nwtk2007 wrote:
I know, it's beyond stupid for these l*****t nimrods to continue to lace their words with the narrative script as if we are going to be convinced by them repeating the same lie over and over again. And what is worse, they themselves know it's a lie and yet continue to do it. "The i**********n" "The big steal" The vicious "Trump I**********n" ; give us a break.
And did you enjoy the alligator tears of the phony democrats yesterday? Who TF are they kidding. The had tissues handed out prior to the beginning as a prop for their "sobbing."
I know, it's beyond stupid for these l*****t nimro... (
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I don't know what to think, nwtk, however, I do know that psychology has explored this phenomenon.
The l*****t narrative has become so pervasive, so unchanging that it bears all the symptoms of a "mass psychosis". Carl Jung calls it a "psychic epidemic". (I'd venture to say it is now a p******c.)
I'll put this out here simply because I can find no other explanation that fits so well.
Is a Mass Psychosis the Greatest Threat to Humanity (Video)According to the psychologist Carl Jung the greatest threat to civilization lies not with the forces of nature, nor with any physical disease, but with our inability to deal with the forces of our own psyche. We are our own worst enemies or as the Latin proverb puts it âMan is wolf to manâ. In Civilization in T***sition Jung states that this proverb âis a sad yet eternal truismâ and our wolf-like tendencies come most prominently into play at those times of history when mental illness becomes the norm, rather than the exception in a society, a situation which Jung termed a psychic epidemic.
âIndeed, it is becoming ever more obviousâ he writes âthat it is not famine, not earthquakes, not microbes, not cancer but man himself who is manâs greatest danger to man, for the simple reason that there is no adequate protection against psychic epidemics, which are infinitely more devastating than the worst of natural catastrophes.â Carl Jung, The Symbolic Life
A mass psychosis is an epidemic of madness and it occurs when a large portion of a society loses touch with reality and descends into delusions. Such a phenomenon is not a thing of fiction. Two examples of mass psychoses are the American and European witch hunts of the 16th and 17th centuries and the rise of totalitarianism in the 20th century. During the witch hunts thousands of individuals, mostly women, were k**led not for any crimes they committed but because they became the scapegoats of societies gone mad:
The totalitarian experiments of the 20th century are a more recent, and a more deadly, example of a mass psychosis. In countries such as the Soviet Union, N**i Germany, North Korea, China and Cambodia it was a collective detachment from reality and a descent into delusions and paranoia that permitted the rise of the all-powerful totalitarian governments that destroyed the lives of hundreds of millions:
â. . .the totalitarian systems of the 20th century represent a kind of collective psychosis. Whether gradually or suddenly, reason and common human decency are no longer possible in such a system: there is only a pervasive atmosphere of terror, and a projection of âthe enemy,â imagined to be âin our midst.â Thus society turns on itself, urged on by the ruling authorities.â Joost Meerloo, The Rape of the Mind
When a mass psychosis occurs the results are devastating. Jung studied this phenomenon thoroughly and wrote that the individuals who make up the infected society âbecome morally and spiritually inferiorâ they âsink unconsciously to an inferiorâŚintellectual levelâ they become âmore unreasonable, irresponsible, emotional, erratic, and unreliable,â and worst of all
âCrimes the individual alone could never stand are freely committed by the group [smitten by madness].â Carl Jung, The Symbolic Life
What makes matters worse is that those suffering from a mass psychosis are unaware of what is occurring. For just as an individual gone mad cannot step out of his mind to observe the errors in his ways, so too there is no Archimedean point from which those living through a mass psychosis can observe their collective madness, or as Jung writes concerning the psychic epidemic that swept through Germany under Hitlerâs rule:
âThe phenomenon we have witnessed in Germany was nothing less than [an] outbreak of epidemic insanity. . . No one knew what was happening to him, least of all of the Germans, who allowed themselves to be driven to the slaughterhouse by their leading psychopaths like hypnotized sheep.â Carl Jung, After the Catastrophe
<SNIP> It's a long read.