Analyzing The Phenomenon Of Targeted Individuals Through An Historical Lens: The personality of dictators
Often throughout history, civilizations have recorded many leaders, although capable and energetic, who were also tyrannical and paranoid. The list of names include, but are not limited to: Fidel Castro (Cuba), al Muammar Gadaffi (Lybia), Gengis Khan (Mongolia), Emperor Hirohito (Japan), Adolf Hitler (Germany), Ivan the Terrible (Russia), King Leopold II (Belgium), Ferdinand Marcos (Philippenes), Omar Mohammed (Afghanistan), Benito Mussolini (Italy), Pol Pot (Cambodia Red Khmer), Joseph Stalin (Soviet Union), and many more.
These men were, by all accounts, totalitarian dictators who sought to maintain complete control over their respective governments and populations through radical methods including systematic murder and imprisonment of those who stood against them.
They see themselves as “very special” people, deserving of admiration and, consequently, have difficulty empathizing with others . . . Not only do dictators show a pattern of grandiosity,” they also tend to behave with vindictiveness often observed in narcissistic personality disorder.
Each of the names listed above were responsible for over one million deaths, and even those citizens who were fortunate to survive these dictators’ reign lived in persistent fear of death, forced labor, and torture.
In my forensic analysis incorporating the use of human history, human psychology, sociology, philosophy, game theory, and human sexuality I have discovered several elements unique to characteristics of control and domination. For example, expressed intimations toward secret societies or secret operations, the discursive use of high technology against others, mimesis between the perpetrator and his fantasy to create imaginary powers that once belonged to the science fiction of film 50–60 years ago, behavioral character traits that reflect high levels of sadism and the dark triad personality constellation in the perpetrator, a psychological “theatre of cruelty” belonging to the behavioral style of malignant trauma victims (i.e. paranoid schizoid), evidence explaining wireless electronic assault torture fitting the psychological need of the “schizoid dilemma” and the “annihilation paradox,” how wireless electronic assault torture shares the same five (5) vulnerabilities of cyber security, the forensic understanding of how need and abandonment “inflicts terrible pain” in the victim that gives rise to the manifestation of the theatre of cruelty in re-capitulated acts of violence towards others, the expressed need for bondage and discipline (BDSM) in acts of control and domination over another, newly acquired evidence Havana Syndrome is linked to Russian top secret military operations, as well as exploring Blaise Pascal’s decision-theoretic in game theory regarding God which places the targeting of Americans in a game involving two or more people.
The technologies that 50 years ago we could only dream of in science fiction novels, which we then actually created with so much faith and hope in their power to unite us, and make us freer, have been co-opted into tools of surveillance, behavioral manipulation, radicalization, and addiction. ~Anonymous Professor
The nature of wireless electronic assault torture as described by the victims who suffer adversely from its effects indicate to analysts a level of hostility, sadism, and malignancy/malevolence that is rooted in war making, advanced torture techniques to neutralize perceived threats, as well as the psychological resistance to cure and recovery.
Sources:
“The Psychology of Dictators: Power, Fear, and Anxiety”
https://constitutionwatch.com.au/the-psychology-of-dictators-power-fear-and-anxiety/
“General Knowledge History: Worst Dictators and Tyrants”
https://www.adducation.info/general-knowledge-history/worst-dictators-tyrants/
Butler, Judith (1997). The Psychic Life of Power: Theories in subjection. Stanford, California. Stanford University Press.
First Do No Harm: Paradoxical encounters with psychoanalysis, war making, and resistance. Adrienne Harris and Steven Botticelli, editors. New York. Routledge. Relational Book Series, Vol. 45.
Grand, Sue (2000). The Reproduction of Evil: A clinical and cultural perspective. Hillside, NJ. The Analytical Press.