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Psychopathic Groups and Distorted Definitions
Brent Jessop
Intel Strike
Thursday, June 19, 2008
The use of an inner, or esoteric, language to intentionally
deceive is a trademark characteristic of the psychopathic personality
or a psychopathically dominated group. This is nicely summarized in Andrew
M. Lobaczewski’s Political Ponerology: A Science on the Nature
of Evil Adjusted for Political Purposes (1998) [1]:
“An ideology of a secondarily ponerogenic association
[secondary stage of infiltration by psychopathic individuals] is formed
by gradual adaptation of the primary ideology to functions and goals
other than the original formative ones. A certain kind of layering or
schizophrenia of ideology takes place during the ponerization process.
The outer layer closest to the original content is used for the group’s
propaganda purposes, especially regarding the outside world, although
it can in part also be used inside with regard to disbelieving lower-echelon
members. The second layer presents the elite with no problems
of comprehension: it is more hermetic, generally composed by slipping
a different meaning into the same names. Since identical names signify
different contents depending on the layer in question, understanding
this “doubletalk” requires simultaneous fluency in both
languages.
Average people succumb to the first layer’s suggestive
insinuations for a long time before they learn to understand the second
one as well. Anyone with certain psychological deviations, especially
if he is wearing the mask of normality with which we are familiar [a
psychopath], immediately perceives the second layer to be attractive
and significant; after all, it was built by people like him. Comprehending
this doubletalk is therefore a vexatious task, provoking quite understandable
psychological resistance; this very duality of language, however, is
a pathognomonic [specific characteristics of a disease] symptom indicating
that the human union in question is touched by the ponerogenic process
to an advanced degree.” - 116
Let us take a look at a group that continually
redefines words in an attempt to deceive, namely The Club of Rome.
(Article continues below)
The Club of Rome is a premiere think tank composed of
approximately 100 members including leading scientists, philosophers,
political advisors, former politicians and many other influential bureaucrats
and technocrats. The organization and its members have been heavily involved
in the environmental movement, including such individuals as Maurice Strong,
Aurelio Peccei, Daisaku Ikeda and Mikhail Gorbachev to name but a few.
[From all quotes below, italicised text is original
emphasis and bolded text is added by myself.]
Self-Reliance versus Collective Self-Reliance
From RIO: Reshaping the International Order: A Report
to The Club of Rome (1976) [2]:
“Self-reliant development, with its reliance
on local rather than imported institutions and technologies, is a means
whereby a nation can reduce its vulnerability to decisions and events
which fall outside its control: a self-reliant community will be more
resilient in times of crisis. And since it is a style of development
predicated upon a recognition of cultural diversity, it is an instrument
against the excessive homogenization of cultures.” - 66
The above quote may sound like a normal
definition of a self-reliant country. But this is an odd statement coming
from a group which is constantly pushing the idea of interdependence.
We need to look at their inner definition of self-reliance, that is collective
self-reliance.
“Self-reliance cannot mean ’self-seclusion’,
isolationism or autarky. No nation, given the nature of global interdependence,
can exclude itself from the international system. The world has become
too complex for that.” - 68
“Self-reliance applies at different levels: local,
national and international [...] [internationally], it becomes
collective self-reliance.” - 68
Territorial Sovereignty versus
Functional Sovereignty
From RIO: Reshaping the International Order:
“Given the growing list of problems confronting
mankind, every effort must be made to stimulate processes which point
in directions which can be deemed desirable. This would certainly apply,
for example, to the tendency towards the increasing centralization of
decision-making involving issues beyond national frontiers should be
viewed as a logical continuation of the process of change and a precondition
for the effective assertion of national sovereignty.” - 103
The “increasing centralization
of [international] decision-making” being a “precondition
for the effective assertion of national sovereignty” may seem contradictory.
To rectify this misconception, we again need to look to the inner meaning
of the word sovereignty. The Club of Rome redefines it from the commonly
implied “territorial sovereignty” to what they call “functional
sovereignty”.
“Acceptance of these elements calls for a reinterpretation
of the concept of national sovereignty. Participation and social control
suggest a functional rather than a territorial interpretation
of sovereignty, or jurisdiction over determined uses rather than geographical
space. Conceptually, this interpretation will make possible
the progressive internationalization and socialization of all world
resources - material and non-material - based upon the ‘common
heritage of mankind’ principle. It also permits the secure
accommodation of inclusive and exclusive uses of these resources, or,
in other words, the interweaving of national and international jurisdiction
within the same territorial space [...] Ultimately, we must air for
decentralized sovereignty with the network of strong international
institutions which will make it possible.” - 82
The Common Heritage of Mankind
It is not always necessary to redefine old words or slogans,
sometimes it is more appropriate to create new misleading ones to describe
old ideas. The “common heritage of mankind” (or “functional
ownership”) is a good example of this. If you are “left leaning”
this concept will sound like fascism, if you are “right leaning”
this concept will sound like communism. Regardless of the label you wish
give it, the end result is centralized control over all resources.
From RIO: Reshaping the International Order:
“Effective planning and management calls for
the fundamental restructuring of the United Nations so as to give it
broad economic powers and a more decisive mandate for international
economic decision-making [...] It is also hoped that major changes in
the United Nations structure will be made over the next decade so that
it is not only able to play a more forceful role in world political
affairs but it is also able to become more of a World Development Authority
in managing the socio-economic affairs of the international community.
[...] The most effective way of articulating the planning and management
functions of this organization would be through a functional confederation
of international organizations, based upon existing, restructured and,
in some instances, new United Nations agencies - to be linked through
an integrative machinery. This system and its machinery, if it is really
to reflect interdependencies between nations and solidarity between
peoples, should ultimately aim at the pooling and sharing of all resources,
material and non-material, including means of production, with a view
to ensuring effective planning and management of the world economy and
of global resource use in a way which would meet the essential objectives
of equity and efficiency.” - 185
“In the long term, and assuming progress towards
the creation of an equitable international economic and social order
leading to a pooling of material and non-material resources, mineral
resources will need to be viewed as a common heritage of mankind.”
- 148
Global Governance not Global
Government
From The First Global Revolution: A Report by the
Council of The Club of Rome (1991) [3]:
“Not only have we to find better means of governance
at national and international levels, but we have also to determine
the characteristics of a capacity to govern. Global ‘governance,’
in our vocabulary, does not imply a global ‘government,’
but rather the institutions of cooperation, co-ordination and common
action between durable sovereign states.” - 100
In Club of Rome terminology, don’t
forget, “durable sovereign states” means “durable functionally
sovereign states”. From the same book the term governance, as in
global governance, is expanded on:
“We use the term governance to denote
the command-mechanism of a social system and its actions, which
endeavors to provide security, prosperity, wherence, order and continuity
to the system. It necessarily embraces ideology of the system, which
may (democratic) or may not (authoritarian) define means for effective
consideration of the public will and accountability of those in authority.
It also includes the structure of government of the system,
its policies and procedures.” - 160
Unity Through Diversity
The following quote is from a book containing a series
of lectures organized at the behest of Maurice Strong (an Executive Member
of the Club of Rome) while he was Secretary-General of the United Nations
Conference on the Human Environment (1972). One of the lecturers was Aurelio
Peccei, co-founder of The Club of Rome. The book was entitled Who
Speaks for Earth?: Seven Citizens of the World on Major Issues of the
Global Environment (1973) [4].
“As the various nations and regions continue
to differentiate - in economic activities and in life styles - they
must elaborate new ways of relating to each other so as to become progressively
integrated into organic wholes. Differentiation must always be followed
by integration. To symbolize the need of achieving unity through
diversity, the United Nations might eventually come to be known
as the Integrated Nations.
In practice, a global approach is needed when dealing
with the problems of the spaceship earth which affect all of mankind.
But local solutions, inevitably conditioned by local interests, are
required for the problems peculiar to each human settlement.
These two contrasting attitudes concerning the environment
are not incompatible : in fact they complement each other. The national
loyalty that we must develop toward the planet as a whole need not interfere
with the emotional attachment to our prized diversity. As we enter the
global phase of social evolution, it becomes obvious that each one of
us has two countries - his own and the planet earth. We cannot feel
at home on earth if we do not continue to love and cultivate our own
garden. And conversely, we can hardly feel comfortable in our garden
if we do not care for the planet earth as our collective home.”
- 42
“Unity through diversity”
(or “act locally think globally” as a variation on the same
slogan) is a very fluffy way of saying interdependence. The Club of Rome
refers to interdependence as an organic society. From Mankind at the
Turning Point: The Second Report to The Club of Rome (1974) [5]:
“The concept of the “organic growth”
of mankind, as we have proposed in this report, is intended as a contribution
toward achieving that end. Were mankind to embark on a path
of organic growth, the world would emerge as a system of interdependent
and harmonious parts, each making its own unique contributions,
be it in economics, resources, or culture.
[...] Such an approach must start from and preserve
the world’s regional diversity. Paths of development, region-specific
rather than based on narrow national interests, must be designed to
lead to a sustainable balance between the interdependent world-regions
and to global harmony - that is, to mankind’s growth as an “organic
entity” from its present barely embryonic state.” - viii
According to Bertrand Russell, a well
bred elitist himself, an organic society is nothing more than totalitarianism.
From The Impact of Science on Society (1952) [6]:
“Totalitarianism has a theory as well as a practice.
As a practice, it means that a certain group, having by one means or
another seized the apparatus of power, especially armaments and police,
proceed to exploit their advantageous position to the utmost, by regulating
everything in the way that gives them the maximum of control over others.
But as a theory it is something different: it is the doctrine that the
State, or the nation, or the community is capable of a good different
from that of individual and not consisting of anything that individuals
think or feel. This doctrine was especially advocated by Hegal, who
glorified the State, and thought that a community should be as organic
as possible. In an organic community, he thought, excellence would reside
in the whole. An individual is an organism, and we do not think that
his separate parts have separate goods: if he has a pain in his great
toe it is he that suffers, not specially the great toe. So, in an organic
society, good and evil will belong to the whole rather than the parts.
This is the theoretical form of totalitarianism.” - 64
Conclusion
The use, or more appropriately, the abuse of words is
a characteristic of a psychopath or psychopathic group. As you have just
seen, The Club of Rome is a well versed organization in this type of deceit
and should be properly classified as such. It is very important for anyone
trying to understand how these types of organizations operate, to take
the time to understand the inner, or esoteric language developed for the
elite within the organization. Without this understanding, the outer layer
of propaganda’s suggestive insinuations will be dangerously misleading.
References
[1] Andrew M. Lobaczewski, Political Ponerology:
A Science on the Nature of Evil Adjusted for Political Purposes (1998,
2006). ISBN-10: 1-897244-25-8.
[2] Jan Tinbergen, RIO: Reshaping the International
Order: A Report to the Club of Rome (1976). ISBN 0-525-04340-3. For
more information about this book please read this
series of articles.
[3] Alexander King and Bertrand Schneider, The First
Global Revolution: A Report by the Council of The Club of Rome: A Strategy
for Surviving the World (1991). ISBN 0-671-71107-5.
[4] Barbara Ward, Rene Dubos, Thor Heyerdahl, Gunnar
Myrdal, Carmen Miro, Lord Zuckerman and Aurelio Peccei, Who Speaks
for Earth?: Seven Citizens of the World on Major Issues of the Global
Environment (1973). ISBN 0-393-06392-5.
[5] Mihajlo Mesarovic and Eduard Pestel, Mankind
at the Turning Point: The Second Report to The Club of Rome (1974).
ISBN 0-525-03945-7. For more information about this book please read this
series of articles
[6] Bertrand Russell, The Impact of Science on Society
(1952). ISBN 0-415-10906-X . For more information about this book please
read this
series of articles
More articles by Brent Jessop can be found at his
site Knowledge Driven
Revolution.com
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