The Nature Of Evil –
Political Ponerology
By Katherine Frisk on January 27, 2016
Primal Causes
Andrew M.
Lobaczewski
After I wrote the
article, Where Does
Evil Come From? a friend put me onto Ponerology. (Thanks KT very
grateful.)
Editor’s note:
Consider this a survival guide to understand, not only the upcoming
presidential election but the general function of government itself.
Stars among the list of characteropaths would be Adelson and Koch, the
Kagen/Noodleman klan and all those associated with the Institute for the Study
of War, the American Enterprise Institute, the Jamestown and Heritage
Foundations and “PJ Media,” always a favorite.g
In “Where Does Evil
Come From”, I explored how trauma results in evil behaviour, in this case
cannibalism, and how, in my opinion, the people of Jamestown should have been
returned to England and put into a place of safety where they would no longer
be a danger to themselves and to others.
Instead they were
returned to the trading outpost and integrated with the new settlers. Their
psychopathic behaviour became “normalized” and integrated into their life view
and was passed on down through generations as a cultural trait, resulting today
in the human sacrifice rituals as we see at Bohemian Grove, the Zombie fetish
and in the film industry such as “ The Hunger Games.” Another example is “Twin
Peaks.”
In Political
Ponerology, Andrew
M. Lobaczewski explores two types of evil, characteropathy and psychopathy,
both of which result in a lack of empathy.
The latter he
describes as people born with a genetic lack of empathy and an inability to
feel real emotion. Any emotion they display has been copied, and they repeat
the facial expressions and body movements of others like actors on a stage. The
psycopath is the hidden hand behind the characteropath and identifies and uses
them to achieve their goals. Of the former he says:
“Those without brain
tissue damage often develop paranoid characteristics as a result of
psychological induction by a paranoid characteropath. A terror-filled
upbringing gives rise to rigid and stereotyped thinking, and makes it hard for
such an individual to develop a healthy world-view.”
The traumatized
people of Jamestown were reduced to cannibalism, and these behaviour traits
were passed on down through generations and became a generational/cultural
world-view. One only has to think of Skull and Bones to get the picture.
Characteropathy can
also be caused by brain damage through illness or accidents. Of frontal
characteropathy caused by brain damage he says:
“Such ruthless and
egotistic beliefs traumatize and spellbind normal people, diminishing their
ability for common sense. Some even come to view frontal characteropaths as
having special powers.
If a parent
possesses this disorder, all their children will usually show evidence of this
fact in their personalities. Lobaczewski characterizes Joseph Stalin as
typifying such a characteropath.
A typical
description of an extreme case may include the following: brutal, charismatic,
snake-charming, issuing of irrevocable decisions, inhuman ruthlessness,
pathological revengefulness, an egotistical belief in their own genius.”
One only has to
think of the 100 million who died as a result of Stalin’s political policies to
get the point, to be followed by more millions who died during Hitler’s rise to
power and World War 2.
He then goes on to
explore the detrimental use of drugs.
Consider the full
implications of Big Pharma that only has profits as a motivation, as opposed to
real health care. Companies like Monsanto who use poisonous Round-up Ready as a
pesticide, which causes cancer. Compulsory vaccines that often result in the
very disease they were supposed to prevent. Then factor into this equation the
narcotics industry and the prolific use of addictive substances, the cocaine
and heroin industry.
“Character anomalies
developing as a result of brain-tissue damage [from medications] behave like
insidious ponerogenic factors. … their influence easily anchors in human minds,
traumatizing our psyches, impoverishing and deforming our thoughts and
feelings, and limiting individuals’ and societies’ ability to use common sense
and to read a psychological or moral situation accurately. This opens the door
to the influence of other pathological characters who most frequently carry
some inherited psychological deviations.” (Lobaczewski, 119-120)
With the rise of
modern medicine came the use of little-understood drugs which leave permanent
damage to the nervous system. Some tumor treatments (i.e., cytostatic drugs)
often attack the more primitive portions of the brain, leaving such individuals
emotionally dull, unable to empathize. While retaining their intelligence, they
become vengeful and praise-craving egocentrics, indifferent to the pain they
cause others.
Certain viruses
(e.g., mumps, diphtheria, polio) and toxins like heavy metals, pesticides, food
additives and household chemicals can have similar effects. Such individuals
are usually psychologically naive and unable to comprehend the crux of a
matter.”
Western society and
culture incorporates all these factors, from those traumatized in wars and
false flag attacks, to the abuse found in detention centres and black sites and
lastly to the drug culture in health care, food and entertainment. What is
inherently not part of normal human behaviour has been inculcated over the last
70 years into a cultural norm, where empathy has become a rare commodity. In
other words the west is a ponerological society.
In Lobaczewski’s
view “Inherited and acquired psychological disorders and ignorance of their
existence and nature are the primal causes of evil.”
The Khazars
for example, and
their influence on eastern Europe, later western Europe and the world, and our
ignorance of their existence, as well as similar personalities in other
cultures would in his estimation be a primal cause of evil. He goes on to
stress:
“The scope of evil
does not respect any boundaries of race, doctrine, or ideology. All races carry
the genes, and all schools of thought are susceptible to their influence. These
pathological factors that influence behaviour form a complex web. It is only in
such a web that the “environmental evil” wherein circumstances can influence a
normal person to commit harmful acts can be understood. …
The ultimate cause
of evil lies in the interaction of two human factors: 1) normal human ignorance
and weakness and 2) the existence and action of a statistically small (4-8% of
the general population) but extremely active group of psychologically deviant
individuals. The ignorance of the existence of such psychological differences
is the first criterion of ponerogenesis. That is, such ignorance creates an
opening whereby such individuals can act undetected.”
One point he
stresses is the psychopathic trait of wearing masks, appearing to be what they
are not. A pertinent example he gives is the very nature of the CIA:
“Ideological Mask:
The group’s stated goals are often at variance with its true nature. Colorful
literature and humanitarian values often mask its true motivations. Take, for
example, the disparity between the CIA’s stated goals, such as “Creating
special, multidisciplinary centers to address such high-priority issues such as
nonproliferation, counterterrorism, counterintelligence, international
organized crime and narcotics trafficking, environment, and arms control
intelligence”, and its widespread use of terrorism, torture, overthrowing
democratically elected governments, installing foreign dictators, drug
trafficking, arms smuggling, etc.
Also, compare the
public humanitarian front of the Anti-Defamation League, with its sordid
history of illegal domestic surveillance, character assassination, and
collaboration with foreign spy organizations.”
In Lobaczewski’s
view, evil has two elements. The born psychopath who is incapable of
experiencing any real emotion nor the experience of empathy for others, and the
characteropath who becomes evil either through trauma, illness, environmental
illness, nurture or brain damage.
Three important
factors come into his analysis.
- Evil
can be identified.
- Those who are evil represent a very small
percentage of the world’s population.
- If we can educate ourselves as to the real nature
of evil and recognize the personalities, we can find solutions to this
problem that has now run like a wildfire across the globe.
Evil is not some
unidentifiable “other” with horns. Evil is very human, and its human
characteristic is to lie. Its nature is to pervert others in order that this
minority group not only rules but influences those around them to adopt their
emotionally devoid and socially irresponsible world view.
What is imperative
in this process is that humanity realizes that in culture, in social
structures, in arts, entertainment, politics and commerce, we have through
their influence been infected like a virus, where abhorrent behaviour has been
inculcated. The unacceptable has become acceptable.
The first step would
be to detoxify ourselves. Kick the habit. Be more aware of what we read, what
we watch and what we expose ourselves to with a full understanding of the
influence it has on us and our behaviour.
The “judgement” is
that the behaviour we have been infected with is destructive.
The “do not judge
others” is in recognizing that there is an illness which has effected most of
us and in our empathy share this knowledge so that we can work towards healing
ourselves and others.
The conclusion is to
start cleaning out the system.
A tally of the
millions who have suffered in the last 100 years alone should be a
screaming siren that empathy is in danger of becoming extinct. And more than
ever we need those famous words : Love one another as I have loved you.
_________
For More Information
See:
Katherine Frisk is a
freelance writer, political commentator and the author of: Jesus Was A
Palestinian.
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