading the truth, as truth

  • is one of the greatest weapons against evilhence why Satan is often referred to as

  • the father of lies”.

  • We should call out the hypocrisy of the political malignant narcissists, expose their lies,

  • mock their overweening moral pride, and watch on as the truth renders their behavior increasingly

  • desperate, erratic, and eventually self-destructive.

  • Pride goeth before the fall”.

  • Or as M. Scott Peck concludes:

  • The evil hate the lightthe light of goodness that shows them up, the light of

  • scrutiny that exposes them, the light of truth that penetrates their deception.”

  • (Peck)

  • M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie

Evil is not committed by people who feel uncertain about their righteousness, who question

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