I think it's enough that every child spends nine months in relative comfort
with everything being taken care of by an evolving awareness of a
transcendent consciousness just out of reach.   When you're born you learn
that consciousness was female and that is enough reasonable enough for me
that the root of gratefulness and love is female to the boys.     Even the
boys who love boys are big on venerating mother and females.   They just
aren't sexually attracted to them.    The whole Mary movement in the
Catholic Church admits to being a part of all of that. 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of de Bivort
Lawrence
Sent: Monday, July 23, 2012 5:08 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] 'Dark Knight Rises' shooting: Three heroes died in
Aurora taking bullets for their girlfriends - NY Daily News

 

Greetings,

 

On your second thought, Ed, I would think that the relative incidence of
sperm to ova (and their longer gestation periods) would clearly indicate
that women are more critical to continuance of the species.

 

On the first question, all my research into the psycho-cognitive profiles of
people suggests that there is no killer identifier for social psychopaths.
That is, the profiles of "normal" people and social psycho-paths (as defined
by state- and non-state terrorists) and indistinguishably similar. Social
psychopaths can only, it seems, be recognized by their behaviors, which is
often too late.

 

If this is correct, then I would suggest that the only way to do something
to diminish these kinds of massacres (or their counterparts in the financial
industry) is to raise kids properly to begin with. I believe that much of
today's approaches to child-rearing is profoundly dysfunctional, and am
wondering if it is dysfunctional to the point where it actually produces the
occasional unself-controlled social psychopath?

 

Cheers,

Lawry

 

 

On Jul 23, 2012, at 4:29 PM, Ed Weick wrote:





You never really know, do you, not even if you've know a person for a long
time.  Even then you can't be certain.  Take the Russell Williams case.  A
very senior military officer, a base commander, a very good pilot who flew
the Prime Minister's plane, and apparently, socially, not a bad guy at all.
But then, at night, he'd sneak out and collect panties, killing two women in
the process.  Makes you want to watch everybody and keep your windows
locked.

 

And as far as men protecting women goes, it may stem from something buried
very deeply in the human genome: women may be more important to the
continuity of the human race than men.

 

Ed

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Keith Hudson <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION
<mailto:[email protected]>  ; D  <mailto:[email protected]> & N 

Cc: [email protected] 

Sent: Monday, July 23, 2012 11:57 AM

Subject: Re: [Futurework] 'Dark Knight Rises' shooting: Three heroes died in
Aurora taking bullets for their girlfriends - NY Daily News

 

At 15:16 23/07/2012, Darryl wrote:



Add extreme abuse to those life histories as well.


True, but what is particularly interesting (that is, disturbing) is that,
over the years, I've noticed that, from what one gains from newspaper
accounts, many of these mass/serial murderers superficially appear to have
been quite normal to those around them. They may be judged retroactively by
people who knew them in everyday life to have been a little lacking in the
normal range of warm human behaviours but nothing exceptional. Their
parents, too, don't seem to be out of the ordinary. On the other hand, many
(if not all) young men who are clearly sociopathic have usually acted
violently all through their school years and turn out to have had abusive or
deeply neglectful parents.

I first became interested what appear to be a Holmes/Breivick type of
non-sociopathic killer because I knew one in my schooldays (when I was 16).
The rest of my class and I were shocked one morning to hear that one of our
number had killed two young nurses with a hammer and almost strangled an old
lady he was trying to rape. Now, we had known him for five years. We thought
he was a little eccentric because he was mad about buses and collected their
numbers in a little book, but otherwise quite normal. However, we learned
later that not only was his bedroom walls covered in photos of buses but
also that hundreds of bras and other ladies' underwear were stuffed into
drawers and every other available niche. His parents weren't abusive but his
bedroom should have rung warning bells. He (and they, probably) badly needed
some sort of psychiatric attention. And then what could or should have been
done? 

Keith






On 22/07/2012 9:56 PM, Keith Hudson wrote:



Arthur,

My comment is that I strongly doubt the literal accuracy of this news
account. Men are more inclined to be heroic in emergencies because males,
intrinsically, are more risk-taking than females. For example, in the
Zeebrugge ferry disaster in 1987 (in which 193 passengers and crew died), I
remember reading at the time that one young man, in dangerous circumstances,
helped many passengers to escape from being trapped below. But the total
weight of evidence from many ship disasters over the years says that men
take to the lifeboats disproportionately to women and children. There were
examples of this, I believe, during the Ttitanic sinking.

All stories of tragedies tend to get enhanced from the word go. I can well
imagine three young men throwing their arms around their girl friends and
then trying to flee together or take cover. But if three of the six were to
die then it's only 8:1 against three men rather than girls being hit.

Incidentally, I'm glad that the police didn't kill Holmes at Aurora. As with
Breivik's massacres a year ago in Norway, and his arrest, we need to know a
great deal more about the early life stories of these men (usually social
isolates) to identify other potential misfits at as young an age as possible
in order to hopefully deflect their development.

Keith

At 04:26 23/07/2012, you wrote:



Way off topic but sort of intriguing.

Arthur


To: ' [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> '
Subject: FW: 'Dark Knight Rises' shooting: Three heroes died in Aurora
taking bullets for their girlfriends - NY Daily News

Interesting.  The response of the male seems to be to protect.  Instinctive?
Who knows.  Maybe Keith has an answer or would care to comment.

Arthur
'Dark Knight Rises' shooting: Three heroes died in Aurora taking bullets for
their girlfriends In final acts of valor, Jon Blunk, Matt McQuinn and Alex
Teves used their bodies to shield their girlfriends as accused madman James
Holmes turned the Aurora cineplex into a shooting gallery.

Read more:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/aurora-shooting-died-bullets-sweeti

es-article-1.1119395#ixzz21Oy21I65

http://tinyurl.com/c9sj52m
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/aurora-shooting-died-bullets-sweeti

es-article-1.1119395
Sent from my iPad

https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Keith Hudson, Saltford, England http://allisstatus.wordpress.com
<http://allisstatus.wordpress.com/> 
  

 

  _____  

 

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