Aggression

Aggression is overt, often harmful, social interaction with the intention of inflicting damage or other unpleasantness upon another individual. People may intentionally use aggression to control or bully other people, or as a result of poor self awareness and impulse control, and may be completely unconscious of their directed aggression towards others. Aggression is a potent pre-cursor to violence, and as such, great thoughtfulness to discipline aggression and aggressive behavior is needed to develop higher Consciousness and to adhere to the practice of the Law of One. The Archontic Deception Strategy uses forms of Mind Control and conditioning people to accept aggression and violence as normal and desirable behavioral traits, especially in males. This behavioral conditioning is used in order to shape thought forms of the Predator Mind easily into the unaware public and to keep the majority of people operating at the 1D Root Chakra, the lowest frequency spectrum. The main Controller Pillars of Society tend to reward destructive and negative behaviors, such as forms of Aggression, in order to influence people into acting out violent states of being, which incite inner and outer violence between the people of earth, as a divide and conquer agenda.

Aggression may occur either in retaliation or without provocation. In humans, frustration due to blocked goals can cause aggression. Submissiveness may be viewed as the opposite of aggressiveness.

Aggression can take a variety of forms, which may be expressed physically, or communicated verbally or non-verbally: including anti-predator aggression, defensive aggression (fear-induced), predatory aggression, dominance aggression, inter-male aggression, resident-intruder aggression, maternal aggression, species-specific aggression, sex-related aggression, territorial aggression, isolation-induced aggression, irritable aggression, and brain-stimulation-induced aggression (hypothalamus). There are two subtypes of human aggression: (1) controlled-instrumental subtype (purposeful or goal-oriented); and (2) reactive-impulsive subtype (often elicits uncontrollable actions that are inappropriate or undesirable). Aggression differs from what is commonly called assertiveness, although the terms are often used interchangeably among laypeople (as in phrases such as "an aggressive salesperson")