Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Reasons for Concealed Carry: My Interview with a Psychopath” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/reasons-for-concealed-carry/.
Our Medical system, while pretty good, isn't really equipped to deal with these people long term. Hospitals in general aren't set up for long term care of anyone. As bad as it sounds we need some form of Asylum's again. So many of our homeless have severe mental health problems too but there's no where for them to go. Yeah this is just one more reason of a long list of why to carry.Not to throw shade on the medical community, but, let me see if i have this straight. The story has him killing someone(?) for no reason, then harming himself, then issuing threats. They let him go? thanks for nothing. We do carry, for many reasons, this type of mentally ill misfit being one of them.
well didn't i hear on the radio news this morning, that the GA 14 year old shooter was under FBI watch for making threats some time ago..??Not to throw shade on the medical community, but, let me see if i have this straight. The story has him killing someone(?) for no reason, then harming himself, then issuing threats. They let him go? thanks for nothing. We do carry, for many reasons, this type of mentally ill misfit being one of them.
Welcome to the forum from South Texas.Our Medical system, while pretty good, isn't really equipped to deal with these people long term. Hospitals in general aren't set up for long term care of anyone. As bad as it sounds we need some form of Asylum's again. So many of our homeless have severe mental health problems too but there's no where for them to go. Yeah this is just one more reason of a long list of why to carry.
i had been saying "bring back the mental hospitals" for a long time now, even here on this site.Our Medical system, while pretty good, isn't really equipped to deal with these people long term. Hospitals in general aren't set up for long term care of anyone. As bad as it sounds we need some form of Asylum's again. So many of our homeless have severe mental health problems too but there's no where for them to go. Yeah this is just one more reason of a long list of why to carry.
With all respect to Dr. Dabbs, Frank's condition sounds much more like schizophrenia rather than psychopathy, which is an inability to empathize with others and typically does not involve a break with reality. The title of the article would be accurate if it was "My Interview With A Schizophrenic."Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Reasons for Concealed Carry: My Interview with a Psychopath” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/reasons-for-concealed-carry/.
Welcome to the forum from South Texas.With all respect to Dr. Dabbs, Frank's condition sounds much more like schizophrenia rather than psychopathy, which is an inability to empathize with others and typically does not involve a break with reality. The title of the article would be accurate if it was "My Interview With A Schizophrenic."
Psychopaths (or sociopaths) have few moral scruples, can be very charming when they desire, and see other people as objects to be used to the extent that they can provide the sociopath with whatever they want. In some cases, other people are obstacles (to be eliminated). In others they are things to be used (think Bill and Hillary Clinton). In still others, sociopaths such as serial murderers enjoy the suffering, fear, and death of others. These people are legally (and psychologically) sane. They just don't care about the needs and feelings of others or how they hurt other people and do not have the same emotional reactions most people do. Estimates are that up to 4% of the population are sociopaths; obviously over-represented in elected government, as well as the C-Suite, but they are found in all walks of life.
I will. All too often I've watched I/M's BS head shrinkers and then go back and brag about it on the cellblock. Too many think they can "fix" someone. It just needs the right amount of counseling, understanding and drugs. They talk to an I/M a couple hours a month, and think they know what's best and everything that needs to be done. Never listening to the guard that spend 8-12 hours a day 4,5,6 days a week dealing with the little darling. If they do ask the guard, or look at the notes, they only take into account what agrees with their opinions, dismissing everything else. Too many times after being asked not to do so, the Dr.s will take an I/M off constant, 15 min watch, give them back everything that was taken and by the end of the day the guards are once again going in to restrain a bleeding, combative, or both I/M. While the good, educated professional is home with their family. Not to throw shade on the medical community,
And it will continue to happen. It seems to fit the gungrabbers' narrative for banning guns.well didn't i hear on the radio news this morning, that the GA 14 year old shooter was under FBI watch for making threats some time ago..??
why watch someone and not act when you see a pattern..??
You're exactly right. "Deinstitutionalization" is the source of many of our problems today. The inmates were released, but the local centers were not funded or built. So now we have a population of people with severe mental health problems who have nowhere to go. Many of them are harmless, but there are some violent people who are mentally impaired. Instead of being behind bars in an institution, they are free to roam among us and hurt people. Here's something I wrote a while back and saved to be used over and over:Actually, the changes to mental health laws and the demise of asylums began in 1968 with the passage of the Community Mental Health Act. This was a law that was championed by JFK because he had a sister that had been "mistreated" by the existing mental health system. As with most laws designed to "right" some kind of wrong, the "solution" went way beyond what any reasonable person would suggest as a remedy. CMHA '68 effectively dismantled the federal and state mental health systems, and turned that responsibility (and funding) over to community-based mental health programs. Many of these programs were mismanaged, funds were diverted, and centers shuttered. State hospitals were left out of the "solution", and have been closed, repurposed, or simply torn down. So, here we are now...with a totally dysfunctional mental health system.
I say, bring back Arkham Asylum! In the meantime, carry what you are good with.
On September 16, 2013, Aaron Alexis killed 12 people and injured 3 others in a mass shooting at the Washington Navy Yard in Southeast Washington, D.C. Alexis had numerous mental health issues, including claims that the voices in his head were harassing him and an incident where he disassembled his hotel room bed, believing that someone was hiding under it.
On December 14, 2012, 20-year-old Adam Lanza killed 20 children and 6 adult staff members at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, Lanza was a schizophrenic psychopath who could barely function on his own. He lived with his mother but communicated with her only by email. His mother once told his babysitter "to keep an eye on him at all times - to never turn my back, not even to go to the bathroom."
On July 20, 2012, James Eagan Holmes killed 12 people and injured 70 others at a mass shooting in a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, Holmes had met previously with several mental health professionals at the University of Colorado. He had made homicidal statements to one of his psychiatrists, and she believed that he could be dangerous.
On January 8, 2011, Jared Lee Loughner killed 6 people and wounded 13 others during a constituent meeting held for U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Arizona. Loughner was a longtime drug user whose behavior frightened his parents. His teachers were afraid of him. He had had five contacts with college police for classroom and library disruptions.
On April 16, 2007, Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people and wounded 17 others at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, Virginia, Cho had exhibited numerous incidents of aberrant behavior beginning in his junior year of college that should have served as a warning about his deteriorating mental condition.
One thing that is common among these and other mass murderers is that they were all known to be mentally ill, and their actions caused their acquaintances to fear them. Someone who is completely sane would not commit murder, right? So there's a common thread here - murderers have severe mental problems.
In the past, they would have been safely locked away in a secure facility where they could not hurt members of the general public. But the mental health system in this country has deteriorated to the point where it seems the only way a person can end up behind bars now is if they injure or kill someone.
Nope, the Doc is quite right. Frank is a psychopath. And the Doc said it but didn't...Frank is either possessed or oppressed, but I believe he's firmly possessed, as in perfectly possessed. This should be obvious. He did after all invite it in, and his behavior proves it. Unless someone, GOD, can reach him, he's lost.With all respect to Dr. Dabbs, Frank's condition sounds much more like schizophrenia rather than psychopathy, which is an inability to empathize with others and typically does not involve a break with reality. The title of the article would be accurate if it was "My Interview With A Schizophrenic."
Psychopaths (or sociopaths) have few moral scruples, can be very charming when they desire, and see other people as objects to be used to the extent that they can provide the sociopath with whatever they want. In some cases, other people are obstacles (to be eliminated). In others they are things to be used (think Bill and Hillary Clinton). In still others, sociopaths such as serial murderers enjoy the suffering, fear, and death of others. These people are legally (and psychologically) sane. They just don't care about the needs and feelings of others or how they hurt other people and do not have the same emotional reactions most people do. Estimates are that up to 4% of the population are sociopaths; obviously over-represented in elected government, as well as the C-Suite, but they are found in all walks of life.
The left won't agree with asylums because the mentally sick are of them.At one time people like Frank would never be allowed to roam free. I believe it was during the 80s that Congress, including President Reagan said it was cruel to keep people like Frank off the streets and in mental institutions. So the law that kept 'them' in was changed and 'they' let 'them' out. Just one of many things the Congress and Presidents have done to make our streets less safe. So we carry, legally or not legally, but will feel better being able to keep ourselves, loved ones and the innocent safer.