Some Philosophical Concepts on Consciousness and Freedom: More paradoxical encounters of psychoanalysis

“Try to imagine what it’s like to have been a prisoner all those years? You’re not free just because you can see the ocean. Captivity’s a mentality. It’s a thing you carry with you. Hep succeeded. He broke the rebellion by making Homer complicit in kidnapping Renatta. He made us feel like we couldn’t possibly be angels. We were too human.”

From the Netflix series “The O.A.”, Season 1, episode 7.

This particular scene struck home with me. What Nina, Prairie, O.A., whatever you want to call her, is speaking of can be found in the philosophy “Of Lordship and Bondage” and theories of subjection. We all carry a piece of captivity around with us. We all, at some point in our past, have fallen under the subjection of a Lord who wants to reign over us and reform our behaviors. So, we carry those experiences within us. We were all former prisoners who, under the dictatorship of a Lord, underwent some type of “reformation process.” This happened to us when we are young, in school, within our familial relationships, with our friends, and with other institutions found within society like church or temple. The question is, “What type of captivity are you carrying around within you?” “Do you remember how you were “formed?” “Who or what shaped you the most?” “Where is your prison?” “Who are your prison guards?” I find myself asking these very questions of myself. For Nina, Prairie, O.A. her reformation was particularly fierce. She was born in Moscow Russia. She was the daughter of an oligarch. She had a near death experience at 5, woke up from her NDE blind, lost her father at the same age, was placed in a brothel which her aunt owned and operated, was adopted by two Americans and was kidnapped at age 21 and was tortured and held captive for seven years by a monster!

A former prisoner who was also kidnapped with Nina, reminds her, “O.A. … It’s not Homer that’s doing this to us. It’s him! You told us. You told us that we are down here to find each other. To find out what we are. Maybe even Renatta. You said, “We need five. We are five!”

In the basement of an old mine, reformed into living quarters where the five inmates were wrongfully imprisoned by a mad medical doctor obsessed with finding proof of the After Life, is where he performed some of the most inhumane experiments on them. I believe the basement was a metaphor for “Earth” and where “God” resided above them, was the doctor in his house or “Heaven.” It is the following wisdom spoken by an angel, “We are down here to find each other. To find out who we are. This speaks to the psychoanalytic truth for the human need for interdependence and the shared precarious life all human beings possess. We are all born into infantile dependency and a respective need for others.”

On Violence Found in Intimate Partnerships

Consenting to be dominated by another is problematic because it reinforces prevailing gender and racial hierarchies as prescribed by the ideological and repressive apparatus known as white male misogynistic supremacy.

Wireless electronic assault torture represents a form of abnormal erotic language that seeks to degrade women (and men for that matter) by placing them in subordinate, submissive, obedient, powerless roles for the use of another, in subjection to a Lord.

As a woman, I have experienced gender subordination and oppression at the hands of abusive authority figures. My disbelief in promoting this form of gender inequality, goes against the main character of my very essence and it is our democracy that seeks to establish equality for all races, genders, religions.

Screaming gender epithets at a woman (whore, slut, etc.), or making them play the role of sex slave doesn’t make much logical sense in a society and social environment that is supposed to promote inclusion. Inclusion for gender, racial, religious differences. Wireless electronic assault IS TORTURE! Let there be no doubt!

If, black women, when surveyed about watching BDSM scenes involving a white man degrading a black woman as a submissive slave responded by saying that it made them feel “icky” and “uncomfortable” and made them feel “kinda weird” regarding its racial tones in the erotic language of BDSM, then the psychoanalytic insights to the form and type of person issuing forth the wireless electronic assault torture (ie: oppression) suggests that those “watching” and “listening” to it, find its erotic language of sadism pleasurable and stimulating to their egos as well. As such, it represents a form of misogynistic white male supremacy and the exercise of control over human female subjects for the purpose of degrading them via a perpetrator’s use of technology as a vehicle to feel powerful and less vulnerable.

There are some things that are just ethically wrong; slavery, racial prejudice, sexism, a man physically fighting a woman, the sanctioned violence of war, and unsanctioned violence of personal human conflict.

For this reason, mixed gender related contact sports are found repulsive. Some people may believe that mixed gender contact sports represent a “progressive move towards equality.” But I think it promotes the opinion towards socially accepted violence towards women. And because of this, the technological vehicle of wireless electronic assault torture is seeking to establish a progressive normalization of violent oppression, against both women and men, that seeks community approval. The source of discomfort for women’s participation in violent contact sports against men, evokes dominant discourses and imagery of violence against women. Consent seems irrelevant in the face of a repulsive ugliness and that is violence against women in the intimate spaces of romantic relationships. In other words, oppression of vulnerable groups.

My theory regarding how wireless electronic assault torture affects identity compared to how minorities, oppressed women and vulnerable groups negotiate their own identities within the intimate oppressive space of familial and romantic relationships that diverge on the larger community in which they live and reside.

Individual’s viewing the violence carried out by wireless electronic assault torture or hear of its “availability” to be purchased by consumers interested in acquiring it for the personal pleasure of feeling as an “all powerful Lord” in a world that makes them feel vulnerable. This is the form the fetish structure of disavowal to vulnerability takes within our society.

This fact can be supported by the presence of “The Achilles Complex” where young men are socialized to repudiate female weakness and are socialized to “be men” in competition with other men. These are the social elements that continue to promote, not just violence against women, but violence in general. Because to be in league with men, means imploring violent aggression.

The irony is how psychoanalysis is looking towards a politic of vulnerability. That is to say, how psychoanalysis might achieve a broader acceptance within human populations toward a shared acceptance of our shared human precarity, our shared mutual need for one another, our dependency on one another and our need for recognition from others as separate individuals with our own identities.

Rephrased in a different way, there is a profound human need to recognize our shared human infantile dependence on others that turn us into ethically responsible individuals. This proclamation came after the discovery of 9/11 with the Bush administration’s need for violent and aggressive “advanced interrogation techniques,” policies that were so quickly accepted by the public and that were so obviously mired in weakness and insecurity.

Another paradoxical encounter of psychoanalysis is the fact that despite civil and criminal laws that make violent abuse and torture illegal, certain sub-groups create their own rules and norms that sometimes make violence against another human acceptable. We see this in intimate partner violence, domestic abuse, as well as parental choices for corporeal punishment (physical assault against their children).

All the while the main focus of psychoanalysis is MOTIVATION. Specifically, how the government’s military branches can convince young men and women to kill and be killed for their country. These paradoxical encounters never seem to end.

Malevolence and the Disavowal of Malevolence: Defining Malignant Dissociative Contagion

It is important to note that when I write about “the trauma survivor” in this post, I am referring to the type of trauma endured during pre-oedipal development before the formulation of language. In the pathological regression of such states where there was no experience of “I” who can reflect and remember her own history thus facilitating accountability for her sadistic cruelty onto others.

The reproduction of evil is an attempt to answer the riddle of catastrophic loneliness that results in the wake of massive trauma. In her core, the trauma survivor remains solitary in the moment of her own extinction. No one knew her in the moment she died without dying. I propose this is the effect that wireless electronic assault torture has on the victim that makes the victim feel “alone in her torture” in “her solitude” emersed in the presence of another unknowable object who is not present in her visual field of reference, and who seems to be infused with hate, fear, shame, loss and despair. It seems to be a re-capitulation of the perpetrator’s own deadness. Death has possessed him in his impenetrable solitude. Because that traumatized self is defined by solitude, survivor/perpetrator’s resurrection requires that he be known by another in this solitude, for Benjamin (1995) notes, “The sea of death can be crossed only by reaching the other (pg. 186).” How can the survivor be known by another in a moment defined by its loneliness? Who will be the knower and who (and what) will be the knownThis is the ambiguity encapsulated in wireless electronic assault torture. This loneliness is not something wordless that can ultimately be rendered in speech. It is unformidable it cannot be represented mutually in linguistic narrative. Whatever can be known mutually through linguistics about traumatic experience is not death’s solitude but something else, some other pain that exists at the perimeter of death. This is annihilation’s paradox: that the need to be known continually meets the impossibility of being known. And the need to be known meets, as well, an inner refusal to be known.

Why the Phenomenon of the Targeted Individual Continues to Remain Poorly Understood

Wireless electronic assault torture is not a pathway to “treatment” or “cure.” Rather through its continuity, habituation, and repetitive nature it eviscerates the possibility of psychic repair, if psychic repair is required in the individual.

I have previously stated I am punished with wireless electronic assault torture for performing exercise in my living room. I have uncovered a manic psychic defense in schizoid states that helps to explain why this is happening. Since evil seduces with its perverse promise of recognition, and evil always is constituted so that each victim is accompanied by her perpetrator to the obscure solitude of extinction, the victim-perpetrator shares her own catastrophic loneliness in what Bollas (1995) calls the “companionship of the dead.” Evil reaches it terminus in shared loneliness and in the shared disappearance of selves. For, as Bion (1965) and Grotstein (1990) have suggested, destruction is a force of nothingness that subjects human experience to a centripetal pull into the void. Man’s elemental hate, envy, and greed (Freud, 1930; Klein, 1935, 1940, 1955) are embedded in this force of nothingness. But, as Greensberg and Mitchell (1983) note, the nothingness of destruction is not an instinct. It is a perverse hungering for an object, as a reprieve from the objectlessness of annihilation (Fairbairn, 1952a, b; Guntrip, 1971).

Thus, the survivor-cum-perpetrator works out her trauma on the human race by “trying to bring others to an equivalent Fall” (Bollas, 1995, pg. 1184): he lives, masters, transforms, and re-obliterates the forgotten forms of his own traumatic past. And the no-self of survival is sustained by the imminence of contact by extinguishing the other before too much contact is made (see Laing, 1960; Winnicott (1960); and Guntrip, (1969).

This stated excavated psychoanalytic truth is supporting evidence to why wireless electronic assault torture technology would make a perfect medium for controlling victims whose perpetrators are suffering malignant trauma from early childhood because it limits contact with the victim while maintaining “annihilation’s paradox”: the need to be known continually meets the impossibility of being known. And the need to be known meets, as well, an inner refusal to be known. Much as another’s empathetic understanding is critical for the perpetrator’s self-resurrection, so that very understanding threatens to renew the perpetrator’s annihilation. Any presumption of knowledge will eviscerate the truth of her loneliness, collapsing the core of her traumatic identity. Loneliness is the sacred container of the survivor-cum-perpetrator’s residual sanity; it is the survivor’s ultimate testimony. It must not, cannot be foreclosed.

Thus the “shattered self” of trauma is suffused with death anxiety, with the sense that there is no self. Such a personality becomes pre-occupied with the protection and concealment of the no-self and its deadness and vacuity are the defining qualities of the person’s tenuous identity. Other people become figures of hope and dread while they potentially offer much needed confirmatory evidence of the existence of the self, they nonetheless threaten to eclipse the perpetrator’s self with the larger presence of their own identities (Grand, 2000, pg. 4–9).

This desire by survivor-cum-perpetrators of malignant trauma to remain hidden, limiting contact with their victims is what makes wireless electronic assault torture technology so desirable to these types of perpetrators. It appeases the survivor-perpetrator’s need to remain hidden and “not known” at the same time it limits contact with the victim. Here, think of how Rex Heuermann used prostitutes to elude his death anxiety and could exist triumphantly after a brief encounter with these women, in which he ended their lives, and survived death yet again in the re- enactment of his former trauma.

Malevolence and the Disavowal of Malevolence

The primary reason why the phenomenon of the Targeted Individual remains so poorly understood is because “silence is the facilitator of destruction: it is through denial that evil consolidates its power” (Grand, 2000, pg. 10).

“Generation after generation, mankind has turned against itself in cruelty: in the familial violations of rape, child abuse, child neglect, and spouse battering; in the anonymity of violent crime; in the mass depredation of war, genocide, and racism. Generation after generation, evil assumes subtle, pedestrian forms. Sometimes sadistic, but more often banal, these interpersonal acts may be perpetrated with or without the conscious intent to destroy. Evil seems to be everywhere. And even as it is everywhere, it is everywhere denied; perpetrators and bystanders collude in its obfuscation. Evil tends to be brazen in its presence and yet radical in its concealment. Evil degrades all truth to meaningless trivialities; it utilizes “language rules” and “holes of oblivion” to marshall its force in a culture of lies: War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength (Orwell, 1949, pg. 7).

The diabolic is an arena of disorientation and confusion in which truth is lost, becoming unrecognizable even when seen (see Grotstein, 1979; Bollas, 1992, 1995). This arena is the perpetrator’s cloak of invisibilitythe evacuation of the victim’s mind, the bystander’s refusal to acknowledge sin (Coser, 1969; Peck, 1983). Throughout human history, the truth of evil is occluded; the tyrant finds his permit in mankind’s credulity: “I shall present propagandistic grounds for starting the war (with Poland); whether they are believable is irrelevant. The victor will not be asked later whether or not he told the truth” (Hitler, 1939, as quoted by Gebhardt, 1970).

In this obfuscation of the truth, evil eludes accountability and justice. Secrecy, concealment, denial, ambiguity, confusion: these are Satan’s fellow travelers, requiring elaborate interpersonal and intrapsychic collusion between perpetrators and bystanders. The operations of silence potentiate evil and remove all impediments from its path (Grand, 2000, pg. 9–11). And this is why certain individuals with accredited and advanced degrees in criminal justice and psychoanalysis continue to report the phenomenon is “too poorly” understood and requires further investigation. These individuals may have a vested interest in obfuscating the truth and refuse to provide accurate knowledge regarding its presence in our current time period.

“Not knowing” tends to be regarded as a separate simpler variable intersecting with man’s dark internal forces. To provide you some historical examples look to the Serbian eradication of the mass graves of genocide. This was perceived and regarded as a “strategic evasion of accountability.” Another historical example can be found in the “apparent ignorance” of “good Germans” during Nazi occupation which was attributed to a “desire for security” during prewar and war years (Grand, 2000, pg. 11–12)

The disavowal of evil and the perpetration of evil are singular manifestations of traumatic memory. Together they are the deep structure of evil. There is deep significance to Herman’s (1992) perception that “the study of psychological trauma has a curious history — one of episodic amnesia — though the field has in fact abundant and rich tradition, it has periodically forgotten the truth of its past and must be periodically reclaimed.

Conclusion

Our human history, with its proclivity for collusion and concealment of evil, acts that manifests “the appearance” and “disappearance” of evil, is an ongoing process that rediscovers and disavowals its very presence. Systematically, the facts of evil seem to press toward communal knowledge just as some counterforce undermines the emergence of such knowledge (Grand, 2000). This is also true for the evil being perpetrated on victims of wireless electronic assault torture by victim-perpetrators of malignant trauma (ie: Targeted Individuals suffering Electronic Harassment). It would seem the phenomenon of cultural malevolent disavowal for the memory of evil, is a systematic process in which awakening alternates with obfuscation. Psychoanalytically speaking, the scary truth regarding this phenomenon is that this systematic enactment is a precise reflection of the survivor-perpetrator’s internal struggle between the desire to be known, the fear of being known, and the impossibility of being known. And it is a precise mirroring of developmental regression with its attendant loss of history and agency.

“When the family or culture reflects these dynamisms when the communal history of evil is one in which truth continually appears and disappears, humanity is testifying to the paradox of the perpetrator’s no-self. If trauma survival is a “mutually obscuring relationship between being alive and being dead (Ogden, 1997, pg. 61) in which the survivor “cannot historicize his experience because he remains anchored in a moment of cruelty and cannot turn perception into memory” (Auerhahn ande Laub, 1987, pg. 327), then cultural context of victimization is a larger refraction of this mutually obscuring relationship. Malevolence is inextricably linked to a relational system in which there is a continuous “retrospective falsification of the past” (Bromberg, 1994, pg. 537) and a continuous erasure of the present” (Grand, 2000, pg. 15).

“For this shared experience to occur, perpetrators must solicit victim, bystander, and culture to collude in the shared disavowal of evil. So ubiquitous is the process that it must be named (Grand, 2000, pg. 16).” Sue Grand refers to this process as “malignant dissociative contagion.” Malignant dissociative contagion is a dialectical system. Its field is characterized by heightened awareness and vigilance, vociferous claims to truth and knowledge, exhortations to communal awakening and action, and by heroic acts in which those who perform them feel acutely awake and alive” (Grand, 2000, pg. 17).

Malignant dissociative contagion is a system of “mutual influence” (Beebe and Lachmann, 1988; Aron, 1996; Bromberg, 1998). In mutual influence systems, people unconsciously act upon one another. Here, there is frequently an asymmetry in power (Aron, 1996); someone in a position of dominance inevitably fails to achieve empathetic recognition for the other’s autonomous human existence or feeling states. As Aron (1996) suggests, perpetual systems of mutual influence are systems of inherent danger: “If two people do not acknowledge each other as separate autonomous subjects, then in one way or another they are dominating or submitting to each other. Or as Bach (1994) puts it, “the unilaterally imposed fantasy is the hallmark of an act of violence” (Grand, 2000, pg. 17).

Primary Source:

Sue Grand. (2000). The Reproduction of Evil: A Clinical and Cultural Perspective. Hillsdale, NJ. The Analytic Press. Note: I want to credit to Sue Grand for providing the psychoanalytic insights that helped me to understand and explain Wireless Electronic Assault Torture in the phenomenon of the Targeted Individual suffering Electronic Harassment as use of this technology satisfies the “Schizoid Dilemma” as well as the “Annihilation Paradox” possessed by the paranoid schizoid.

Other References:

Benjamin, J. (1995). Like Subjects: Love Objects: Essays on recognition and sexual differences. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Bollas, C. (1992). The Fascist State of Mind — Being a Character: Psychoanalysis and Self-Experience. New York. Hill & Wang.

Bion, W.R. (1965). Transformation. London. Tavistock.

Grostein, J.S. (1979). Demonical possession, splitting and the torment of joy. Contemporary Psychoanalysis; 3:407–445.

Grostein, J.S. (1990). Nothingness, meaninglessness, chaos and the “Black Hole” II. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 3:377–408.

Freud, S. (1930) Civilization and its discontents. Standard Edition, 21:64–145. London. Hogarth Press. 1961.

Klein, M. (1935). A Contribution to the Psychogenesis of Manic-Depressive States. In: Contributions to Psychoanalysis, 1921–1945. London. Hogarth Press, pp. 282–311.

Klein, M. (1940). Mourning and its relation to manic-depressive states. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 21: 125–153.

Klein, M. (1955). On Identifications. In: Envy and Gratitude and other works, 1946–1963. New York. Decorate, 1975, pp. 176–234.

Bollas, C. (1995). The Structure of Evil. In: Cracking Up: The work of unconscious experience. New York. Hill & Wang.

Greenberg, J.R. and Mitchell, S.A. (1983) Object Relations in Psychoanalytic Theory. Cambridge, MA. Harvard University Press.

Fairbairn, W.R.D. (1952a) An Object Relations Theory of the Personality. New York. Basic Books.

Fairbairn, W.R.D. (1952b) Psychoanalytic Studies in Personality. London. Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Guntrip, H. (1969) Schizoid Phenomena, Object Relations and the Self. New York. International University Press.

Laing, R.D. (1960) The Divided Self. New York. Penguin Books.

Winnicott, D. (1960) Ego Distortion in terms of true and false self. In: The Maturational Processes and the Facilitating Environment. New York. International University Press, 1965, pp. 140–152.

Arendt, H. (1955) Men in Dark Times. New York. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

Aren’t, H. (1963) Eichmann in Jerusalem: A report on the banality of evil. New York. Penguin Books.

Orwell, G. (1949) 1984. New York. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

Coser, L. (1969) The visibility of evil. J. Social Issues, 1:101–109.

Peck, M. (1983) People of the Lie: The Hope of Healing Human Evil. New York. Simon & Schuster.

Gebhardt, B. (1970) Handbuch der Deutschen Geschichte, Vol. 4. Stuttgart: Klettcotta.

Herman, J.L. (1992) Trauma & Recovery. New York. Basic Books.

Ogden, T. (1997) Reverie and Imagination: Sensing something human. Northvale, NJ: Aronson.

Auerhahn, N.C. and Laun, D. (1987) Play and Playfulness in Holocaust Survivors. The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 42:45–58. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Bromberg, P.M. (1994) “Speak! That I May See You.” Some Reflections on Dissociation Reality and Psychoanalytic Listening. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 4:517–549.

Bromberg, P.M. (1998) Standing in the Spaces: Essays on clinical process, trauma, and dissociation. Hillsdale, NJ: The Analytic Press.

Beebe, B. and Lachmann, F.M. (1988) Mother-Infant mutual influence and pre-cursors of psychic structures. In: Frontiers in Self Psychology: Process in Self Psychology. Vol. 3, ed. A. Goldberg. Hillsdale, NJ: The Analytic Press, pp. 3–25.

Aron, L. (1996) Mutuality in Psychoanalysis. Hillsdale, NJ: The Analytic Press.

Guntrip, H. (1971). Psychoanalytic Theory, Therapy and the Self. New York. Basic Books.

When Combat Speaks: Eruption of Kristeva’s the Real

In a particular case vignette read recently about a Vietnam war veteran, Peter, who seemed to have not yet come to terms with the atrocities he committed; ordering the firebombing of a village, setting mothers, children, and infants on fire, the shooting of elderly unarmed women and men in guerrilla warfare, being shot at by enemy snipers, his men being killed by landmines. He himself was blown up, hospitalized for months, the loss of his right foot and part of his right leg. He had a prosthesis, phantom pain, and a crutch. Athletic discipline restored his ability to walk again. He returned from the war as a guiltless man of modest desires and he came to therapy because he wanted his wife to love him like she had done when they were first married.

In this man there is no conflict over history, no registry of regret, and there is no real perception of self or other. He lives in a state of war mythology as the heroic soldier to which metals and scars have been bestowed upon by a country that was, in all likelihood, in the same denial. Erasing the bestiality of combat and replacing it with war rhetoric mythology. Unable to grasp the “I-Thou” relation. Each morning, he resuscitates his former youthful war soldier Adonis, an officer who did not die, who will never die, and the gap between himself and his real aging wife widens. This soldier’s life story has no elasticity, no evolving new perspective; it admits no grief or moral or political complication. This position does not respond to time or distance, to changing gender roles or new historical/cultural epochs; nor to aging, or fatherhood, or to any other kind of intimate experience. Soldiering has a hyper-masculine phantasm linked to hyperbolic splits — to “gooks” and men and the necessity for “purifying violence.” When he looks at his own grandchildren he never sees the children he killed in Vietnam. When he looks at himself, he never sees the young boy inside himself. There are no depths to his mirror. Looking is a condition of blindness (Grand, pg. 223–224).

When nations prosecute these foreign wars, our war rhetoric always conjures this mutual silence and blindness. To manipulate the U.S. population toward war, the conversation must be foreclosed. Humane empathy towards responsiveness to enemy causalities interfere with necessary mass violence. “To diminish empathy and tragic guilt, our ideologies direct our gaze toward what the enemy is doing to us (Grand, pg. 225).” We are prevented from seeing what the war is actually doing to us. How it is harming us as a nation, as a society, and as individuals. As a result, most of us, but not all, become complicit in what is known in psychoanalysis a, “malignant dissociative contagion.” It is here I implore you to think about the 2020 Presidential election and the defeat of Donald Trump by Joe Biden and the accusations of “voter fraud.” “When multiple perspectives appear, malignant dissociative contagion breaks-up. We become able to relinquish our faulty heroic mythologies, and we begin to see an “I-Thou” relationship (Grand, pg. 225).” In what Mahler (1968) described as an omnipotent autistic orbit, the malignant dissociative contagion becomes a field of the totalizing knowledge and our war rhetoric transforms the whole of society into a field of perception that is manipulated by the media in regard to what we are “allowed” to see and read. Thus, the wholesale consumption of what we know about the war, controls our perceptions, knowledge, and vision on what we see and hear about the war. All circumscribed by our own zones of blindness and inattention.

When citizens are caught in the predicament of a foreclosed conversation. We are not permitted to see truth on either side. It’s a one-sided conversation that manipulates our gaze.

In many ways this dialectic foreclosure has been my relationship with my own family. Kept away from relatives and family functions via the induction of wireless electronic assault torture (frequency sedation during the gathering). It was impossible on either side to know what the truth really was and to what extent. Had I really become a full-blown alcoholic like many people claimed? Or had I been made to avoid family and family events via what can only be described as Pavlovian conditioning, moving me away from a space? When an individual is isolated from others in the group, and the group is isolated away from the individual, the “authority figure” at the center controls the narrative. This is exactly what police investigators do when interviewing accomplices. Instead of attending family events and functions, I was supplied a small amount of alcohol, while at the same time granted a reprieve from the wireless electronic assault torture. That is to say, as long as I stayed away, it was turned off. What was behind this sinister evil lurking in the shadows? Did extended family know what was transpiring? Or was this the technique of propaganda in war rhetoric promoting a malignant dissociative contagion? In short, warmongering.

In gangs, mafias, the Taliban, malignant dissociative contagion is the technique used to recruit new member to the “cause” in a reproduction of evil. It is how ideologies regulate what their members can and cannot see because it’s a foreclosed conversation, a one-sided conversation, that seeks to manipulate our gaze away from truth and the narrative is implicitly accepted by others because of their own blindness and inattention to the facts that tell the individual otherwise which are so frequently ignored. This cultural predicament makes individuals unable to direct or redirect their own vision because they’ve vested interest in an “authority that appears to know and it someone they trust.” Thus, individuals are unable to know they are not regulating their sight. We imagine we see through our own eyes, but our critical capacity is bewildered. We act as a collectivity of unthinking bodies, who cannot think about other bodies that are wounded. Think about how social media influences recruit new members to their ideology. Ruby Franke, a parenting host on YouTube received up to 60 years in prison for her disciplinary ideologies involving the maltreatment of her own children. She spent several years dishing out “parenting advice” but when Franke’s malnourished son escaped out a window with obvious signs of physical abuse, she was arrested and imprisoned.

The Maternal Symbolic and the Return of the Repressed: Kristeva’s the Real

In the opening case vignette about the Vietnam War veteran named Peter, he reports a series of dreams to his analyst. He has similar reoccurring dreams:

He is at home in his bedroom. The room with the mirror. A woman is just there: gloved, demur, coifed. Eyes obscured by the black mesh veil of a pillbox hat. A 1960s, white, ladylike presence, reminiscent of Jackie Kennedy’s elegance. At first, he barely notices that she is in the room. But her presence is both fixating and obscure. She sits, and she is silent. He doesn’t know her. He cannot see her eyes behind the veil. The dream recurs, and his dread seems to increase with every repetition.

To the war veteran the woman seems to represent Jackie Kennedy at JFK’s funeral. “Jackie the aristocrat of motherhood whose own children were half orphaned by violence. Whose husband was sanctified by his assassination Inserted into history as another “profile in courage.” In a condition of eternal youth, like the war veteran’s image in his own mirror. In 1960s America, Jackie’s widowhood was grace: her dignity and fortitude were used to confirm the man’s heroic honor (Grand, pg. 233).

But now, to the war veteran, Jackie Kennedy’s image has become to his unconscious a warning of disapproval. As a grieving wife, she watches the war veteran. She remains silent and poised, doing nothing, except to cast an “evil eye” on his “badness.” His dread is shapeless and wordless and insistent. He says, “She knows what we did.”

Dread is a feeling connected with empathy remorse and guilt. We feel dread because we fear reprisal. When dialogue is foreclosed, reflection can only be guided by a third perspective. In this case when the maternal symbolic allows us to feel dread and experience grief for the first time from which it was previously cut-off.

In war rhetoric, we find an idealized and sacrificial mother, this maternal symbolic. Her loins have yielded the hero: she has relinquished him to destiny; she wait; she mourns his remains. In maternal surveillance, another set of eyes appear as the “all seeing mother.” Her appearance functions as a perfected projective object. She has the all-seeing eye of loss and grief. Her eyes always registered that which we could not see. She maintains the sacred claim to truth.

Referring my analytic reading to the philosophy of Julia Kristeva in the writing of Michelle Boulous Walker’s “Philosophy and the Maternal Body: Reading silence” and in “naming the problem”:

Poetic language simultaneously affirms and negates symbolic function. It contests the symbolic order by freeing “the subject from certain linguistic (psychic, social) networks. Because it re-introduces negativity within language, the poetic marks the return of what the symbolic order has repressed. Kristeva is adamant that this repressed space is in fact the maternal chora. For [Kristeva] the chora is the maternal locus of the poetic subject. It is the site that constantly subverts the stability and coherence of the symbolic. It appears to be at odds with paternal authority of the symbolic (Walker, pg. 115).

The signal to the maternal chora is a rather ambiguous “space” formed in Plato’s work Timaeus. He emphasizes that the “space” is a receptacle, a receptacle that is face-to-face with reason that is necessary, unstable, uncertain, ever changing and becoming according to Elizabeth Grosz. Is this “receptacle” a “thing” or “a mode of language?” In the Platonic space, the receptacle is a mother and wet nurse. (*)

Grosz writes: “She is thus the consequence of a masculine fantasy of maternity, rather than woman’s lived experience of maternity.” The issue that Grosz raises here is an important one. It forces us to question the implications of Kristeva’s maternal in the light of some very real feminist concerns. We need to ask whether this transgressive maternal space can be useful for any feminist analysis given that, according to Grosz, it ultimately rests upon, and stands in for, a phallic paternal fantasy. This is why the image of the maternal symbolic is always represented as an idealized and “perfect” image of a mother. Has this space have anything to do with women and their real voices?

Poetic language of the maternal body in dreams can prompt our thinking about our own subjectivity.

(*) “Mother writes in white ink.” The white ink of breast milk and nurturance. It’s important to mention that in dreams when masculine desire to have oral sex performed on him can converge on the maternal space of the mother as wet nurse and caregiver. In the war veteran’s erotic transference with his heterosexual female analyst, he had previously unconsciously conferred upon her the role of “able bodied, capable soldier” through an unexpected altercation with another patient’s angry and aggressive husband. Thus, his homosexual erotic dream of having oral sex performed on him by another man was really the unconscious desire in fantasy to be in sexual union with his female analyst.

SOURCES:

First Do No Harm: The Paradoxical Encounters of Psychoanalysis, Warmaking, and Resistance. Adrienne Harris and Steven Botticelli (editors.) New York. Routledge. Relational Perspectives Book Series Volume 45. Chapter 11, Combat Speaks: Grief and tragic memory by Sue Grand.

Michelle Boulous Walker. (1998) Philosophy and the Maternal Body: Reading silence. New York. Routledge.

On The Malevolent Uses Of Emotion As A Dark Mirror Of The Therapeutic Process

“The False Mirror” (1928) by Rene Magritte. Surrealism

“The ability to maintain psychic integrity in the face of torture has become more difficult with the increasing sophistication of torture technology supplied by supportive governments of the developed capitalist world and psychology-oriented methods of repression supplied by complicit medical and mental health professionals.” ~Nancy Caro Hollander, First Do No Harm: The Paradoxical Encounters of Psychoanalysis, War making, and Resistance. Chapter 14 The Gendering of Human Rights: Women and the Latin American Terrorist State

According to Adrienne Harris (2017):

“Perhaps one of the mixed pleasures of being an older woman in this profession is that one gets to inhabit in the transference of various patients the force and dynamism of the too powerful dangerous mother.”

International Human Rights organizations have documented the military and paramilitary (police forces) assaults by totalitarian regimes on civilian suspected of supporting dissident or revolutionary movements. In one especially sadistic example, the mutilated body of a dead pregnant woman was discovered. Her fetus has been slashed out of her stomach and stuck in her mouth. This particular method of terror is a symbolic representation of the intersection between psychological and political processes. It reflects both the unconscious male dread of and hatred of the fertile omnipotent mother who, it is feared, consumes rather than feeds the baby, as well as the conscious sadistic rage aimed at women who, through her political opposition and her capacity to bring forth from the womb more rebels, is seen as a challenge to male authoritarian power.

“A woman’s body becomes a commodity in a market controlled by military officers: “Thus, while men may trade in cigarettes or male prestige when seeking favors, women more often must resort to the coin of the flesh.” ~A. Aron, S. Corne, A. Fursland, B. Zelwer, “The Gender Specific Terror of El Salvador and Guatemala, (1991).

In the literature of various mind control methods two types of processes are distinguished: Coercive and Indirect Influence. In the first, love is proffered that latter turns into abuse, coercion, and humiliation. Whereas with the second, the prisoner/indoctrinator relates to the prisoner with cruelty, then changes his face to become kind, friendly, and warm. In the first type of engineered abuse the redemption seeker (who joins the cult) is lured by the grace, warmth, and gentleness of his new acquaintances. The coercive commands are revealed only gradually, at the point when the follower has already been incrementally caught in the commands of the group. In many ways, this sequence resembles a drug changing its function from positive to negative, from a substance that procured extreme well-being and happiness to the thing that is desperately needed as a salvation from pain, despair, and collapse. In contrast to this prototypical process of becoming addicted, there is an apparently opposite, but basically similar process, in which what comes first is not love, but hate — harsh practices of attack and imprisonment, and mental or physical kidnapping that impose discipline and utter obeisance. Following the victim’s “softening” by these attacks, he is granted reprieve and acceptance by the group where he now feels he belongs when he begins to comply. He is hence rewarded in direct proportion to his self-denunciation and immersion in what is dictated to him. None of the coercive-persuasive environments and procedures are a pure type, but the second type of process, hate turning into “loving kindness,” seems to be more perverse and chilling than the process where gentleness and seductive change into oppression and torture. In the world of sex work, women are sometimes lured into a “love relationships” by male pimps classified as a “Romeos” who, through lavish love gestures wins the women’s favor and coercively coxes her to become an escort/sex worker.

Schizophrenia: The gaslight conspiracy

I’d like to compare the psychological paranoid symptom of schizophrenia where one “hears voices” calling out derogatory names like, “whore,” “piece of shit,” “Boo-hoo-hoo,” as one would mock a crying child, and other offensive names and phrases in the harsh method of “hate turned to loving kindness” in methods of mind control and the surreptitious technique of trying to imprison a person for a criminal’s hidden, personal gain.

Since man has harnessed the ability to manipulate the electromagnetic frequency spectrum, he has developed and advanced technology by leaps and bounds. Man has invented radio, television, the Internet, wireless router technology, cell phones, global positioning systems, and the latest greatest marvel is artificial intelligence. AI that can speaks to you and answer most of your questions in Generative Pre-trained Transformers (GPT) chat. So, we know that technologies can transmit human voice through space and across vast distances and even monitor people’s locations and timeline of activities and social whereabouts. They can even create computer generated voices that sound like their human counterparts and they can create physical images that look just like their human counterparts using artificial intelligence. Deep fake technology of AI is an increasing area of global concern. Your cell phone is intelligent enough to know if it’s in your hand or laying on a flat surface. Your Google FIT device can monitor your heartbeat and sends the human data via wireless remote transmission via an upload to another device. Radios and televisions can receive these wireless radio signals, as can cell phones, desktop computers, and tablets do too, and can turn them into sound (human voices), images, and data (written text). The conspiracy in the diagnosis of “schizophrenia” may very well be the malevolent use of human technology combined with jawbone sound conduction known as the earphone. Since we depend heavily on military defense research and defense interests, it shouldn’t be surprising this type of spyware exists or has been discovered and manipulated for military defense interests. Sound does and can be successful transmitted through the jawbone to the inner ear.

People who are using illegal narcotics, or who are mentally ill, who are “resistant” to therapy, or people who are part of other marginalized groups, such as women and homosexuals (refer to the medical use of conversion therapy of mind control to change sexual orientation and personality), may be vulnerable to a conspiracy due to a breakdown in mutual recognition and may be surreptitiously be being abused by a perpetrator in a major gaslight to get them into “therapy” or “imprisoned in a hospital setting,” as was common practice by men who couldn’t control their wives during the 19th century. Or, God forbid, incarcerated as a means of “dealing with them.” This is one-way criminal behavior employs the malevolent use of the dark mirror and, so too, how the medical treatment of mentally ill people, by “medical professionals,” may be employing it to aid in “moving a person into therapy.” It is being employed by the perpetrator for “defense purposes,” or more accurately, in my opinion, as a “defensive mechanism.” It is Macheivallian deception at its finest. It is the smoke and mirrors of mind control. The use of harsh technology and tools employed for mind control can be explained by feminist psychoanalysts and other professionals seeking to achieve change in the use of torture in medicine by doctors who took a Hippocratic oath to “first do no harm.” Where methods and machinations are devised to break the mind instead of cure it.

Freud wrote in “Analysis Terminable and Interminable” (1937) on how psychic defenses originally acquired to ward off threats posed by the ego, by a dangerous and unpleasurable outer and inner reality, can themselves become a threat to life itself: “if the perception of reality involves unpleasure,” Freud writes, “that perception — e.g. the truth — must be sacrificed. The ego further weakened by the internal that threaten unpleasure, defends itself by distorting reality and, in fact, by seeking situations that justify its its maintaining its habitual modes of reaction, even when unnecessary.” We recognize here the definition of the repetition compulsion. It appears in this particular writing of Freud’s as an outcome of situations in which the truth of a perception, if painful, is sacrificed in favor of a less painful lie. Tying this observation to the issue he is investigating — what makes analysis so difficult and what makes some analyses fail — Freud goes on to say that one half of the job of analysis is to LIFT REPRESSION, while the other half is to RECOGNIZE which DEFENSE MECHANISMS are exacting too high a price for the ego. These ego-modifying defense mechanisms emerge in analysis as resistance to cure. When reality is too painful to tolerate, we may both register the reality and simultaneously sacrifice what we know to be true to a more tolerable lie. War is man’s biggest repetition compulsion and cultural amnesias always reappear following wars throughout history, as men quickly forget the tremendous toll war takes on both sides, at various levels: social, economic, physical, psychological and generational.

Where the problem exists. Terms such as gaslight, soul murder, and “driving the other person crazy” have been used to describe procedures of unacknowledged or dissociated domination and psychic exploitation within the imprisonment of closed quarters of the family or analytic situation. I had personally made an appointment at a mental health facility for therapy, Oaks Integrated. Upon arriving at the time of my appointment with my therapist and while receiving wireless electronic frequency assault/torture (pain and suffering), I witnessed the receptionist personnel and another employee at the receptionist’s desk (who were a black male and a black female) using a hand held device and appeared to turn something off, at which point, I felt a reprieve from the wireless electronic torture. Remember where I previously wrote on methods of mind control:

“Following the victim’s “softening” by the attacks, he is granted reprieve and acceptance by the group where he now feels he belongs when he begins to “comply.” He is hence rewarded in direct proportion to his self-denunciation and immersion in what is dictated to him.”

This is the major gaslight in a perpetrator’s criminal use of mind control to “move a person into a hospital setting” or “demonstrates the criminal use of mind control to manipulate and use another for personal gain.”

The movie Gaslight (1944) describes the process where one person plots to undermine the sanity of an intimate other. They describe the confusion of the victim, who struggles with the feeling that her mind plays tricks on her and that she is losing her sanity. Her anguished self-doubt grows without her suspecting that it is her husband that is deceiving her by deviously staging these distortions. The concept of the effort to “drive the other person crazy,” was developed by analysts who worked with schizophrenics, such as Silvano Arieti (1955), Harold Searles (1959), and Robert D. Laing (1967). Arieti talks about “externalized psychosis” of people who specialize in creating certain situations that produce or accelerate psychosis in the other while they themselves remain immune to overt symptoms. Couples therapy works with solid awareness of phenomena of induced craziness in one or both partners.

Leon Shengold borrowed the term soul murder from Freud ‘s Schreiber case to describe extreme parental abuse. Shengold attributed the origins of the concept to the Nordic dramatists Henrik Ibsen and August Strindberg who wrote about “the attempt to erase or spoil the separate identity of another person.” Steinberg, more vociferous than Ibsen, was intensely pre-occupied with mental hostility and the battle of minds that happens in the paradigmatic situation of two people who hate each other and strive to drive the other to doom.

It seems to me, that “love” following persecution and causing pain and suffering, makes it possible to gain a deeper insight into the thirst for human masochism. Dispensing tenderness, warmth, and friendliness after periods of creating terror, hate, and guilt, and shame is a powerful tool for changing someone’s character into an obedient, AUTOMATIC, careless creature that is extraordinarily pliable and open to receiving the pouring into him of contents from outside. I have heard the term “automata,” as in a human automatron or human robot. One of the areas investigated by the CIA was mind control. The CIA’s human behavior control program was chiefly motivated by perceived Soviet, Chinese, and North Korean use of mind control techniques. One area they explored through various medical treatment centers, medical doctors’ and human test subjects’ participation was the use of LSD for mind control research. The first program originated in 1950, during the Cold War, called BLUEBIRD. In 1951, after Canada and Britain were included, the project’s name was changed to ARTICHOKE. A declassified CIA document (CIA MORI 190691, p. 1), “Hypnotic Experimentation and Research, 2/10/1954,” describes an attempt to hypnotically create unsuspecting assassins (in Mind control Cover-up; updated May 21, 2005).

Self-Loathing: The side effects of remote wireless electromagnetic frequency assault during routine daily exercise

Whether conscious or self-conscious, the sense of self as bad, malicious and unworthy is often the sickest element in one’s core and is thus the most dangerous element in a person’s psychic economy. Self-loathing is chronic, amplified shame. I theorize the use of remote wireless electromagnetic assaults/torture purpose is to help to create the atmosphere for feelings of amplified shame, in unable to complete routine daily exercise in repetitive defeat by a perpetrator/captor. “Shame is the affect of indignity, of defeat, of transgression, of inferiority, and of alienation. No other affect is closer to the experienced self,” writes Gershen Kaufman (1988). The capacity to experience shame is a precarious developmental achievement, an acquisition of a sensitive marker of boundaries, warning us against behaviors that will diminish, mortify, or endanger us psychologically. The mature, self-protective version of “signal -shame” is the dialectical opposite and a good version of the searing, internalized version of traumatic shame that accrues from being found undeserving at one’s core. This is one reason why I believe my captor is trying to imprison and perform a sort of “soul murder” through direct infliction of trauma, by violent means (pain and suffering via remote wireless electromagnetic assaults/torture) rather than through open dialogue and discourse. This exposes the human male tendency of masculinity with its tendency for warmaking and the masculine tendency to castrate the other (see Chodorow, 2012). It points a glaring red flag to Freud’s paper entitled “Terminable and Interminable” (1937) and when he defines the defense mechanisms that emerge from replacing an intolerable truth with a more tolerable lie (see Holmes, 2012 and her writing on the repetition compulsion and the promise of psychoanalysis).

Internalizing shame, in contrast to signal -shame, violates our essential dignity as human beings. In cases of mind control, the external accusations that one is a “criminal,” “whore,” “piece of shit,” “bad and unlovable,” fold into interior pre-existing feelings of self-hatred and sinfulness via trance like states induced by remote wireless electromagnetic assaults/torture. Funny, men who are sexually driven to conquer multiple women and have multiple marriages, are not often seen as “deranged,” the perverse term “derilict from the breast” or “sexually addicted” but might rather be perceived as “the typical male” warrior who seeks to conquer and destroy. There exists a perverse subtle tendency of men to collude and maintain political and social control via the subtle art of coercion and persuasion. Donald Trump and Jeffery Epstein.

Intimacy: The tank in the bedroom, on totalitarian regimes and Trump’s winning the 2024 New Hampshire primary

It seems extraordinary to me that a country, a nation’s medical community, thought of as a “healing” profession, can make use of such dark techniques and technology. In the marriage between the APA’s psychoanalysts and the military defense program at Guantanamo. But such collusions came out of the Republican Bush administration following 9/11. Adrienne Harris wrote about the impact of political and totalitarian regimes on intimate life. Her goal of the paper was to convey, sexuality, gendered subjectivity, and intimacy are not simply personal and self-contained but rather invaded by, and cohabitating with, forces of power and history.

“If we fail to stand up and say something about the inequality of the behavior to employ torture as a means of “therapeutic technique” in methods of mind control, then we, in a sense, are participating with it by allowing it to continue.”

Prague psychoanalysts, during Nazi and then later communist regimes, manage to demonstrate a remarkable ability to survive long-term totalitarian oppression and maintain a — even if quite weak — continuity.

Martin Mahler, a contemporary analyst in Prague, conjured up the clinical, social, and professional dilemmas when Czech citizens began to rehabilitate and recover psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic work after the collapse of communism.

“The Hungarian writer, Gyorgy Konrad, once wrote (2009): Some time ago, a butcher lived in our village. He had a house on the corner, of a steep street. There was a military base near the village. Once, the butcher’s wife was changing bedding and a tank crashed through the bedroom wall because the road was ice and slippery. The front of the house was damaged. The woman was also damaged, but not too much. When I met the butcher next time, I asked him about what happened. “History came at us,” he said. The grotesque presence of a tank in the bedroom describes the ever-repeating experience of loss of a safe and familiar home, a very “unheimlich” space in Central European experience (Mahler, 2014).

This repeating presence of violence across the spectrum of normative development circumstances, and also in circumstances of extreme social destructiveness, always trying to uncover the elements of intimacy in the phenomena, is especially true for electronic harassment and wireless electronic assault/torture. I feel it is crucial to understanding intimacy’s role in the violence. Intimate life, particularly the intimate life of the body, a gendered experience and of sexuality, is always already infused by regulation, by violence, and by power.

Ruth Stein, in her paper “Notes on Mind Control: The malevolent use of emotion as a dark mirror of the therapeutic process,” notes the parallels between totalitarian methods and certain (but not all) models of psychoanalytic training. She writes,

“The infantilization of “candidates,” the mistrust toward their independent thinking and competence, the mystification that surround senior (training) analysts who occupy positions of power (training analysts were, and in some cases still are, elected by votes cast by a small group of older, privileged training analysts in the institute, who promote members who tend to think like them and leave out those who disagree), the intolerance for dissident opinions and their categorization as “nonanalytical” and even psychopathological — all these phenomena have controlled, and still, in part control, the mind of aspiring analysts in training.”

In forensic analysis, in the absence of a subject, an individual personality is only comprehensible from the informational clues left behind at the scene. In relational models of psychoanalysis, the individual is only comprehensible to the analyst within a complex field of conscious and unconscious forces. Relational psychoanalysis considers shifting self-states, as multiple sites where psychic states join social links. This perspective also parallel “intersectional” models of the subject. The intersections are where the different sites cross, where movement is regulated or unregulated, violent or orderly, and include self-states of race, class, gender, sexual orientation, culture, historical incident. All these experiences operate in the subject in unique and emergent combinations. Feimberg (2005) speaks of telescoping of generations, the unconscious transfer of alienated narcissistic identifications arriving often as uncodeable and undecipherable to their senders and to their recipients. These seemingly unnoticed experiences where techniques in mind control are employed to control the population by its leaders. Jessica Benjamin investigated the complex interface of self and other, intimate and social, through the work of Thirdness. This concept of Thirdness is the space where mutual recognition takes place. (see Benjamin, 2018 “Beyond Doer and Done To”). This space of Thirdness is not present in the perpetrators’ utilizing wireless electronic assault/torture against their victims. It is most definitely being used as a bias against my perceived possessed personal identity. My womanhood.

Donald Trump and his 2024 campaign for re-election sends me into a state of dread. Trump easily seized the New Hampshire primary making him the more likely Republican nominee. One of the reoccurring unconscious psychic phenomena involves the fantasy of the “all powerful omnipotent dangerous mother.” Fear and dread abound in re-occurring fashion in dreams, fantasy and phantasy, opinions, and unconscious forces that cause us to take action or inaction, time and time again, according to the psychoanalytic literature. Ron Desantis dropped out of the 2024 Presidential Election as did Niki Haley, the other Republican candidate on the ballot. Dare I say any more? There is a totalitarian, fascist regime to fear in Donald Trump.

Sources:

First Do No Harm: The Paradoxical Encounters of Psychoanalysis, Warmaking, and Resistance (2010). Adrienne Harris and Steve Botticelli (editors). New York. Routledge. Relational Perspective Book Series Volume 45.

Lucy Holmes (2013) Wrestling with Destiny: The promise of Psychoanalysis. New York. Routledge.

Nancy Chodorow (2012) Individualizing Gender and Sexuality. New York. Routledge. Relational Perspective Book Series Volume 53. Chapter 9. Hate, Humiliation, and Masculinity.

Adrienne Harris. Intimacy: The tank in the bedroom. International Journal of Psychoanalysis (2017) 98:895–907.

M. Mahler (2014). Underground in Prague, 1–12 pp. Paper given at the Sandor Ferenczi Center, New School University (unplublished). Included in Harris’ above-mentioned paper in references.

Martin Mahler. “Underground psychoanalysis in Prague. Part 1.” Retrieved on January 28, 2024. https://psychoanalyzadnes.cz/2017/03/27/underground-psychoanalysis-in-prague-part-i/

Jessica Benjamin (2018) “Beyond Doer and Done To: Recognition and Theory, Intersubjectivity, and the Third.” New York. Routledge.

Vulnerability, War, and the Female Pregnant Body in Psychoanalysis: A Diary of Wireless Electronic Assault Torture

“The hope that humans will one day stand in solidarity with each other in regards to their shared human condition of precarious vulnerability ushering in a unified effort to end the human need for war.”

Psychoanalysts are sometimes involved with formulating the rationales for war. Their special area of expertise, however, was and remains motivation. To find the answers to the questions, “How can a man be motivated to kill and be killed for his country? How could their parents and fellow citizens tolerate their deaths? How could free men and women be induced to kill and maim their fellow humans? What made democratic wars acceptable? These questions lie at the heart of paradoxical encounters of psychoanalysis. How can any country promote and make war acceptable when there exist laws within civilized society that forbid murder, criminal battery, torture, cruelty to animals, child abuse, child murder, femicide, parricide, feticide, etc? When we know the only way to advance ourselves further in human development means the eradication of war? I ask these questions knowing full well that includes questions like “Should abortion be legal?” Is not abortion a war waged by women on their unborn children? It would seem, that killing has becomes a convenience to man when his situation becomes too uncomfortable thanks to the advancements of medicine and technology. A convenience that would seem to reduce man to an unconscionable state of existence that of wild animal and beast.

The Female Pregnant Body in Psychoanalysis

Pregnancy is the most vulnerable position a woman can place herself in and women as well as men fear it (Holmes, 2013). The same revelations discovered by psychoanalysts pertaining to the reasons for war were not innate human aggressive drives, but rather that of human vulnerabilities (Zaretsky, 2010). Woman are placed in a weakened position, for several years, once motherhood is realized as their ultimate outcome and destiny. Men as well are placed in weakened position at the moment they become fathers. Women become a dependent with a dependent and men, as well as many women too, are burdened with the excess of financial responsibility to care for these newly acquired family members.

The fear of passivity in pregnancy poses an unconscious fear for women that makes the presentation of pregnancy seem like a fear against conscription and the draft peculiar to motherhood (nonwage earning status of domesticity). The fear of being caught unprepared and vulnerable becomes the unconscious motivation for abortion. Freud noted the human tendency towards anything that threatens to reveal one’s vulnerability would result in more aggression not less. Thus, human vulnerability lie at the heart of human violence. Freud’s postulation on shell shock is telling in regard to the female psyche. Although, as a man, he could not realize it at the time. Abortion is an attempt to master the experience of passivity in the trenches (nine months of pregnancy followed by the harrowing experience of childbirth). Freud wrote regarding shell shock, the ego in defense of itself is the libido whose demands seem to it to be menacing (Freud, 1920). The woman’s ego, defending itself against the experience of helplessness in the face of the possible culmination of excitation of childbirth cannot be managed by the normal workings of the pleasure principle (ie; fantasy). In other words, some women’s egos at the time of pregnancy fear passivity and being caught unprepared; where their egos at the time of pregnancy prefer the active, masculine role of being “prepared for the fight against masculine oppression” stand in high risk of seeking abortion.

I contend, through my reading and acquired knowledge in feminism on female pregnant bodies, that some women defend against this fear in fantasies that allow them to become pregnant and enter the precarious state of possible death known as labor and delivery. While other women do not (Balsam, 2012). If a state is going to outlaw abortion, then the state should offer psychotherapeutic services to help these women manage the fear of becoming vulnerable should they decide to keep their pregnancy. How can states take control of female flesh, via the law, without adequately providing psychotherapeutic services for the women who may be traumatically impacted by their pregnancies? Freud wrote about the fragility and defensiveness of the ego regarding war in Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920) and, believed at the time, the sexual symbolism tied closely to war rooted in Romanticism was at its end. Freud felt that the sexual symbolism was virtually identical to war and the Romanticism tied to it was weakening and dying. I can’t help but feel it is the same for childbearing in today’s modern and contemporary world. Romanticism elicits images of fantasy that work in the minds of little girls that allow them to imagine their own future pregnancies as mothers when women of childbearing age (ie: female pregnant bodies) enter their field of object relations. This psychological arrangement is known as “positive female pregnant body experiences,” but may not be a “positive” experience for all little girls.

“[As psychoanalysis]… highlighting psychological vulnerability …helped foreground the significance of economic and material vulnerability … analysts … urged teachers and parents to reflect rather than be angry (Zaretsky, 2010; pg. 184).”

To further comment on symbolism and fantasy, let’s discuss how masculine and feminine images reflect the stark contrast between male’s phallic superiority (the possession of an erect penis) and women’s phallic superiority (possession of an erect bulging belly of pregnancy) fair in the modern psychic consciousness of mass society. If, the extension of the male phallus, through erect largeness (the bulging erect penis) extended into the woman, of his choice via sexual intercourse, results in the female’s pregnant bulging erection of a belly, why has female largeness not been considered an aspect of strength and domination in terms of her possessed femininity and ultimate destiny? Why is the female pregnant body associated with oppression, weakness, disfigurement when in all actuality it is her highest achieved potential with regards to female development? Has her destiny not been realized? In addition, women who are overweight are considered “weak,” “inferior,” and “not in control of their appetites” where the aesthetic of the slender, lithe, athletic physique is absent in the female form, which, in my opinion represents the unconscious desire for a masculine idealized phallus, represents the splitting of the maternal object into its “bad” parts. This wished for aesthetic is sought after by women willing to risk death in surgical procedures and in the consumption of risky “miracle diet drug” to overcome the narcissistic blow of contemporary modern-day living (poor diet) and to defy the aging process and fend off disintegration anxiety. What happens when the wished for fantasy of the female narcissist is bent on seeing her Object-other humiliated by excess weight gain and a desire to interrupt graceful aging? I’ll follow next with Romanticism in political propaganda and in contrast black propaganda smear campaigns. Both are effective in recruiting followers to their respective cults.

Switching Gears To The Political Propaganda of War

In January 1941, Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered to congress his “Four Freedoms” speech following the end of World War II. His speech stressed the importance of the freedom of speech, the freedom of religion, the freedom from fear, and the freedom from want and resonated respectively with disarmament and social-democratic reform. This starkly contrasts with the current gang/mafia appeals to which I find myself caught in. The gang/mafia appeals to individual self-interest of personalized capitalistic pursuits to deny, degrade, destroy, a perceived threat causing the narcissist disintegration anxiety. That somehow, in his/her heightened psychological state of vulnerability, the “fundamental ideals and values of his culture have become threatened by a perceived enemy from within (or without for that matter).” This perceived “indifference to personal and family ties,” “lack of commitment to the extended family,” “lack of loyalty to aging parents’ needs,” “to friends and neighbors.” In short, propagandized the threat on “American way of life” so beautifully depicted and fantasized by Norman Rockwell paintings, yet the fantasy being entertained by the narcissist is the inversion of truth (a black propaganda campaign) through direct wireless electronic assault torture on the target to achieve the degradation of the very behaviors that contribute to the Norman Rockwell “American way of life.” The ideas that Rockwell depicted in simple everyday scenes, mowing the lawn, attending town meetings, tending the garden, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas, parents cooking in the kitchen a meal for their children, husband and wife tucking their children in at night, all aiming at democratic ideals and values of American culture, in terms everybody can understand. Rockwell linked them directly to a set of “intimate family and neighborly relations permeated by ‘an ethic of care.’” These ideals are in stark contrast to the people carrying out wireless electronic assault torture known as Electronic Harassment. Electronic harassment “is not an ethic of care.” Norman Rockwell, like Franklin D. Roosevelt, used these images and symbols as a rallying cry for the reason for men and women to go to war against an enemy that threatened the fundamental values and ethics of American living, as if to say, “This is what we are fighting for!” But it is the narcissist who is in direct conflict with these very ideals and seeks to destroy them in their object relational world because they threaten the narcissist’s superior opinion of him/herself. In short, annihilation of the competition in mafia terms requires a maiming of the enemies’ capabilities. Wireless electronic assault torture and Electronic Harassment “is not an aesthetic of American care!” Furthermore, it is not an aesthetic to the American way of life!

It needs to be made clear, these ideal representation of the “American way of life” put forth by Norman Rockwell and Franklin D. Roosevelt are the form Romanticism takes in fantasy of “perfect nuclear family values” which is misleading because no one lives a “perfect American life.” Again, the wireless electronic assault torture splits the Object-other into perceived “badness”, the kind of “badness” that renders the object to the position of least threatening terms, a position which will bolster the narcissist’s high opinion and image of him/herself that follows a calculated move towards omnipotent superiority, in a castration phantasy turned into reality. This psychoanalytic theory makes full use of Freud’s initial insight into “the preference for the active masculine role (active/dynamic/superior) over the feminine passive role (inactive/static/inferior). That is the child’s wish to possess father’s penis and, to that extent, relegates mommy’s castrated status to passive inferiority. It is the common behavior among many women and men, of idealizing father’s wished for phallic superiority.

To connect how this relates, in particular to women, children and minority groups, consider economist Leland Gordon explaining the concept of democracy in 1943;

“The concept of democracy includes our economic as well as our political life … Although you may never have thought of it the concept of representative government in our economic life includes your freedom as a consumer to choose whatever you wish in the way of economic goods or services to satisfy our wants. To satisfy such fundamental freedoms as freedom of worship, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, should be added economic freedom of choice (Zaretsky, 2010).”

The economic freedom of choice is simply not granted to everyone, especially women and those minorities situated in the lower classes lacking higher educational opportunities. Thus, the ability to achieve these fundamental American values become stressed in certain minority groups which promotes resentments and hostilities towards the upper classes and those possessing more “elite status.”

For Freud, the internal world was dominated by conflicts over authority; for Melenie Klein it was dominated by responsibility to particular others to whom one had incurred obligations, not because one found themselves generically human as in Kant philosophy, but because one had found oneself in specific relations and circumstances. For Freud, the moral core of a person was formed in conflicts deriving from the “laws” that constitute our humanity, such as the incest taboo; for Klein, in contrast, the core conflicts reflect frustrations in obtaining basic needs such as milk or attention, from immediate others and in the context of real or imagined rivals or enemies (siblings/class mates/cousins/relatives). Kleinian orientation toward personal life represented an ethic, a feminine alternative to Freud, as an ethic of care instead of an ethic of justice. Thus, the need to exact revenge on a perceived threat that might threaten a person’s own sense of superiority sheds light on the Freudian desire to be “father’s potent penis” embodied in the wireless electronic assault torture or a reflection of inadequate maternal care by a non-responsive female object. (In short, annihilation of that which threatens from without). Thus, the Kleinian circle encompasses women, not all women, but a circle of certain women that elaborates the ethic of care in relationships; mother-daughter, mother-son, and sister-sister.

Devising Rules and Norms: Wireless Electronic Assault Torture Contributing to A Cultural Ethos

On final note, I can’t help but feel wireless electronic assault torture is a lot like a fighter developing his arsenal of “kicks” and “strikes.” What exactly are the rules and norms for electronic torture? Rules matter because they structure our interactions and relationships. But rules also matter because they contribute to the creation of culture. But what happens when the rules become perverted? When the rules are manipulated to make another, or rather, reduce another subject to a “beat down” for purely narcissistic satisfaction? Let’s consider how rules and norms play out in the politics of sex, sports, and injury:

“Cultural values and beliefs become embedded in rules, while simultaneously rules are purposely crafted to create and to symbolize a culture of the group. In this case, how people define and “do” consent emerges from its own language, rituals, institutions, and rules. Looking at the rules of consent reveals to what degree consent matters, what role it plays in the activities of its members, and to what extent people become incentivized to learn the rules.

Within BDSM, consent becomes the prevailing narrative centered on reaching a subjectively meaningful agreement by individual participants interest in giving and receiving pain. Suffice it to say, I am not interested in receiving or even giving graduated levels of pain. In BDSM, practitioners are solely responsible for crafting rules for their erotic encounters. No authority devises the rules, so they must rely on themselves and the consent of their partners to differentiate acts of pleasure from acts of violence. Within the community, knowledge of the rules delineates insiders from outsiders. A fairly institutionalized framework operating within the community mandates a “certain level of communication” and disclosure among members. Those unwilling to learn and play by the cultural rules are not considered upstanding citizens.

The rules of MMA create a culture in which explicit consent becomes implicit and less important to the fighting itself. Fighters are merely subjects to the rule-making authority — In this case, the state — an authority that does not participate in the fights. State athletic commission dictates the terms concerning who can fight, where they can fight, and how they can fight. A fighter’s power to negotiate the rules he will consent to is limited to stepping into the Octagon and choosing to fight or not. A fighter then focuses his energy on learning the techniques of the sport, maximizing the few opportunities he has over his own actions. Accordingly, learning how to kick and punch becomes primary; learning fight rules comes gradually through socialization.

Beyond involvement in how rules are constructed and learned, the presence or absence of an authority influences the level of group memberships’ investment in each other. BDSM practitioners are vested with rule-making authority for their scenes, and therefore have considerable incentive to clear to their partners and themselves. More broadly, “the community itself places great emphasis on rule-abiding behavior,” which creates more incentive for practitioners of BDSM to know and follow the foundational rules of the group. MMA fighters have the luxury of a rules system that requires referees to enforce the rules. They know that if they commit a foul, or break a rule, someone will intervene and penalize the offender. Since fighting is inherently competitive, fighters have little incentive to be accountable to their opponents. Fighters’ investment to learn the rules and to their fellow participants predicts whether rules are followed; the presence of rules may matter, but adherence to them may vary greatly (Weinberg, 2016; pg. 61–62).”

Sources:

Rosemary Balsam. (2012) Women’s Bodies in Psychoanalysis. New York. Routledge.

First Do No Harm: The paradoxical encounters of psychoanalysis, warmaking, and resistance. (2010) Adrienne Harris and Steven Botticelli (editors). New York. Routledge. Chapter 9, Psychoanalysis, vulnerability, and war by Eli Zaretsky (pg. 177–200).

Sigmund Freud. (1920) Beyond the Pleasure Principle (SE 18, pp. 7–64). In J. Strachey (Ed. & Trans.), The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud. London. Hogarth Press.

Lucy Holmes. (2013) Wrestling with Destiny: The promise of psychoanalysis. New York. Routledge.

Amber Jacobs. (2007) On Matricide: Myth, Psychoanalysis, and the Law of the Mother. New York. Columbia University Press.

Melanie Klein. (1988) Envy and Gratitude and Other Works: 1946–1963. London. Virago

Melanie Klein. (1988). Love, Guilt, and Reparation and Other Works: 1921–1945. London. Virago.

Melanie Klein. (1997) The Psychology of Children. London. Vintage.

Jill Weinberg. (2016). Consensual Violence: Sex, Sports, and The Politics of Injury. Oakland, California. University of California Press.

Vulnerability, War, and the Female Pregnant Body in Psychoanalysis: A Diary of Wireless Electronic Assault Torture

“The hope that humans will one day stand in solidarity with each other in regards to their shared human condition of precarious vulnerability ushering in a unified effort to end the human need for war.”

Psychoanalysts are sometimes involved with formulating the rationales for war. Their special area of expertise, however, was and remains motivation. To find the answers to the questions, “How can a man be motivated to kill and be killed for his country? How could their parents and fellow citizens tolerate their deaths? How could free men and women be induced to kill and maim their fellow humans? What made democratic wars acceptable? These questions lie at the heart of paradoxical encounters of psychoanalysis. How can any country promote and make war acceptable when there exist laws within civilized society that forbid murder, criminal battery, torture, cruelty to animals, child abuse, child murder, femicide, parricide, feticide, etc? When we know the only way to advance ourselves further in human development means the eradication of war? I ask these questions knowing full well that includes questions like “Should abortion be legal?” Is not abortion a war waged by women on their unborn children? It would seem, that killing has becomes a convenience to man when his situation becomes too uncomfortable thanks to the advancements of medicine and technology. A convenience that would seem to reduce man to an unconscionable state of existence that of wild animal and beast.

The Female Pregnant Body in Psychoanalysis

Pregnancy is the most vulnerable position a woman can place herself in and women as well as men fear it (Holmes, 2013). The same revelations discovered by psychoanalysts pertaining to the reasons for war were not innate human aggressive drives, but rather that of human vulnerabilities (Zaretsky, 2010). Woman are placed in a weakened position, for several years, once motherhood is realized as their ultimate outcome and destiny. Men as well are placed in weakened position at the moment they become fathers. Women become a dependent with a dependent and men, as well as many women too, are burdened with the excess of financial responsibility to care for these newly acquired family members.

The fear of passivity in pregnancy poses an unconscious fear for women that makes the presentation of pregnancy seem like a fear against conscription and the draft peculiar to motherhood (nonwage earning status of domesticity). The fear of being caught unprepared and vulnerable becomes the unconscious motivation for abortion. Freud noted the human tendency towards anything that threatens to reveal one’s vulnerability would result in more aggression not less. Thus, human vulnerability lie at the heart of human violence. Freud’s postulation on shell shock is telling in regard to the female psyche. Although, as a man, he could not realize it at the time. Abortion is an attempt to master the experience of passivity in the trenches (nine months of pregnancy followed by the harrowing experience of childbirth). Freud wrote regarding shell shock, the ego in defense of itself is the libido whose demands seem to it to be menacing (Freud, 1920). The woman’s ego, defending itself against the experience of helplessness in the face of the possible culmination of excitation of childbirth cannot be managed by the normal workings of the pleasure principle (ie; fantasy). In other words, some women’s egos at the time of pregnancy fear passivity and being caught unprepared; their egos at the time of pregnancy prefer the active, masculine role of being “prepared for the fight against masculine oppression.” These women possess a high risk of seeking abortion.

I contend, through my reading and acquired knowledge in feminism on female pregnant bodies, that some women defend against this fear in fantasies that allow them to become pregnant and enter the precarious state of possible death known as labor and delivery. While other women do not (Balsam, 2012). If a state is going to outlaw abortion, then the state should offer psychotherapeutic services to help these women manage the fear of becoming vulnerable should they decide to keep their pregnancy. How can states take control of female flesh, via the law, without adequately providing psychotherapeutic services for the women who may be traumatically impacted by their pregnancies? Freud wrote about the fragility and defensiveness of the ego regarding war in Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920) and, believed at the time, the sexual symbolism tied closely to war rooted in Romanticism was at its end. That is to say, Freud felt that the sexual symbolism was virtually identical to war and the Romanticism tied to it was weakening and dying. I can’t help but feel it is the same for childbearing in today’s modern and contemporary world. Romanticism elicits images of fantasy that work in the minds of little girls that allow them to imagine their own future pregnancies as mothers when women of childbearing age (ie: female pregnant bodies) enter their field of object relations. This psychological arrangement is known as “positive female pregnant body experiences,” but may not be a “positive” experience for all little girls.

“[As psychoanalysis]… highlighting psychological vulnerability …helped foreground the significance of economic and material vulnerability … analysts … urged teachers and parents to reflect rather than be angry (Zaretsky, 2010; pg. 184).”

Eli Zaretsky, Psychoanalysis, vulnerability and war, (2010)

To further comment on symbolism and fantasy, let’s discuss how masculine and feminine images reflect the stark contrast between male’s phallic superiority (the possession of an erect penis) and women’s phallic superiority (possession of an erect bulging belly of pregnancy) fair in the modern psychic consciousness of mass modern society. If, the extension of the male phallus, through erect largeness (the bulging erect penis) extended into the woman, of his choice via sexual intercourse, results in the female’s pregnant bulging erection of a belly, why has female largeness not been considered an aspect of strength and domination in terms of her possessed femininity and ultimate destiny? Why is the female pregnant body associated with oppression, weakness, disfigurement when in all actuality it is her highest achieved potential with regards to female development? Has her destiny not been realized? In addition, women who are overweight are considered “weak,” “inferior,” and “not in control of their appetites” where the aesthetic of the slender, lithe, athletic physique is absent in the female form, which, in my opinion, represents the unconscious desire for a masculine idealized phallus and represents the splitting of the maternal object into its “bad” parts. This wished for aesthetic is sought after by women willing to risk death in surgical procedures and in the consumption of risky “miracle diet drug” to overcome the narcissistic blow of contemporary modern-day living (poor diet) and to defy the aging process and fend off disintegration anxiety. What happens when the wished for fantasy of the female narcissist is bent on seeing her Object-other humiliated by excess weight gain and a desire to interrupt graceful aging? I’ll follow next with Romanticism in political propaganda and in contrast black propaganda smear campaigns. Both are effective in recruiting followers to their respective cults.

Switching Gears To The Political Propaganda of War

In January 1941, Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered to congress his “Four Freedoms” speech following the end of World War II. His speech stressed the importance of the freedom of speech, the freedom of religion, the freedom from fear, and the freedom from want and resonated respectively with disarmament and social-democratic reform. This starkly contrasts with the current gang/mafia appeals to which I find myself caught in. The gang/mafia appeals to individual self-interest of personalized capitalistic pursuits to deny, degrade, destroy, a perceived threat causing the narcissist disintegration anxiety. That somehow, in his/her heightened psychological state of vulnerability, the “fundamental ideals and values of his culture have become threatened by a perceived enemy from within (or without for that matter).” This perceived “indifference to personal and family ties,” “lack of commitment to the extended family,” “lack of loyalty to aging parents’ needs,” “to friends and neighbors.” In short, propagandized the threat on “American way of life” so beautifully depicted and fantasized by Norman Rockwell paintings, yet the fantasy being entertained by the narcissist is the inversion of truth (a black propaganda campaign) through direct wireless electronic assault torture on the target to achieve the degradation of the very behaviors that contribute to the Norman Rockwell “American way of life.” The ideas that Rockwell depicted in simple everyday scenes, mowing the lawn, attending town meetings, tending the garden, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas, parents cooking in the kitchen a meal for their children, husband and wife tucking their children in at night, all aiming at democratic ideals and values of American culture, in terms everybody can understand. Rockwell linked them directly to a set of “intimate family and neighborly relations permeated by ‘an ethic of care.’” These ideals are in stark contrast to the people carrying out wireless electronic assault torture known as Electronic Harassment. Electronic harassment “is not an ethic of care.” Norman Rockwell, like Franklin D. Roosevelt, used these images and symbols as a rallying cry for the reason for men and women to go to war against an enemy that threatened the fundamental values and ethics of American living, as if to say, “This is what we are fighting for!” But it is the narcissist who is in direct conflict with these very ideals and seeks to destroy them in their object relational world because they threaten the narcissist’s superior opinion of him/herself. In short, annihilation of the competition in mafia terms requires a maiming of the enemies’ capabilities. Wireless electronic assault torture and Electronic Harassment “is not an aesthetic of American care!” Furthermore, it is not an aesthetic to the American way of life!

It needs to be made clear, these ideal representation of the “American way of life” put forth by Norman Rockwell and Franklin D. Roosevelt are the form Romanticism takes in fantasy of “perfect nuclear family values” which is misleading because no one lives a “perfect American life.” Again, the wireless electronic assault torture splits the Object-other into perceived “badness”, the kind of “badness” that renders the object to the position of least threatening terms, a position which will bolster the narcissist’s high opinion and image of him/herself that follows a calculated move towards omnipotent superiority, in a masturbatory castration phantasy turned into reality. This psychoanalytic theory makes full use of Freud’s initial insight into “the preference for the active masculine role (active/dynamic/superior) over the feminine passive role (inactive/static/inferior). That is the child’s wish to possess father’s penis and, to that extent, relegates mommy’s castrated status to passive inferiority. It is the common behavior among many women and men, of idealizing father’s wished for phallic superiority.

To connect how this relates, in particular to women, children and minority groups, consider economist Leland Gordon explaining the concept of democracy in 1943;

“The concept of democracy includes our economic as well as our political life … Although you may never have thought of it the concept of representative government in our economic life includes your freedom as a consumer to choose whatever you wish in the way of economic goods or services to satisfy our wants. To satisfy such fundamental freedoms as freedom of worship, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, should be added economic freedom of choice (Zaretsky, 2010).”

The economic freedom of choice is simply not granted to everyone, especially women and those minorities situated in the lower classes lacking higher educational opportunities. Thus, the ability to achieve these fundamental American values become stressed in certain minority groups which promotes resentments and hostilities towards the upper classes and those possessing more “elite status.”

For Freud, the internal world was dominated by conflicts over authority; for Melanie Klein it was dominated by responsibility to particular others to whom one had incurred obligations, not because one found themselves generically human as in Kant philosophy, but because one had found oneself in specific relations and circumstances. For Freud, the moral core of a person was formed in conflicts deriving from the “laws” that constitute our humanity, such as the incest taboo; for Klein, in contrast, the core conflicts reflect frustrations in obtaining basic needs such as milk or attention, from immediate others and in the context of real or imagined rivals or enemies (siblings/class mates/cousins/relatives). Kleinian orientation toward personal life represented an ethic, a feminine alternative to Freud, as an ethic of care instead of an ethic of justice. Thus, the need to exact revenge on a perceived threat that might threaten a person’s own sense of superiority sheds light on the Freudian desire to be “father’s potent penis” embodied in the wireless electronic assault torture or a reflection of inadequate maternal care by a non-responsive female object. (In short, annihilation of that which threatens from without). Thus, the Kleinian circle encompasses women, not all women, but a circle of certain women that elaborates the ethic of care in relationships; mother-daughter, mother-son, and sister-sister.

Devising Rules and Norms: Wireless Electronic Assault Torture Contributing to A Cultural Ethos

On final note, I can’t help but feel wireless electronic assault torture is a lot like a fighter developing his arsenal of “kicks” and “strikes.” What exactly are the rules and norms for electronic torture? Rules matter because they structure our interactions and relationships. But rules also matter because they contribute to the creation of culture. But, what happens when the rules become perverted? When the rules are manipulated to make another, or rather, reduce another subject to a “beat down” for purely narcissistic satisfaction? Let’s consider how rules and norms play out in the politics of sex, sports, and injury:

“Cultural values and beliefs become embedded in rules, while simultaneously rules are purposely crafted to create and to symbolize a culture of the group. In this case, how people define and “do” consent emerges from its own language, rituals, institutions, and rules. Looking at the rules of consent reveals to what degree consent matters, what role it plays in the activities of its members, and to what extent people become incentivized to learn the rules.

Within BDSM, consent becomes the prevailing narrative centered on reaching a subjectively meaningful agreement by individual participants interest in giving and receiving pain. Suffice it to say, I am not interested in receiving or even giving graduated levels of pain. In BDSM, practitioners are solely responsible for crafting rules for their erotic encounters. No authority devises the rules, so they must rely on themselves and the consent of their partners to differentiate acts of pleasure from acts of violence. Within the community, knowledge of the rules delineates insiders from outsiders. A fairly institutionalized framework operating within the community mandates a “certain level of communication” and disclosure among members. Those unwilling to learn and play by the cultural rules are not considered upstanding citizens.

The rules of MMA create a culture in which explicit consent becomes implicit and less important to the fighting itself. Fighters are merely subjects to the rule-making authority — In this case, the state — an authority that does not participate in the fights. State athletic commission dictates the terms concerning who can fight, where they can fight, and how they can fight. A fighter’s power to negotiate the rules he will consent to is limited to stepping into the Octagon and choosing to fight or not. A fighter then focuses his energy on learning the techniques of the sport, maximizing the few opportunities he has over his own actions. Accordingly, learning how to kick and punch becomes primary; learning fight rules comes gradually through socialization.

Beyond involvement in how rules are constructed and learned, the presence or absence of an authority influences the level of group memberships’ investment in each other. BDSM practitioners are vested with rule-making authority for their scenes, and therefore have considerable incentive to clear to their partners and themselves. More broadly, “the community itself places great emphasis on rule-abiding behavior,” which creates more incentive for practitioners of BDSM to know and follow the foundational rules of the group. MMA fighters have the luxury of a rules system that requires referees to enforce the rules. They know that if they commit a foul, or break a rule, someone will intervene and penalize the offender. Since fighting is inherently competitive, fighters have little incentive to be accountable to their opponents. Fighters’ investment to learn the rules and to their fellow participants predicts whether rules are followed; the presence of rules may matter, but adherence to them may vary greatly (Weinberg, 2016; pg. 61–62).”

Sources:

Rosemary Balsam. (2012) Women’s Bodies in Psychoanalysis. New York. Routledge.

First Do No Harm: The paradoxical encounters of psychoanalysis, warmaking, and resistance. (2010) Adrienne Harris and Steven Botticelli (editors). New York. Routledge. Chapter 9, Psychoanalysis, vulnerability, and war by Eli Zaretsky (pg. 177–200).

Sigmund Freud. (1920) Beyond the Pleasure Principle (SE 18, pp. 7–64). In J. Strachey (Ed. & Trans.), The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud. London. Hogarth Press.

Lucy Holmes. (2013) Wrestling with Destiny: The promise of psychoanalysis. New York. Routledge.

Amber Jacobs. (2007) On Matricide: Myth, Psychoanalysis, and the Law of the Mother. New York. Columbia University Press.

Melanie Klein. (1988) Envy and Gratitude and Other Works: 1946–1963. London. Virago

Melanie Klein. (1988). Love, Guilt, and Reparation and Other Works: 1921–1945. London. Virago.

Melanie Klein. (1997) The Psychology of Children. London. Vintage.

Jill Weinberg. (2016). Consensual Violence: Sex, Sports, and The Politics of Injury. Oakland, California. University of California Press.

The Inversion Of Truth: Paradoxical Encounters of Psychoanalysis

“I felt I had finally attained humorous acceptance of the “the bitch within,” I find that I still prefer the familiarity and general recognition that comes from being a “good girl.” ~Lynn Layton, speaking on the effect of socialized gender roles

One of the key features, according to my personal experience with wireless electronic assault and torture, is the presence of an indifferent group/gang/institutional ordering, similar to the indifferent ordering in the mafia perspective, that breeds low levels of informal trust and high levels of anxiety about becoming “useless.” In our increasingly individualistic meritocracy, where a few people are recognized as truly talented (e.g.: “special”) and the rest are relegated to the “nonspecial status” of a disposable mass, it is the untalented mass who often receive the blame for their own “victimhood” (pg. 366).

Maltreatment from those on whom we depend creates the conditions in which disavowal to vulnerability becomes an individual and social defense. The label of “disavowal to vulnerability” will be referred to throughout this essay and has been considered in psychoanalysis as the “repudiations of the feminine represented as weakness, vulnerability, and inferior womanhood” (pg. 363).

Dominant narratives explain what is happening in terms that generally do not challenge the habitual ways of thinking that support the power status quo, such narratives pass as “common sense.” For example, the existence of torture in illegal detention sites will be framed by government, media, and the populace as the work of a few bad apples. Such de-contextualizations and de-historicizations are at the heart of the individualistic thinking proper to bourgeois ideology; to fit our experience to existing narratives, we “learn” to ignore the links that would render counter narratives meaningful, for example, narratives in which such phenomena are understood as systematic. Indeed, for many, systematic narratives simply don’t make sense. For some, notably those who have something to gain from supporting the status quo, be it material reward or social acceptance, adopting these narrative frames might involve cognitive dissonance — it is not in their interest to know what they know (pg. 363).

Maltreatment often issues in a wish to keep the perpetrators good, a wish that makes us distrust our own sense. I am arguing that this is a key feature in wireless electronic assault torture. “It is not the powers that be who are to blame, it is the victims/citizen in his craziness who is to blame” (pg. 364).

For those of us who are aware of how they suffer from existing power relations, systematic narratives that run counter to the dominant frame make perfect sense and some, especially those whose life depends on it, resist. Yet many of us in this situation too often feel helpless to challenge individualistic narratives in any way then by yelling back at the television or writing articles to help explain it. It is as Al Franken’s (2003) book title avers, there are the lying liars of the past 8 years (now 22 years), who justify war with lies like the one that linked Iraq to al Qaeda. It was hard for anyone to say they did not know these were lies — evidence was downplayed in the press, but evidence was there to find in popular books, documentaries, and news articles. Those who directly challenged the lies were named enemies of freedom; once the antiwar movement withered, it was easier to collude by silence. All of these forms of disavowal engendered resistance to resistance and have the feel of a socially shared perversion (pg. 364).

Lies seek collusion. And institutional and socially collective lies DEMAND it. Perverse pacts are defined as “a relationship between two accomplices, a mutual agreement … that serves to cover over or turn the common mutual gaze of the accomplices from the catastrophic biographical events that had befallen each of them.” A social reality built on cynical lies evokes a painful turn away from what we know to be true. But the disavowal works in two directions. As Howard Stein (2000) has argued, a media that turns away from painful truths, such as the body count of Iraqi citizens not only collude with government to trick the population into quiescence, but also collude with the population’s social defense against knowing what it knows (pg. 363).

“The resistance movement that formed in opposition to Bush’s social and foreign policies will need to stay mobilized (pg 370).” (see my previous post “Paradoxical Encounters with Psychoanalysis: Warmaking and violations of the Hippocratic Oath, The Role of Shame, The Paradox of Electronic Harassment and Wireless Electronic Torture, Benevolence and Malevolence in Theory, God’s Jury and the Inquisition, The Role of Mutual Recognition and Julia Kristeva’s Power of Horror” dated January 23, 2024 about the Bush’s administration’s use of APA psychologists in programs of torture at Guantanamo.

The Interpretation of My Dream

I want to recount a dream I had recently. It is amazing I had this dream because wireless electronic frequency stimulation is turned on during the night that prevents me from dreaming. The ancients believed dreaming was the vehicle with which the “gods” spoke to us. More recently, they are the food that helps us interpret unconscious signals of our waking lives. My dream:

“In my dream, I was in the process of learning a “new job” and felt like a fish out of water. There were supportive training staff, one man who was kind and supportive, said to me, “Don’t worry about it. You’ll eventually “get it.”

I was typing — performing data entry — from a document and feeding the text into a computerized data base. Eventually I would be evaluated and based on this “evaluation” I would be either allowed to walk free or be incarcerated in an institution for the “mentally ill” based on the number of my mistakes.

As I was entering the data, my screen slid down to the task bar, thus revealing to me the presence of another screen. (Towards the end of this paper I’ll touch briefly on Shoshana Felman’s textuality and the riddle of bisexuality and pull into a clearer view the inversion and mask that conceals truth from us.) On the second screen that was revealed to me, there the data on the screen was full of mistakes and typos. I was being careful to correct my typographical errors by inputting accurate information to ensure a good evaluation. After this happened, I start to panic. Someone is going to LIE about my performance! And usurp my freedom away and place me in a mental institution to be incarcerated!

I immediately alert the support staff and the kind gentlemen, who said he would stand by me when it came time to address the problem with the senior staff.”

It is important to comment on the particular task I am performing in my dream. It is a redundant and repetitive task of data entry. People who are deemed “redundant” or whose jobs are outsourced are, indeed, disposed of in very traumatizing ways (H. Stein, 2000). It is the threat of precarity found in this position in which we all can be located. We can all be the subject of a rumored lie that is false. A false lie supporting a narrative to defend the status quo of power and influence, most usually is the dominant narrative.

An important consequence for individual psychology is that people feel anxious, not so much about failure, rather people are more anxious about being found useless and redundant. Like I have just previously stated, people who have been deemed redundant or whose jobs are outsourced are, indeed, disposed of in very traumatizing ways (H. Stein, 2000). Likewise, feminine domesticity is, too, a service job that can be outsourced as domestic work involves a lot of redundant, repetitive tasks. Likewise, when governments’ abdicate responsibility for containing anxiety and for “holding” the vulnerable and the needy, dependency becomes more shameful. It has been my experience with wireless electronic assault/torture, that the main scope and purpose for its use is the complete and utter annihilation of the victim’s identity. Through the reduction of cognitive capacity (induced hypnotic states) combined with the infliction of physical pain and suffering directed at the body and mind (wireless electronic frequency stimulation), to induce feelings of shame, and to reduce mobility and productive output, further evidences its inversion to truth. In short, DISPOSAL of the victim (pg. 366).

Political institutions have modeled themselves on “cutting edge” corporate culture, a key feature of which is to be less and less accountable for the negative effects their policies have on workers/citizens. These new cultures, based on a consultant model that discourages long-term attachments and rewards risk taking and shaking things up, cultivate an idealized self that publicly eschews long-term dependency on others (pg. 366, see Sennett, 2006 — The culture of the New Capitalism). The “politics of disengagement” that characterizes the postwelfare state make it difficult both to locate a clear collective opponent and clear collectives with those grievances one might ally. Thus, individual competition replaces collective struggle (Bauman, 2001) (pg. 366).

We consciously and unconsciously collude with social norms, even when such collusions cause pain, because we long for acceptance and for caretaking responses to our vulnerability from both our loved ones and our cultural surround. Careful tending from the social surround might more quickly counter the defense of disavowal than does the analyst’s careful tending in the therapeutic arrangement (pg. 374).

The Inversion

The inversion, then, is the more harassment from one’s social surround, the more quickly one can move the targeted victim quickly into a state of disavowal and psychic splitting that lies at the heart of resistance to resistance (e.g. MIND CONTROL) (pg. 374).

My Interpretation Based On Personal Experience: If the targeted subject is moved to a psychic disavowal of feminine vulnerability via the targeted harassment (e.g. social and electronic harassment), and the subject then retaliates and becomes aggressive, the use of wireless electronic targeting to the victim then counter-acts the aggressive response inducing a sedative or hypnotic state. Thereby the targeted subject becomes the possession of the perpetrator issuing forth the assaults. For those of us who contend with “the bitch within,” represented as the symbolic all-powerful feminine maternal object, that seeks to kill us or save us, that all-consuming maternal object of which we are all split, this technological arrangement might be very well wished for masturbatory fantasy.

Comparing some of the social roots of contemporary disavowal regarding vulnerability and dependency to wireless electronic assault/torture, one can quickly make the connections to historical conspiracies and cover-ups and perverse pacts, to the degrading effects of mind control, the targeted individual experience of suffering wireless electronic assault/torture, and see it for what it truly represents. The inversion to cure which further gang/mafia/institutional indifference objectives rather than the supportive space of vulnerability and dependency of Thirdness (see Benjamin, 2018) in which mutual recognition can be achieved. The social and electronic harassment and torture, of which I have been suffering in the greater community of my demographic, aims to degrade the subject’s clairsentience, and locus of control, cognitive clarity, performance output, and unhinge the person’s sanity by quickly moving them from a state of peace into a state of disavowal and psychic splitting. Thus, inducing shame in the victim for the purpose of controlling her body. If employed as a tactic of control, the two common responses that follow will be either retaliation or withdrawal. Of course, there is one other possibility, creativity. When creativity is the response to this disavowal, an individual psychological response might be a fetish for homosexuality in the subject’s sexual orientation. As is the case of girls abused by one or more abusive female caregivers.

“In the personality who has the habit of lying, we find a scission that Freud described in “Fetishism” … a part which is in contact with reality and the other part that disavows it. The patient in the habit of lying usually uses ambiguity to “navigate” through the scission. This characteristic of “yes,” but “no,” indicates the tenacity with which the scission is maintained. Conflict implies having contradictions, vertices that might be in disagreement; in ambiguous functioning the definitions of vertices and the acceptance of contradictions are eluded, and what usually shows up are masks and incongruence (pg. 362).”

Pistiner de Cortinas, (2009)

Taking this one step further, if the lies rooted in the fetish structure of social perversion (repudiation of feminine dependency) for which I have been speaking, a person in the habit of lying, usually uses ambiguity to “navigate” this scission, than we need to look at the mask. What does the mask tell us?

“Throughout history men have knocked their heads against the riddle of femininity … Nor will you have escaped worrying over this question …”

And

“What is femininity — for men — mean for women?”

The Textuality and Riddle of Bisexuality In Balzac Compared To the Fetish Structure Roots of Contemporary Disavowal

The girl with the golden eyes in Balzac’s writing represents gold and femininity. In this writing, Henri is attracted to the girl’s golden eyes because they are for him the sign of feminine desire and sexuality, the very incarnation of femininity per se. However, what are the connotations of the metaphor of gold that, through her eyes, comes to symbolize the girl and, thus, to embody ideal femininity? By virtue of its very brilliance, the “gleaming gold,” is essentially a reflective substance, which reflects a source of light external to itself; the light reflected comes indeed from the object contemplated by the woman — Henri himself: the golden eyes of femininity are fundamentally a mirror in which the male — Henri — can contemplate his own idealized self-image so as to admire himself: “Judging from the expression on her face, she seemed to be saying: “What! You are here, my ideal, the being I have thought of, I have dreamed of night and morning!”

The golden brilliance of the girl with the golden eyes is fascinating, says Henri, because it is an “amorous gold, gold that wants to come into your pocket.” Paradoxically, gold as the metaphor of the utmost value is an image, at the same time, of possession and appropriation through which the ideal woman is again “reduced to a mere object, whose sole function is to be possessed and owned by man.” But the metaphor evoked by Henri of the gold that wants to come into his pocket is even more ambiguous than that, since, carrying a clear erotic connotation suggestive of the sexual act, it grants the golden eyes of femininity a phantasmic masculine — phallic — role. Ironically enough, femininity itself thus turns out to be a metaphor of the phallus. To the extent that the girl with the golden eyes is here viewed by Henri as the tool for his purely narcissistic satisfaction, Henri’s desire for the ideal woman can be said to be a sort of masturbation fantasy: his own phallus is indeed the prize he seeks. In much the same way as was said gold to be the ruling principle, a principle of domination and of hierarchy, so the golden phallus in the story, beckoning from behind the mask of woman’s beauty, is to be wishfully recuperated and restored to its proper place: man’s pocket (pg. 46–47).

In much the same way this story uncovers the textual riddle of bisexuality, and so too, the fetish structure of contemporary disavowal for which we observe in modern neoliberal capitalism and free market economy. It is my argument that the use of wireless electronic targeted assault/torture represents the masculine phallus of male patriarchy whose wish is purely narcissistic satisfaction in possession and appropriation, and so too, is carried out in a very similarly erotic space of intimacy of the sexual act, penetration and domination of the individual subject targets through wireless electronic assault (see the anal-sadistic universe and perversion in Chasseguet-Smirgel, 1984).

The movie “In the Valley of Elah” (2007), turns out to be about the violence perpetrated on the soldiers by their individual fathers — and how that violence is passed on. In the movie, Hank, the father, must bear many painful truths before he is able to face the entirety of his perverse relation to his son. He will have to confront his ugly racism, bear the unsettling of some of the very certainties that ground him, such as “the people you fought next to would never hurt you” and face a devastated wife who accuses him of killing both their soldier sons because of the macho code to which he made them adhere (pg. 371).

But the lie I want to address in this story happens when Mike, Hank’s son, is ordered by his superior officers to drive into an Iraqi child in the street and to keep on driving. Even though they know they hit a child, the group, Mike’s platoon mates who were with him, agree on the lie that they hit a dog, reducing the child to a non-human object. It is this lie that masquerades in the psychic constellation of the perpetrator against his perceived “enemy.” This psychic splitting exists in many forms; the Iraqi child, the Jew, the Muslim, the Prostitute, the Drug User, the Homosexual, the Catholic, the Black Man, the Autistic Child, and the Alcoholic, the targeted individual.

So, what are some of the ways that the social defense of disavowal (repudiation for feminine weakness and vulnerability) is made manifest in our institutional ordering? The author from which I am quoting, Lynn Layton, suggests we all need to locate our experience in existent cultural narratives or in personal adaption of these narrative (pg. 363).

It is through the malevolent use of emotion as a dark mirror, in inducing shame through abusive tortured violence of wireless electronic assaults to the body and mind that this technology creates the malevolent mirror which is a reflection of the perpetrator’s own position in society. Thus, the perpetrator replaces the truth, with a more palatable lie, that it is his target that is the “useless” “immoral” “inferior” “shameful” Other. And that she, in fact, IS the lie instead of it being the other way around.

In Balzac the reflective substance is gold, gold that reflects light penetrating illumination. In the malevolent dark mirror, the reflection is of the darkness found within the perpetrator’s own heart (see Chassguet-Smirgel, 1984). The textuality and riddle of bisexuality in Balzac’s work compared to the fetish structure of contemporary disavowal to feminine vulnerability and weakness in the experience of the targeted individual IS the tool with which we can uncover the conspiracy via a comparison. The technology that creates the targeted individual experience of wireless electronic assault/torture reflects the masculine phallic narcissistic satisfaction through appropriation and possession of the targeted subject, reduces the targeted subject (victim) to a mere object whose sole function is to be manipulated, degraded, and possessed by a masculine perpetrator, or if the perpetrator is a woman, by the masculine side of the female psyche. In short, it is a masturbatory fantasy that strokes the ego of the perpetrator’s “superior being.”

In methods of mind control, following the victim’s “softening” by these attacks, he/she is granted reprieve and acceptance by the group where he/she now feels he/she belongs when he/she begins to “comply” with the orders given. He is hence rewarded in direct proportion to his self-denunciation and immersion in what is dictated to him. These processes were and are practiced in cults, in religious conversion agendas, under totalitarian governments, in certain therapeutic communities, and in abusive relations of all stripes (pg. 252).

It is this inversion of truth that operates, not just in mafia/gang mentality, but also in the institutional ordering of indifference found within our social institutions and social structures.

Sources:

First Do No Harm. (2010) Adrienne Harris and Steven Botticelli (editors). New York. Routledge. Chapter 18, Resistance to Resistance by Lynn Layton (pg. 359–376). Note: the major part of what I have shared comes from this chapter in this book.

Felman, Shoshana. (1993). “What Does A Woman Want?: Reading and sexual difference.” Baltimore, Maryland, The John Hopkins University Press. (pg. 46–47). Note: The interpretation of Balzac’s work “The Girl With The Golden Eyes” comes from Shoshana Felman’s interpretation of the reading.

Benjamin, J. (2018). Beyond doer and done to: Recognition theory, intersubjectivity and the third. Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group.

Franken, A. (2003) “Lies and the lying liars who tell them: A fair and balanced look at the right.” New York. Dutton.

Stein, H. (2000) “Disposable youth: The 1999 Columbine High School massacre as American metaphor.” Journal for the Psychoanalysis of Culture and Society, 5(2), 217–236.

Sennett, R. (2006) “The culture of the new capitalism” New Haven: Yale University Press.

Bauman, Z. (2001) “Community: seeking safety in an insecure world.” Cambridge. Blackwell.

Chasseguet-Smirgel, J. (1984) “Creativity and perversion” London. Free Association Books.

The Casus Belli of Electronic Harassment

“The same tools that are used for healing can be used for torture … We know that now other totalitarian ideologies over the globe continue to use psychiatry and even psychoanalysis to confine and brainwash political opponents.”

Casus Belli is the psychoanalytic term used to describe the space in the therapeutic relationship between analyst and patient where trauma, linked to the patient’s past erupts and awakens from repression where both enter “the field of the catastrophe.” It occurs when dissociated material comes to life and it can seem more like a “combat zone” of war than a scientific laboratory to the analyst. They call this necessary pass in cure a “casus belli” in analysis because this is the Latin expression meaning “occasion of war” in an act or event that either provokes or is used to justify war. This is the purpose of wireless electronic assault torture also known as Electronic Harassment. It is the capitulation of ruthless vengeance by someone who has been “denied,” and is the on-going repetition behavior of the narcissist who, in a psychotic state, is far from repair.

Long ago, Greek tragedies used cathartic techniques to interrupt fate’s repetition across generations. They used drama to enact the fight, called agon, so that citizens of Athens could express and expel the unsayable and unimaginable issues of trauma. Nowadays such cathartic practices are still in use, for instance, among aboriginal people, who speak of exploring “the world of the dreaming.” But strangely enough, developed countries seem quite underdeveloped in this respect. The skills we have gained in technology, consumption, and positivistic science have been lost regarding the science of healing trauma. Convulsive shock therapy and new miracle drugs now replace the cathartic techniques of the ancient past and are no better than the prehistorical good old “bump on the head (pg. 203).” The extent to which wireless electronic assault torture also known as Electronic Harassment seems to represent this fact and seems to be a way doctors and those with authority gain control over the Object-other. But it is the patients who lose a genuine chance to repair themselves through creative expression. Such is the space of the Ritual of the Snake which will be discussed later.

For the psychoanalyst, the casus belli can be a very dangerous place for the clinician. This unavoidable crisis issues forth the ghosts from the past. The analyst may suddenly embody a strange kind of ruthless otherness. At that moment, the Erinyes, the Greek goddesses of vengeance, known to the Romans as the Furies, with their hairdo full of snakes, enjoy a manhunt across the generations, under the cover of a scientific warrant, or a classical psychoanalytic approach (pg. 202).

But this term is not what fascinated me the most about Francoise Davion’s chapter. It was the case analysis of Aby Warburg’s madness of 1914-1923 because it provided me the insight to our historical past and pairing of crisis and genocide that so often erupts after economic crisis, political upheaval, famine, and periods of ethnic supremacy. Aby Warburg’s was a famous art historian of the Renaissance period. His career was considered eccentric in a family of Hamburg bankers and started with a noteworthy event. In 1879, when he was 13, he relinquished his birthright, which was to assume control and leadership of the family’s banking business, to his little brother. On one condition, they give him as many books as he wished for the rest of his life. The Warburg brothers kept their word to Aby and his famous library contained 85,000 books at the time of his death in 1929. The books were later smuggled to London Library during the Nazi occupation of 1933. The collection has been established as a working library – the Warburg Institute, in London (pg. 210).

Arby Warburg’s Madness Explained

What was Aby Warburg’s madness and what was its root cause? During the Great War, his library was a battlefield, with Warburg as the general-in-chief, receiving thousands of reports selected from newspapers, which he ordered his wife and children to bring him urgently. He came to believe in the delusion that World War I had been lost because of him. Some of his crazy rantings would prove prophetic. In the early 1920s, he went around shouting that Jews soon would be deported, tortured, and exterminated under the orders of Brinswanger the butcher. Ludwig Brinswanger was his former psychiatrist to which his family paid a lot of money to help cure Warburg of his delusions, but to no avail. He also claimed the “nice” Bellevue, his former hospital where he was an in-patient resident, was hell where the inmates were given human flesh to eat. He saw himself as “a ghost coming back from the dead.” While at the same time, Hitler was busy writing Mein Kampf from prison (pg. 210).

“Let us not be surprised to come upon madness so often in the fictions of novel and the theater. Let us not be surprised to find it actually prowling through the streets. For madness is within each one of us. All it requires is a little provocation and precipitation of peripety. Madness no longer lies in wait for mankind at the four corners of the earth; it insinuates itself with man, or rather it is a subtle rapport that man maintains with himself.” ~Michel Foucault, Madness and Civilization: A history of insanity in the age of reason.

Let us, for a moment, consider the truth in Aby Warburg’s madness. “How did Warburg foresee the objectifying process that would lead inexorably to the “scientific” reification and actual eradication of the mad among millions of people, and presage the genocide of the Jews? (pg. 211)

The interpretation and analysis of Aby Warburg’s delusion. Warburg’s delusion may be considered a revival of the trauma he experienced in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, during which he and his mother almost died of typhus. Moreover, he was 13 years old – the age of the pledge sealed with his brothers – when he witnessed, in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War, a new kind of mass anti-Semitism, especially when Hamburg anarchist Wilhem Marr launched the first Anti-Semitic League of 1879.

Wilhem Marr was a German agitator who campaigned in central Europe which culminated into Nazi anti-Semitism that put in place a surge of pollical perversion during times of financial crisis. It is my opinion that this is the character of wireless electronic assault torture and the phenomenon known as Electronic Harassment. Coincidentally, the onset of increased wireless electronic torture exponentially increased in 2009 following the fall of Fannie and Freddie Mac. Let’s compare, through a historical lens, the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War.

At the end of that war, France had to pay compensation for its defeat and did so in a surprisingly short time, in 5 years with gold money. German banks were destabilized, the Warburg bank nearly bankrupt, and Jewish bankers held responsible for the financial crisis. At the same time, as Hannah Arendt (1948/1978) described, new rights for Jews fostered, paradoxically, a new kind of massive anti-Semitic hatred still unimaginable. With a delay of 25 years, Warburg’s delusion showed the way to explore the trend leading to mass murder (pg. 212).

Trauma has a way of reappearing years after it has taken place. At the eve of World War I, Warburg launched his research, deemed psychotic by others but actually bearing on areas of death, taped during his youth on the delicate apparatus he called “the seismography of my soul.” As is always the case, his delusion was not only a sophisticated tool of investigation, but also a theory for healing (pg. 212).

During the first World War, he was indeed showing, pointing out what could not be said, nor heard. This specific knowledge – denied by the classical language game of signifiers, allowing repression – was conveyed through sensorial images, which he called “surviving images (pg. 212).”  

Could there be a parallel between the September 2008 housing crisis which seems to parallel the agitation of crisis following the Franco-Prussian War and World War I? Genocides and torture follow in the aftermath of crisis whether it be economic, political, famine, or otherwise. Wireless electronic assault torture and Electronic Harassment is a form of torture. Let there be no doubt!

Genocide and Tortures are carried out for a number of reasons: resource extraction (compare Elon Musk’s monkey brain chips and unethical medical experiments of the German concentration camps), territorial expansion (see Russian expansion in Ukraine and Israeli occupation of Palestine), the ethnic cleansing of “defective character traits” (see the German Holocaust). In addition, domestic violence occurs during times of stress. Similarly, some people, when placed under stress, will resort to the use of mind-altering substances in an attempt to reduce stress. Wireless electronic assault torture poses an increased risk for the use of substances by compromising an individual’s copying skills which degrades the individual on a personal level.

The crime of genocide has been defined as, “any of the following acts committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group, as such: killing members of the group, causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of a group; deliberately inflicting on the group’s condition of life, calculated to bring about physical destruction in whole or in part imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; and forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. This has been defined by Article 2 of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG) of 1948.

One psychoanalyst had said to her colleagues of a patient, “I had somehow to “humanize” the monster that was inside this patient.” To which one of her colleagues replied, “I don’t agree. The point is not to have the “snake” become “human,” but for us “humans,” to become the snake.” Employing another colleague’s input, an Athapascan Indian, Art Blue, spoke of the “Hopi snake dance.” The ritual consists of having an individual dance with a live snake between their teeth and hands, at which point, you either get bit and die, or you become one with the snake.

How does Aby Warburg’s story end? Ludwig Binswanger, Warburg’s psychiatrist, agreed to finally discharge him on one condition: Warburg has to prove his sanity by giving a lecture on his research to the staff and the patients. What does Aby Warburg give a one-hour lecture on? On April 13, 1923 Warburg gives a one hour lecture on “The Ritual of The Snake.” At the heart of Warburg’s lecture was the confrontation with terror, a casus belli. Remarkably, Warburg tied the ritual of the snake found in several native American tribes to the terror of wiping out the Jews during the German Holocaust. For a half an hour, Hopi dancers hold rattlesnakes in their mouths and hands, representing a terror otherwise unspeakable. Afterward, they throw the snake back into the wild space of the desert, where they are said to take on the shape of lightening and become messengers for rain and conduits for power coming from the ancestors, who creep between our world and the world underneath, the world of the dead. This ritual enacts the shift between the threat of an imminent death – the venomous strike of the snake, as fast as lightening – and the renaissance of language from an unspeakable anguish (pg. 213).

“Andrienne Harris (2007) called such a passage “the bridge world,” which connects a new social link, “a particular province of unlinked speech” and the creation of otherness (pg. 214).”

When time stops in catastrophic areas, the normal dimension of causality is defeated. On the border of the “nameless dread,” and Lacan the Real, lies the space in which the wirelessly electronic tortured victim finds themselves. In a perpetrator’s re-enactment of a ritual of violence that links a “special causality” in the spatial dimension of the “invisible” with the very ritual of torture.

“One could almost say that man is a ceremonial animal.” ~Ludwig Wittgenstein

SOURCE:

First Do No Harm: The paradoxical encounters of psychoanalysis, warmaking, and resistance (2010). Adrienne Harris and Steven Botticelli (editors). New York Routledge. Chapter 10, Casus Belli by Francoise Davione (pg. 201-221). NOTE: I want to give credit to the author for his insightful discussion on the nature of and cause of Casus Belli in the therapeutic space of repair.

The Different Perspectives On Magnanimity After Wars: Insights to group stalking with electromagnetic assaults and torture and the attack on Pearl Harbor

As I have stated before, I believe the reason for group stalking with electronic targeted physical assaults and psychotronic torture is because the targeted individual has entered some type of conflict or disagreement with the perpetrator of the stalking. The following paragraph was written by Steven J. Brams in Game Theory and the Humanities: Bridging Two Worlds:

“A dilemma facing every victor is an interstate war is how to treat the vanquished opponent when hostilities end. Should the victor strive for a postwar settlement that addresses at least some of the grievances of the vanquished, or should it implement a new status quo that does not acknowledge these grievances? Magnanimity may quell the desire of the vanquished for revenge, but non-magnanimity may prevent the vanquished from acquiring the means to mount further challenges.”

Indeed, wars are fought over the preferred political order, as we see in the Russia-Ukrainian outbreak that has killed so many in recent news. The vanquished position in this order of events cannot be ignored. Similarly, the victims of group (gang) stalking with electronic harassment and torture, their position cannot, must not, be ignored either. Indeed, the purpose of this type of stalking is to destabilize the target similar to the de-stablization of enemy targets during times of warfare. Several scholars of international relations have analyzed the vanquished’s role in the postwar stability of a system. Indeed, restoring stability to a postwar system requires magnanimity toward the vanquished opponent by the defenders of the status quo. By focusing on two-state conflicts, evidence that “prudence in victory” is more stabilizing than punitive behavior by the victor, because the latter strategy produces a desire for revenge on the part of the vanquished. Indeed, we have witnessed the claims by individuals, who claim they are electronic targets, acts of mass random gun violence. A key difference is in the statistical evidence that perpetrators tend to be mostly men who seek to vindicate their egos because they have been humiliated by a male opponent. Women don’t typically seek revenge with overt bloody violence. In fact, when women do kill, it is their children whom they target.

In contrast, advancing a “peace by empire” argument, claiming that postwar stability is better served by a total subjugation of the opponent, which robs it of the means, and hence the opportunity, to initiate further conflicts. In warfare, reasons and goals are two totally different elements. I may have, or may have not have, mentioned previously the goal and reason for the attack on Pearl Harbor were two totally different elements in the naval pacific theatre. The goal of the Pearl harbor attack was to prevent the US Pacific Fleet from interference with their plans to advance militarily on territory belonging to Britain, the Netherlands, and the United States in the pacific theatre. It’s goal was to weaken the resolve and the spirit of the U.S. citizen, military officer, and its political leaders. The reason for the attack was to further the Japanese’s goal of acquiring vital resources so that the Japanese economy could thrive. The attack on Pearl Harbor was also in protest to the embargos placed upon them by the US which opposed the Japanese invasion of China. Their goal was accomplished on December 7, 1942 when several U.S. naval ships were sunk in the harbor and destroyed by a barrage of Japanese fighter planes. As it stands, it was one of the most decisive naval war victories in history.

In comparing electronic torture to the goal and reason for war, we come to conclude group (gang) stalking with electronic harassment and electronic torture is to weaken the spirit and the resolve of individuals who are being targeted by the stalking. Through the technique of slow and consistent torture, it wears down its victims. This is known as the Lesser Technique of Specialized Torture. That is its goal. But what of the reason? The reason can be summarized as a “declaration of war” against a perceived enemy target by a veiled and clandestine predator. But what are the roots of its conflict? The individual possess something they want and/or the individuals is “in the way” of their goal. It could also be you possess a resource, an attribution, a commodity they want or they don’t like. Conflict is sometimes perceived as abuse. Personal difference is sometimes seen as “conflict”. This is at the heart of basic object relations theory.

Perhaps you are dealing with a narcissist, and it just so happened that the target warned others about the perpetrators narcissistic behavior. This is the ultimate betrayal, calling out the narcissist for who and what they represent. In Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Jade Fox was Jen Yu’s mentor. But Jen Yu out grew her mentor and became a much stronger fiercer warrior. Because Jade Fox lacked the ability to comprehend the training manual and only understood the diagrams and not the text, she was limited in her capacity to reach her fuller potential. So Jen Yu kept the knowledge of the training manual hidden from Jade Fox in order to spare her feelings. For even if she conveyed the martial art knowledge to Jade Fox, it was likely she would not comprehend it as some people’s minds are closed or cut off. This news enraged Jade Fox and the friend and sister she knew in Jen Yu now became her greatest enemy. Jade Fox’s only desire from that point forward was to kill Jen Yu. This is what group (gang) stalking with electronic harassment and electronic torture represents on the theatre stage of war. It can be analyzed using theories postulated in game theory.

Indeed, the bullshit found in the game of group (gang) stalking with electronic harassment and electronic torture, that is to say the phenomenological narrative, is the excuse that the person is “alcoholic” or “mentally ill”. But why would you systematically torture someone who is “alcoholic” or “mentally ill” if you are not victim blaming? This victim blaming ideology parades in the face of “values” and “virtues” claiming to be those two very things, but, in actuality, is one of the most sinister aspect of warfare creating a “good us” and “bad them” narrative. The point is, you cannot declare a state of war in civilized society without a court of law. The victim blaming narrative predominantly used in the phenomenology of the crime only registers in the court of public opinion. In fact, the narrative and phenomenology is very similar to the sexual hegemony found in heterosexual domestic violence, intimate partner violence, and inter-partner/inter-friendship conflict. Since the power to dominant the victim registers in the invisible realm of a paranoid schizoid personality constellation, which can also be called the symbolic imaginary realm, it requires the advance skill of reading silence and denial of women in the historical context as well as other vulnerable minority groups. Unfortunately, the State reproduces and recapitulates the abuse inflicted onto the victim in domestic assault cases and rape cases.

To reiterate the point I am trying to put forth, the American Naval Pacific Fleet present in Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1942 presented a threat to the Japanese’s military campaign of acquiring land territory resources because Japan, at that time, had very little in the way of territorial resources. There message to the American Naval Pacific Fleet was, indeed, was “get out of our way.”

It is a certain type of individual who engages in acts of terrorism and torture. In fact, women do not typically engage in acts of terrorism or torture. When they do, it is in very small numbers. When women do kill, they tend to kill their children at very young ages. The method they employ to carry out these killings are passive-aggressive in nature. That is, they kill their young children via drowning, strangulation, smothering, or poisoning. Men also carryout killing by these methods as well but are more prone to use covert violence such as guns and knives as weapons against their targets.

History: Magnanimity after Wars and Choices for the Targeted Individual

In transformed games it is always advantageous to vote for cooperative game outcomes. Why, then, is the cooperative outcome not always selected?

I am posting this today not because I feel magnanimous due to victory of some conflict. On the contrary, I feel defeated. If history is the study of the past, then psychoanalysis may uncover the individual’s enigma and discover why some wars are complete losses. Both history and psychoanalysis identify the set of events that give rise to particular outcomes, which encompass unique childhood experiences and critical time period events like the Great Depression and death of a parent which are the underlying forces that produce, across cultures and time, the sea of social consciousness we know as society. Such are the rise and fall of empires as well as the rise and fall of individuals.

Pareto-inferior non-cooperative outcome

Democracy resolves conflict in difficult games like the Prisoners Dilemma and Chicken by stabilizing their cooperative outcomes. It does this by transforming them into games in which voters are presented with a dichotomous choice (two choices) between a cooperative game and a Pareto-inferior non-cooperative outcome. A Pareto-inferior non-cooperative outcome is a situation where no individual or preference criterion can be better off without making at least one individual worse off.

When I wake up in the morning I like to exercise to get my blood flowing and my joints lubricated. But every morning I’m greeted with electronic targeted physical assaults and intrusions into my personal space by some rogue operator. I’m worse off for it and it appears to me to be a Pareto-inferior non-cooperative outcome due to “voters choice”. This is the effect of Group (Gang) Stalking with electronic targeted assaults and psychotronic torture.

Then, What are my choices as a Targeted Individual? If every morning at 4:00 AM I awake to coffee and exercise and I am only greeted with relief from my torture if I return to a sitting position how can I be successful with a rogue operator in control of my environment and my body?

Game theorist ask questions like, “Why aren’t cooperative outcomes not always selected, given that voters have no incentive to be free riders in the transformed game?” The answer to that question is that the public good may not be viewed by enough voters to be worth the cost of providing it. Even though democrats insist “We save lives!” and say “We are for the people!”
The honest truth is this. Some people don’t believe some lives are worth saving. So, the sea of public opinion might be the thought
“Some people are NOT worth it” like immigrants, Jews, women, the disabled, and the mentally ill because of a “non valuable” label that gets placed on such groups. Such a label has been placed against me. Since the public good may not be viewed by enough voters to be worth the cost of providing it. This explanation for the failure of cooperation is that the majority see the public good as a public bad and that “free riders” undercut the provisions of public good in a democracy. Therefore, I am dispensable. A common object with no specialized skills and one wearing a “non valuable” label.

What’s the label?

What does that matter? Make one up; Jew, Immigrant Daughter, Female, Disabled, Gay, Transgender, Christian, Communist, Sucker. Aren’t they the stuff delusions are made from.