

I forget who said "power should only be given grudgingly to those who do not want it," but they're right.kitkat wrote:Yeh... no. Cops, over here at least, are a particular *kind* of human being, of the robotic/authoritarian variety, exactly the type they recruit and psych-screen for. ...
The US is a full-on police state. I pity anyone who thinks otherwise.
<<NON ERRO>>Bigshankhank wrote:The world is a fucking wreck, but there is still sunshine in some places. Go outside and look for it.
Were these the same neighbors that lynched the black neighbors? Or the ones that spit on the Jews? The "minutemen" help each other, their friends and neighbors, shoot Mexicans crossing the border.kitkat wrote:Interesting idea, Pattio, but i gotta lament the need...as such social helping roles were once filled (albeit less "professionally" than I imagine your "civic helping force" to be) by one's friends and neighbors. But in this disconnected and dysfunctional era that sort of mutual connection is fast becoming a thing of the past
Aside from my personal desire to attack the stress of anyone allowed to be "off duty" this still fits with the reform piece. I understand your position here, but it makes me sick (not with you). This is why there must be outcry, participation and reform. The legitimacy of this argument is inspiringly disgusting. No one should feel the need to fear the actions of the police, to include criminals. The guilty should fear the wrath of a jury, and the innocent should fear naught.kitkat wrote:Cops are collectors of human garbage for the most part, but such garbage being *created* by the system they all serve--and not _born_ as such. The tragic scale of this is hard to miss... So I understand--(yet decry)--the need, appreciate the social stresses resultant on both sides, and my position of 'don't call the cops' rises from practical considerations rather than being ideological in nature. Simply put it is reasonable to *avoid* introducing highly stressed, heavily armed and fascistic *men* into one's personal life under virtually any circumstances aside from simple administrative purposes (obtaining a police report for insurance purposes comes to mind).
Well, I think we should first clear up what I meant when I said "us". I meant society at large. That which you'd consider "just people". People you might not like on a personal level, might never grow to like would you meet them. People with different opinions, different habits, but just people. Not raving maniacs, not even bloodthirsty monsters just holding back. But just people.kitkat wrote:Yeh... no. Cops, over here at least, are a particular *kind* of human being, of the robotic/authoritarian variety, exactly the type they recruit and psych-screen for. They are not "us" by any stretch of the term, sorry, not anymore than a freakin' SS camp guard was "us". (And they know it too..their socialization is very circumscribed when it comes to "civilians", which has always been a big hint in the "us or not us" dept.)
I'm not enough of a WWII scholar to really know, but I'd wager that disobeying Führer was a demonstrably and painfully bad idea. It's certainly a bad idea in the current U.S. Military.DerGolgo wrote:...
...All it takes to make such a normal person into an evil "monster" is opportunity, permission to act in ways normally prohibited, removing responsibility for consequences and creating the perception that this is what they're expected to do. Like an authority giving an order. They're "just following orders", right? They're "not responsible".
Tru dat, Br'er Golgo.DerGolgo wrote:...
The banality of evil, it's quite real.
doG love 'em, that's sort've what they're trying to do faced with the reality of the activity, which often involves the potential for serious physical harm. Therein lies the rub.DerGolgo wrote:...With all the things cops, fire fighters, EMTs and what have you have to deal with, I'm glad there's a group of specialists specifically trained to save lives, like fire-fighters and EMTs. If there's a need to (ideally) keep the peace, or at least provide something that makes people think twice before breaking the law, well, a cop should be specifically trained, also. Not in handling guns so much as in field-psychology, defusing situations, encouraging people to be cooperative, all of that.
<<NON ERRO>>Bigshankhank wrote:The world is a fucking wreck, but there is still sunshine in some places. Go outside and look for it.
True, but such coercion alone won't work. Anyone can threaten to kill you if you don't do it - but unless the group of people around you at the time agrees, they can threaten all they like. They needed the group-dynamic, the self-reinforcing groupthink and all of that. The people involved had to fear being ratted out by their comrades, had to fear being punished by their direct superiors, for this to work. And only those "at the coal face" had to do the actual killing in this. Most of the time, the camp guards didn't actually have to put a bullet into anyone, nor operate the gas chambers. They knew what was going on, were seeing it themselves, but didn't have to "get their hands dirty" directly. Unless someone was trying to get over the fence, when they were prohibited from firing warning shots and were under orders to shoot to kill, they were technically prohibited from killing inmates unless except as part of the prescribed process with the "selection". But they often enough would, they'd kill for sport. And their superiors would declare that yep, that guy had been trying to escape, shooting him was legitimate, avoiding any consequences for them. They didn't even have to make an effort to get out of disciplinary action over this themselves. Not just obedience, but the whole behavior involved in torture and murder, was made easy like that. Show them that murdering someone against orders is tolerated, you don't need people have much to fear to carry out the orders to murder.Jaeger wrote:I'm not enough of a WWII scholar to really know, but I'd wager that disobeying Führer was a demonstrably and painfully bad idea. It's certainly a bad idea in the current U.S. Military.DerGolgo wrote:...
...All it takes to make such a normal person into an evil "monster" is opportunity, permission to act in ways normally prohibited, removing responsibility for consequences and creating the perception that this is what they're expected to do. Like an authority giving an order. They're "just following orders", right? They're "not responsible".
Not necessarily an excuse, but an important fact to note. "Kill those people or I'll fucking kill you and/or your family" is a significant and understandable motivation.
--Jaeger
I must ask. Did you quit your job because of what your colleagues were doing? Because of what you were expected to do? Or did you perhaps worry they might assimilate you eventually, that you'd do things you didn't approve of because, given enough time in that environment, you'd stop disapproving of them? The latter is a sentiment I've heard expressed often enough, not relating to law enforcement perhaps, but that people were concerned about becoming what they were expected to be. I don't want to accuse you of being another normal person who feared being corrupted into evil, who is or at least was thus corruptible. I just think it's something anyone should occasionally ask themselves. Do I want to become what I'm currently becoming?kitkat wrote:In this vein, a cop can quit his/her job (I did) and go on to something less unsavory or get another LE job in a more benign department--or they can stay on. If the latter is the choice made, it is difficult to argue that there is not a psychic reward in so doing. Evil only appears banal. Look closer and it is anything but.
Well, I didn't cite it here because it didn't pup up in my head. Can't think of a good analogy in this regard really.kitkat wrote:You know, you love to cite the civil rights era (in the US) whenever you talk about how people can overcome their social programming and prevailing groupthink. You should look at that era again and compare your "just people" argument here to the real-life mass (mis)behavior of that era. Then, perhaps, you'll recognize the paucity of your arguments here.
No. It's blaming the exception that should concern you. The idea that it takes a special, violent psychopath or whatnot to do these things. This would be the apologists direction. "They did it. We were not responsible, it was these special people - only the special people could do it, not us normal people! There, we couldn't have had any responsibility." Blaming these events on exceptional people alone means trying to absolve oneself. If not from responsibility for these events, but from the responsibility to be on the lookout, to not let it happen again. Because if you expect only special people can do that, you won't expect it to happen again, because you don't expect people to be capable of it. Blaming it all on special people and special circumstances is at the very least complacent, ignoring that there are plenty of people capable of doing such and similar things, they are around right now.kitkat wrote:Also, i must admit i find the attempts at "normalization" of various and sundry nazi nastyness concerning. Is this Germany's bad conscious-salve nowadays-- "it's wasn't *us*! Why, anyone would have done the same thing?"? I certainly hope not. I thought that today's Germans rather recognized that their historical culture, one of extreme authoritarianism and militarism (naturally) dominated by sociopaths, was the causal culprit in that dark time..and since severely mitigated in deference to that fact. IOW, as before, a plain yet horribly awful mistake that won't be permitted to occur again. But if current economic dominance leads to a revival of rationalizations such as this "evil is just people" BS, then I have to wonder if that old bad culture is bubbling up yet again. I find this a scary thought--particularly with the concomitant rise in militarism in my OWN country--and the social evils (such as corrupt & sadistic police forces) that sort of culture inevitably begets.
So from reading this literature (and kudos for a source) you propose that humankind is subdivided into three categories that are essentially leader (sadist) follower (masochist) and zen. However I find it difficult to utilize that literature to galvanize your argument (if rench reads this, he's cringing here). Given nothing else but the concept of enlightenment would not the greater majority of humanity always fall within masochistic form following a few sadists? The sadists of course requiring each other as rivals in order to fuel their masochistic population base into malleable and more deeply entrenched followers. I say this to further submit that there would truly only then be two forms of human, the sadist who believe they've achieved zen, and the masochist who believe they are enroute to the same end.My feeling, however, is that such are most definitely are not "just people" but distinct aberrations within the larger population (see: The Authoritarian Personality).
I feel the urgent urge to clarify. I don't think you have accused me of any fault, mind, I just think my previous statements may have been, well, less than entirely comprehensibly articulated by, well, me. I left out some crucial illustration of what I'm fairly certain is my opinion, I think.Mk3 wrote: I do adhere to the concept that people are intrinsically good, in the same vane but antipodal to DG's apparent view (not faulting brotha DG just illustrating).
Sounds like my bedroomSticky, slippery foams. Inflatable enclosures
Oh yeah, we suck at it. We're not trained or equipped for it, and a big part of the reason many of us get in to this line of duty is so it WON'T be the case back home. The last thing I want to see at home is some fat cop with an M4 (and probably fuck awful muzzle discipline). I want home to be Barney Fife with one bullet in his pocket. That is why I get so pissed when I hear of police using military tactics and hear it legitimized on the news. Body armor is passive, have at it, door breakers sure why not, siege tactics? No. If it is that bad call the governor and have the National Guard do it for you. If its still too big, they can involve federal forces. Stick to being Barney and Andy, we all liked Barney and Andy, even if Ron Howard is the poster child for soulless gingers.We all know that part of what the US is screwing up around the world is expecting our soldiers to be diplomat/police
the bystanders would have been =http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dazzler_(weapon)]DAZZLED by the police, vs you know, shot. It baffles me that they would even consider discharging a weapon in the same environment they would never conceive of tossing out tear gas. If you are not willing to clear out the sinus of the masses then you aren't ready to rain lead on them.advanced non-lethal weapons technologies
Day-one of riot control training: Enjoy a dose of pepper spray, right in the kisser!Joss Whedon wrote:You oughta be shot. Or stabbed, lose a leg. To be a surgeon, you know? Know what kind of pain you're dealing with. They make psychiatrists get psychoanalyzed before they can get certified, but they don't make a surgeon get cut on. That seem right to you?
yes.DerGolgo wrote: I must ask. Did you quit your job because of what your colleagues were doing? Because of what you were expected to do?
not at all. That "people" are capable of being psychologically aberrant is already apparent. Rather it gives the opportunity for identification and analysis of the type, which in turn is critical to screening such away from power. *That* is how you stop such things from happening again.if you expect only special people can do that, you won't expect it to happen again, because you don't expect people to be capable of it.
My point exactly. Ordinary people may well be *coercible* into acts of evil, but willingly doing so--and with willing repetition--is the difference between the psychopathic and the rest of us. BTW, where exactly do you think the various psyche issues that combat vets derive from? There is a reason 30% of Vietnam vets have diagnosable levels of PTSD. Include the undiagnosed, related conditions, and relate that percentage to the percentage of those who actually saw significant combat and the relationship between being coerced to do evil (all combat in this war was inherently evil) and the reasons for the resultant psych damage upon those coerced into such acts becomes clear.It may take a genuinely evil person to plan such things, to give the orders.
Well, i doubt we'll ever agree on this. If you expect evil can be instigated by anyone, you'll suspect anyone, fear of one's fellows will become pervasive, personal familiarity will lose its ability to mitigate such universal fear and society will come unglued as a result...much like what has been happening in my country over my lifetime. This is unnecessarily tragic--as the vast majority of people are utterly incapable of casually perpetrating evil acts--rather this behavior lies within the realm of the psychopath virtually exclusively. That an aspect of psychopathy is the ability to act as a social chameleon is the primary reason so many can be deceived into thinking they are "just like us". The Disturbing Link Between Psychopathy And LeadershipIf you expect that evil is done only by special people, you may end up overlooking it. Most people will see someone doing something and will think "that's a good guy, so what he's doing must be good". Which is how, again and again, fuckers got away with stuff throughout history.
Nonsense. Anyone has the ability to choose. What one sees as a mistake, what one sees as psychically uncomfortable, repugnant etc and the choice as to whether to repeat or refuse/avoid repeating. These are individual responsibilities and have nothing to do with whether or not one recognizes that the individual(s) acting to coerce one into these questionable behaviors is or is not recognized as a psychopathic personality.If you can blame it all on "special", evil people entirely, you won't bother considering whether you should blame yourself.
Only in the sense of "we" being the culture which fostered such results. That and almost total ignorance of the tools of manipulation psychopaths use upon the general population to induce desired behavior/beliefs (propaganda was *invented* during this time period and so virtually NO one had any ability to defend against it's effects.)It was US. WE did that.
No not everyone is "capable of actually wielding the machete" to be sure. Glad you at least see that much by now. But as to the latter part of your statement above, that may hold relatively true for the ignorant but for those with even a passing familiarity with psychopathy (and related disorders), it is definitely *not* true. How well does one need to know another before an accurate assessment can be made of their empathy levels and the degree their own self-interest dominates their behavior? (The latter being particularly relevant to the case of cops.) Not very long at all. You see we know what their characteristics are now. This makes it possible to identify the type. Forewarned is forearmed.Not everyone may be capable of actually wielding the machete, or leading the gang armed with those to their victims. But enough are. And those that are, they don't appear out of the ordinary until they do, and they don't think of themselves as out of the ordinary.
Yes, i do see this differently. I am also aware of history and I am also sadly aware of the fatal flaws of this species, BUT--these flaws are not the universal ability to perpetrate evil but rather they lie in ignorance, instincts of self-preservation that allow coercion to work so effectively for those who apply it, a species-wide proclivity for self-delusion, particularly when it comes to uncomfortable/disconcerting realities and a pervasive preference for emotional rather than rational thinking. These are the mass species' weaknesses which psychopaths have historically been so adept at exploiting.I think our basic difference is our view of humanity. You seem to consider the inability to commit an atrocity to be the norm, anything else to be the exception. You hold our species in fairly high regard.
I disagree, and I find that history seems to hold up my disagreement. The norm is that we are still driven by deep, tribal instincts, messed up self-perceptions, the drive for not just physical but emotional self-preservation and fear. We are all cut from different cloth, and some of us surely are incapable of doing such things. But so many people are capable of doing it, it is just as much part of the spectrum of personalities that is normal as the other. Being able to do evil is quite normal.
It should--at the very least, when it is contemplated in a prejudicial/cautionary fashion, it should instigate an in-depth examination of the evidence/logic justifying such division. And...if such evidence is poor or contrived or lacking entirely (as is the case in racism, homophobia, sex/gender, etc) then such proposed prejudicial divisions should be not only dismissed but condemned. However if it is rationally based --it should be adopted--as any exposed, data-supported reality would be. Also, one should be wary of the emotionally-based tendency to generalize to the specific using either certainty or unjustified-by-data levels of probability--as doing so is a fallacy and one which provides the foundation for much unjustified prejudice.mk3 wrote: This is what concerns me, classifying people.
Quite what I've been saying from the beginning. Take a normal person, put them in the right environment and circumstances, and they'll do it. They may even end up doing it without specific orders, but because they adopt their leader's rationale as their own.kitkat wrote:Therefore any individual subject to such a culture, or a willing adoptee of such, has a high probability of acting in a psychopathic manner.
Ah. Casually. You're introducing a new word here. I wasn't talking about anyone doing any of this without plans, unintentionally, out of the spur of the moment or without consideration for the consequences. Just considering different consequences than they should. An SS camp guard shooting a prisoner, even if they did it for sport, didn't necessarily do it "casually". They may have wanted to impress a superior, or felt the need to be part of the pack and to demonstrate their membership thusly.kitkat wrote:If you expect that evil is done only by special people, you may end up overlooking it. Most people will see someone doing something and will think "that's a good guy, so what he's doing must be good". Which is how, again and again, fuckers got away with stuff throughout history.
Well, i doubt we'll ever agree on this. If you expect evil can be instigated by anyone, you'll suspect anyone, fear of one's fellows will become pervasive, personal familiarity will lose its ability to mitigate such universal fear and society will come unglued as a result...much like what has been happening in my country over my lifetime. This is unnecessarily tragic--as the vast majority of people are utterly incapable of casually perpetrating evil acts--rather this behavior lies within the realm of the psychopath virtually exclusively. That an aspect of psychopathy is the ability to act as a social chameleon is the primary reason so many can be deceived into thinking they are "just like us". The Disturbing Link Between Psychopathy And Leadership
Unfortunately, some people choose not to choose which order they carry out. Enough people are so weak willed, so honed through their life to respect authority, that neither the psychopathic personality of their leaders, nor the psychopathic nature of their orders, can drive them away. They desperately want someone to follow, they emotionally need that. And they can't deal with having picked the wrong one to follow, with having not seen the bad side of them or of their plans. Or how would you explain the inevitable occurrence of apologists, desperate to explain why the atrocities committed by their leader weren't atrocities, but necessary.kitkat wrote:If you can blame it all on "special", evil people entirely, you won't bother considering whether you should blame yourself.
Nonsense. Anyone has the ability to choose. What one sees as a mistake, what one sees as psychically uncomfortable, repugnant etc and the choice as to whether to repeat or refuse/avoid repeating. These are individual responsibilities and have nothing to do with whether or not one recognizes that the individual(s) acting to coerce one into these questionable behaviors is or is not recognized as a psychopathic personality.
Ah. I think I've found our disagreement. You figure the psychopaths who make others carry out their evil plans are the ones doing evil here, the others are victims. At least that's what this sounds like. Victims of psychological weaknesses and of the coercion these weaknesses allowed to be applied to them. Fine, fine, interesting proposition. And I don't even particularly disagree with it - not entirely.kitkat wrote:I think our basic difference is our view of humanity. You seem to consider the inability to commit an atrocity to be the norm, anything else to be the exception. You hold our species in fairly high regard.
I disagree, and I find that history seems to hold up my disagreement. The norm is that we are still driven by deep, tribal instincts, messed up self-perceptions, the drive for not just physical but emotional self-preservation and fear. We are all cut from different cloth, and some of us surely are incapable of doing such things. But so many people are capable of doing it, it is just as much part of the spectrum of personalities that is normal as the other. Being able to do evil is quite normal.
Yes, i do see this differently. I am also aware of history and I am also sadly aware of the fatal flaws of this species, BUT--these flaws are not the universal ability to perpetrate evil but rather they lie in ignorance, instincts of self-preservation that allow coercion to work so effectively for those who apply it, a species-wide proclivity for self-delusion, particularly when it comes to uncomfortable/disconcerting realities and a pervasive preference for emotional rather than rational thinking. These are the mass species' weaknesses which psychopaths have historically been so adept at exploiting.
kitkat wrote:Therefore any individual subject to such a culture, or a willing adoptee of such, has a high probability of acting in a psychopathic manner.
If that culture can do it to any individual, what do they need the screening for? The flipside: if any individual can be made to behave like that, how sure can you be that it was their variety of humanity that made them act that way, and not the culture that turned them that way? In other words: If they are, indeed, psychopaths now, were they perhaps normal, once?kitkat wrote:Yeh... no. Cops, over here at least, are a particular *kind* of human being, of the robotic/authoritarian variety, exactly the type they recruit and psych-screen for.
DAZZLED Just makes me laugh till I fart.the bystanders would have been DAZZLED by the police, vs you know, shot.
US armed forces do, and it sucks, a lot, it wears off in a few hours, but the memories of puking in your shirt last a lifetime (because some prick will always be there to remind you). In fact we endure most of the crap that has been called "torture" as a part of training, but that is a topic for another post. You can absolutely be awake for 54 hours and then run 10 miles, you might not remember it that well at the end though. What they didn't prepare me for was being knocked on my ass by jet engines while my eyes were frozen shut.Day-one of riot control training: Enjoy a dose of pepper spray, right in the kisser!
I mean, they still put infantrymen through the tear-gas hut for gas-mask training, or don't they?
LOL! Nice try! No, quite NOT what you've been saying and I quote you: "All it takes to make such a normal person into an evil "monster" is opportunity, permission to act in ways normally prohibited, removing responsibility for consequences and creating the perception that this is what they're expected to do."DerGolgo wrote:I read your words, and it shakes out to me as the following: while a psychopath may be the one who decides to do the evil, a regular person, without any psychological pathology, can be coerced to act on the psychopath's behalf and do the evil deed with their own hands?
To whit:Quite what I've been saying from the beginning. Take a normal person, put them in the right environment and circumstances, and they'll do it. They may even end up doing it without specific orders, but because they adopt their leader's rationale as their own.kitkat wrote:Therefore any individual subject to such a culture, or a willing adoptee of such, has a high probability of acting in a psychopathic manner.
But it is subjecting that person to that culture, is it not? In that whole paragraph, you do not mention once that such culture would be a culture of coercion. You explain rather eloquently, instead, that negative outcomes like collateral damage are culturally accepted, how the use of deadly force is justified ... yet you don't mention the cops being coerced into violence.kitkat wrote:LOL! Nice try! No, quite NOT what you've been saying and I quote you: "All it takes to make such a normal person into an evil "monster" is opportunity, permission to act in ways normally prohibited, removing responsibility for consequences and creating the perception that this is what they're expected to do."DerGolgo wrote:I read your words, and it shakes out to me as the following: while a psychopath may be the one who decides to do the evil, a regular person, without any psychological pathology, can be coerced to act on the psychopath's behalf and do the evil deed with their own hands?
To whit:Quite what I've been saying from the beginning. Take a normal person, put them in the right environment and circumstances, and they'll do it. They may even end up doing it without specific orders, but because they adopt their leader's rationale as their own.kitkat wrote:Therefore any individual subject to such a culture, or a willing adoptee of such, has a high probability of acting in a psychopathic manner.
*That*...is not coercion. That is just permission.
Midliferider wrote:Wish I could wipe this shit off my shoes but it's everywhere I walk. Dang.
Pattio wrote:Never forget, as you enjoy the high road of tolerance, that it is those of us doing the hard work of intolerance who make it possible for you to shine.
xtian wrote:Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken
Well, that's a sudden change of tack. Okay, cool.kitkat wrote:DG i'm bored, sorry. We made our respective points and that's that, far as i'm concerned.