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http://www.sott.net/article/308409-Are- ... d-of-fluff?
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lunarmoth » Mon Dec 14, 2015 9:43 pm wrote:Are you sure all this is really happening, personally and collectively, guruilla? Could it be that on another, less imaginatively traumatic plane, people are going about life doing ordinary things and affirming simple ordinary values like kindness, generosity, friendship, solidarity, hope etc. -- not necessarily because they're duped into accepting an Us vs Them perspective, but because basic sanity and goodness are the default setting for humans -
lunarmoth » Mon Dec 14, 2015 9:43 pm wrote: Women did not run home and kill their children, men didn't sleep with their moms, just because Clytemnestra or Oedipus acted it out on stage.
As Joseph Rheingold says, “Most mothers do not murder or totally reject their children, but death pervades the relationship between mother and child.”33 These death fears become the basis for all later violence, both personal and social. Fay Weldon puts it succinctly: “Once you have children, you realize how wars start.”
http://psychohistory.com/books/the-orig ... -violence/
lunarmoth » Mon Dec 14, 2015 9:43 pm wrote:Those people marching for Charlie Hebdo were acting out a very confused ritual. I'm sure many of them knew it at the time, too. Marching in a demo does not mean one is instantly brainwashed for all time. People fall into trances and they also awaken from trances. They're victims of unconscious forces but then that's why we're all here.
The fears, anxieties and hypervigilance of traumatic stress sets off a cascade of hormones and neurotransmitters that disrupts hippocampal functioning, leaving memories to be stored as dissociated affective states or body memories that are incapable of being retrieved through normal hippocampal indexing. Van der Kolk believes that often these memories are dissociated because they were never really stored in consciousness in the first place. Moreover, the “lack of secure attachments may produce the most devastating effects,” he says, “because consistent external support appears to be a necessary condition in learning how to regulate internal affective states….Dissociation is a method of coping with inescapable stress [allowing] infants to enter into trance states and to ignore current sensory input…” As Eigen puts it in his book, The Psychotic Core, “The aggression perpetrated on the young in the name of upbringing is often tinged with or masks madness. Both parent and child live out this madness in a trancelike state akin to dreaming.” It is these early trance states that are repeated in the social trances of history.
The Emotional Life of Nations by Lloyd deMause
http://psychohistory.com/books/the-emot ... f-history/
lunarmoth » Mon Dec 14, 2015 9:43 pm wrote:And I disagree that Satan is easier to follow than Christ. It's a hell of a lot of work to "abandon ourselves to all our inclinations in defiance of morality and its prohibitions." I get exhausted just thinking about it.
The torture of a victim transforms the dangerous crowd into a public of ancient theater or of modern film, as captivated by the bloody spectacle as our contemporaries are by the horrors of Hollywood. When the spectators are satiated with that violence that Aristotle calls "cathartic" -- whether real or imaginary it matters little -- they all return peaceably to their homes to sleep the sleep of the just.
The word "catharsis" designated first of all the "purification" that the spilled blood procures in ritual sacrifices, which are deliberate repetitions of the process described in the Passion. In other words it is the satanic mechanism at work. This mechanism is also presupposed in the phenomenon of exorcism, which is the subject in the debate that gives Jesus the occasion to raise the question about the satanic expulsion of Satan.
(Girard) http://girardianlectionary.net/res/iss_ ... _32-38.htm
Children who cannot depend upon their caretaker to work through their daily fears have to “swallow down whole” their deadly abusers and store their abusive personalities in their brains, in a dissociated part of the right hemisphere’s amygdalan network, a persecutory personality termed an alter. . . . Even as a little child, Sarah blamed herself for her sexual abuse, then internalized and reenacted the abuse while feeling fused with the abuser.
...
It is this massive “false-alarm system” that leads to reenactments and then to restagings of trauma reenactments with new anxiety-reducing elements that is at the heart of social behavior in humans.
The Origins of War in Child Abuse by Lloyd deMause
As Joseph Rheingold says, “Most mothers do not murder or totally reject their children, but death pervades the relationship between mother and child.”33 These death fears become the basis for all later violence, both personal and social. Fay Weldon puts it succinctly: “Once you have children, you realize how wars start.”
http://psychohistory.com/books/the-orig ... -violence/
lunarmoth » Mon Dec 14, 2015 9:43 pm wrote:And I disagree that Satan is easier to follow than Christ. It's a hell of a lot of work to "abandon ourselves to all our inclinations in defiance of morality and its prohibitions." I get exhausted just thinking about it.
The torture of a victim transforms the dangerous crowd into a public of ancient theater or of modern film, as captivated by the bloody spectacle as our contemporaries are by the horrors of Hollywood. When the spectators are satiated with that violence that Aristotle calls "cathartic" -- whether real or imaginary it matters little -- they all return peaceably to their homes to sleep the sleep of the just.
The word "catharsis" designated first of all the "purification" that the spilled blood procures in ritual sacrifices, which are deliberate repetitions of the process described in the Passion. In other words it is the satanic mechanism at work. This mechanism is also presupposed in the phenomenon of exorcism, which is the subject in the debate that gives Jesus the occasion to raise the question about the satanic expulsion of Satan.
(Girard) http://girardianlectionary.net/res/iss_ ... _32-38.htm
The dark triad [1] is a group of three personality traits: narcissism, Machiavellianism and psychopathy.[2][3][4] Use of the term "dark" implies that people scoring high on these traits have malevolent qualities:
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