Psychopathy

From Ascension Glossary
(Redirected from Psychopaths)

The conceit of egotism describes a person who acts to gain value for self serving motivation and taking in an excessive amount of resources than that which he or she gives back to others. Usually these are actions of taking in others energy, time and resources and is accompanied with very low ethical standards and displaying low moral character traits. This is also called consumptive modeling or energetic vampirism from the Guardian Founder Races Cosmic Sovereign Law of One model. Egotism may be fulfilled by exploiting the sympathy, trauma, emotion or ignorance of others, as well as utilizing coercive force, deception, manipulation, Mind Control and fraud. The egotist has an overwhelming sense of the centrality of the 'Me' operating in their personal qualities and personal identity. Without developing Self Awareness and ego discipline, the untamed Negative Ego is exploited by Mind Control and further develops itself into serious spiritual pathologies which lead to Narcissism and psychopathy.

Sociopathy and Psychopathy are often used interchangeably, but in some cases the term sociopathy is preferred because it is less likely than is psychopathy to be confused with psychosis, whereas in other cases the two terms may be used with different meanings that reflect the user's views on the origins and determinants of the disorder.Sociopaths are masters at influence, Emotional Manipulation and deception. Very little of what they say actually checks out in terms of facts or reality, but they're extremely skillful at making the things they say sound believable, even if they're just making them up out of thin air.

Lack of Empathy

The NAA can be best understood as a Psychopathic or Sociopathic personality or identity profile with a Lack of Empathy that has no feelings of remorse.

Narcissistic Personalities and Psychopaths have little to no remorse for the harm, destruction or killing they cause any person place or thing. This is described as a Lack of Empathy, which is characterized by the inability to feel, experience emotional states, or discern what another life form may be feeling. Lack of Empathy is a mutation in the DNA of a species that has been disconnected from its Soul-Spirit, and thus suffers from genetic damage and Soul Fragmentation.

Psychopathy – The Third and Final Stages of Insanity

Psychopathy as a personality disorder is characterized by enduring antisocial behavior, Lack of Empathy and remorse, and disinhibited or bold behavior. Behaviorialists suggest that different conceptions of psychopathy emphasize three main observable characteristics to varying degrees:

1. Boldness. Low fear including stress-tolerance, toleration of unfamiliarity and danger, and high self-confidence and social (alpha) assertiveness. Fearless dominance. May correspond to differences in the amygdala and other neurological systems associated with fear responses.

2. Disinhibition: Poor impulse control including problems with planning and foresight, lacking affect and urge control, demand for immediate gratification, and poor behavioral restraints. Impulsive antisociality. May correspond to impairments in frontal lobe systems that are involved in such control.

3. Meanness: Lacking empathy and close attachments with others, disdain of close attachments, use of cruelty to gain empowerment, exploitative tendencies, defiance of authority, and destructive excitement seeking. Coldheartedness (black hearted) and meanness may possibly be caused by either high boldness or high disinhibition (a lack of restraint) combined with an adverse environment.

Psychopathy Checklist; Factors, Facets, and Items

Facet 1: Interpersonal

  • Glibness/superficial charm
  • Grandiose sense of self-worth
  • Pathological lying
  • Cunning/manipulative

Facet 2: Affective

  • Lack of remorse or guilt
  • Emotionally shallow
  • Callous/lack of empathy
  • Failure to accept responsibility for own actions

Facet 3: Lifestyle

  • Need for stimulation/proneness to boredom
  • Parasitic lifestyle
  • Lack of realistic, long-term goals
  • Impulsivity
  • Irresponsibility

Facet 4: Antisocial

  • Poor behavioral controls
  • Early behavioral problems
  • Juvenile delinquency
  • Revocation of conditional release
  • Criminal versatility
  • Many short-term marital relationships
  • Promiscuous sexual behavior


A Clinical Profile of Psychopathic Behaviors:In his book The Mask of Sanity, Hervey Cleckley described 16 "common qualities" he thought were characteristic of the individuals he termed psychopaths:

  • Superficial charm and good "intelligence"
  • Mental rigidity or thought addiction to rational thinking
  • Absence of "nervousness" or psychoneurotic manifestations
  • Unreliability
  • Untruthfulness and insincerity
  • Lack of remorse and shame
  • Inadequately motivated antisocial behavior
  • Poor judgment and failure to learn by experience
  • Pathologic egocentricity and incapacity for love
  • General poverty in major affective reactions (low responses to outward emotions or feelings)
  • Specific loss of insight
  • Unresponsiveness in general interpersonal relations
  • Fantastic and uninviting behavior with drink and sometimes without
  • Suicide threats, sometimes used as control over others and rarely carried out
  • Sex life impersonal, trivial, and poorly integrated
  • Failure to follow any life plan.[1]

Archontic Deception Strategy

I have included compiled psychological research to bring a practical reality to the exploration of the negative ego that is tangible. In many cases we can say that a psychopath may be possessed and in the clutches of dark spirit control, however the purpose of this exercise is to learn factually how to identify such behaviors and stop feeding them. As we go through the practical checklists to learn how to identify behaviors of egotism, narcissism and psychopathy, we can clearly see a range of unchecked ego behaviors impacting many people on the planet. These are the three main stages of promoting, distributing and reinforcing the stages of negative ego behaviors in the AD strategy which grows from egotism all the way into psychopathy and psychotic behavior. We may notice that people near us exhibit some range of these Negative Ego behaviors or many of these negative ego behaviors. Obviously the more dysfunctional behaviors one sees on the checklist when evaluating behavior, would be very informative to the level of severity the person has allowed themselves to be controlled through their negative ego. A serious consequence of psychopathy is no genuine feeling of remorse or empathy.We can apply this checklist to ourselves to inquire what may trigger our own negative ego to rear up from unhealed pain. Or we may apply the checklist for better discernment when making choices of where we place our trust and what we value as a model of strengthening our character. If we observe a person acting out an excessive amount of these behaviors near to us, we may choose to not support them in their delusions. As we build better and practical ways of discerning trustworthiness and competency, we also gain confidence to build stronger intuition in such matters, where the checklist is not required.

As is made clear here in these checklists, the more severe the Negative Ego dysfunction the more potentially disconnected the person is from their heart, intuition, self-awareness and spiritual source. This immediately gives one a gauge to measure what level a person can be trusted, no matter what words they may be speaking.In the severe stages of narcissism and psychopathy, the veneer of seduction, charisma and “mimicry” of empathic reactions that are geared for manipulation to serve one’s egocentric needs, and can be seen much more clearly over time. It is very common for people that base their leadership or authority on controlling behaviors and tyrannical principles, to aggressively manipulate others by creating a façade of charisma from mimicking what they have found people want to hear from their wounded ego parts. Many people do not want to hear or know the truth; they want to be lulled to sleep by fantasy delusions.This is the tough part. We have to ask if we are able to seek the honest factual truth of behavioral interactions or have people feed us lies that are flattering or comfortable for our wounded ego parts.Otherwise we reinforce the delusion in the person/circumstance and we become enablers, allowing them to continue to perpetrate deceptions in the group through their own self-deception. Promoting and enabling delusions leads to pathological thinking and spreads a fabricated reality through “false impressions”. This false impression is the spin on perceptions that are designed to serve the agenda of the Negative Ego, Narcissistic or psychopathic personality.[2]

Power Abuser Attitudes

To better define power abuses that are the most common in defining misogynistic attitudes and narcissitic manipulative behaviors that can be found in the cult environment, these terms provided below also apply to any dominating personality that wants to gain control and take advantage over others, from all walks of life. These are some of the common pointers in determining bullies and aggressors in the surrounding environment that like to abuse their power in any kind of social setting, whether it is in the personal family setting, work and career, marriages and partnerships, or any kind of interaction that occurs in the world at large. Many of the following themes describing abuses are directly related to SRA tactics, and are right out of the Satanic playbook for dominating and controlling others. See Controllers.

Use Intimidation

  • Make the target or others feel afraid for their safety
  • smash and destroy things, especially what they care about
  • display weapons or threaten them with use of weapons
  • destroy property, punch walls or generate chaos and damage in personal spaces
  • abuse pets and loved ones, telling them it's their fault

Use Emotional Abuse

  • put others down, belittling and cruel remarks
  • make others feel bad, incite guilt or shame
  • call others names and humiliate them in front of others
  • play mind games like gaslighting, emotional blackmail
  • make them think they are the crazy one, fill them with self-doubt
  • character assassination

Use Coercion and threats

  • make outright threats for bodily harm or threaten to kill
  • force them to do illegal things to make them complicit
  • threaten suicide or to report them to authorities with false charges
  • make up threats and false situations to manipulate perceptions
  • Deny, Reverse Victim and Offender DARVO

Use Economic Abuse

  • Prevent them from getting a job, sabotage their lives and personal economy
  • force the target to ask or beg for money for basic needs
  • take away money and control the flow of money
  • hide income or ways to access money

Use Male Privilege

  • treat women as servants, breeders and sex slaves
  • dominate the gender roles, establishing what is right or wrong with male and female roles
  • act like the King of the castle, tyrant behavior

Use Isolation

  • control and scrutinize every move the target makes
  • control the flow and access to information, limit unapproved sources
  • use jealousy or self righteousness to justify power abuses
  • compel and control speech, control who and what they have access to

Deny, Blame and Minimize

  • do not take concerns of abuse seriously
  • repeatedly say the abuse is not happening and it's all imaginary
  • shift blame and responsibility to something or someone else
  • make light of the abuse, as if it' not a big deal
  • say the victim is the victimizer, turn around the offense
  • ignore the harm or the results of abuse
  • conveniently change the narrative or pretend to forget what happened


References