Originally posted October 10, 2017.
Psychopaths. I don’t believe they are born. They are made. Last week, a documentary I watched confirmed my belief.
The confirmation, interestingly enough, came in the form of a feather.
No, it wasn’t an actual feather. It was a picture of a feather on the television. The feather was part of a poster for the documentary “Tickled”. Here’s what the HBO description read:
“A pop-culture journalist’s investigation into “competitive endurance tickling” leads him on a dark, twisted journey full of manipulation, deception and online intimidation.”
I thought the documentary was going to be funny and bizarre. Instead it was a sad exposé of a psychopath ruining thousands of young boys’ lives. I’m not going to give away the story. Read that here.
What I do want to recount, are the last 10 minutes of the documentary (spoilers below the pic).
The documentarians finally track down and confront the documentary’s elusive subject. He gives up nothing and denies everything. Later, they call his aunt, who recounts this guy’s life as a kid. She explains perhaps why he is doing what he’s doing:
It becomes clear by this point in the documentary that this guy is likely gay, ashamed of it, indulges addictively in “homo-erotic tickle porn” and is ashamed of that. He uses his fixation to lure young athletes – likely similar to the boys who tortured him in school – with toys, cars and many times cash, to tickle one another on camera.
When the boys no longer want to participate, as they all eventually do, he destroys their reputations and their families’ reputation by publishing the videos all over the internet raising suspicions that the boys are deviant, closeted homosexuals.
How does he fund all this? Through over $10 million in inheritance from his parents.
It’s the broadest case of blackmail, exploitation and bullying I have ever seen. Boys from all over the world had been caught in his scheme in “Tickle cells” all over the US. This real-world mega-operation, had staff, studios and recruiters he paid to do his bidding.
What happened to this guy?
Six months after the documentary aired, the man responsible for all this, David D’Amato, died “suddenly” from a heart attack due to complications of obesity, diabetes and other poor health-related conditions.
This man was a true psychopath. He cared not at all for his victims feelings, used them as sexually gratifying play-things (against their knowledge or consent), then, when they tried to resist, he destroyed everything dear to them.
It seems clear David’s rise as an internet/video/homoerotic porn bully would not have happened had he (1) people around him who cared enough to teach him to accept himself, (2) an environment which allowed him to seek and receive help when he was being tortured in school, and (3) existed in a system where money couldn’t fuel his bitterness and hurt.
It was largely because of his huge war chest (his mother left him a trust which paid for all his expenses, plus $5 million and his father left him with over $5 million) that he was able to build a network, including teams of people, who would help him exact revenge on those who possibly looked like the young boys who bullied him in school.
In Copiosis, even if your parents are NBR rich, you’re not, if you haven’t yourself created Net Benefit for society. So when your parents die, their NBR wealth disappears. No more financial inheritances. You can inherit all the property they had, but it’s hard in a Copiosis society to use property to motivate behavior that generates negative net benefit.
Are psychopaths born or are they bred? I think it’s the latter. Even those who seem predisposed to that behavior at birth must be triggered by an environment conducive to the triggering.
I think this is why Copiosis offers so much promise for solving the psychopath problem: it creates an environment where such people can get the help they need.
Real psychopaths are uncommon. Put money in their hands though and their reach makes it seem as though they’re everywhere.
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