Congregator.net Home Congregator.net Home About Congregator.net Contact Information
www.congregator.net
Psychology: The Collective's License To Exterminate the Individual
by  Bobby Garner

December 22, 2005

The collective has zero tolerance for the individual.

He is uneasy in the presence of "crude and immoral" people, but he hates no one.

He becomes withdrawn and shows signs of depression.

His friends are chosen on the basis of a common or shared interest.

He is identified, labeled, criticised, ridiculed, condemned and summarily executed if he fails to comply and refuses to be assimilated by the collective.

He is defenseless against charges of having impaired cognitive and social functions. So, the psychologist's diagnosis of bipolar disorder fits like a psychological straightjacket.

He is cast an outsider, loner, misfit, or separatist. Labels which he is expected to wear like a dunce as the spectacle of focus for public ridicule.

He is profiled, analyzed, diagnosed, tried, treated or killed according to the acuity of his mental illness.

On the evening news, he is "holed up in his compound with his guns", never mind whether or not he actually owns one. He is surrounded, isolated, contained, and entrapped in a "standoff with the police".

In court he is Bewildered and confused, and he shows "no sign of remorse" for the things of which he is falsely accused.

His neighbors thought he was such a nice person, quite and docile. "Minded his own business, Wouldn't harm a fly".

The following story illustrates:



Experts: Soldier who tried to pass secrets to al Qaeda mentally ill

FORT LEWIS, Washington (AP), September 2, 2004 -- A soldier accused of trying to pass military secrets to al Qaeda suffers from bipolar disorder and other mental health problems, a psychologist testified at his court-martial Wednesday.

"He has been an outsider, a social misfit, most of his life," psychologist Jack Norris said of Spc. Ryan G. Anderson.

Norris, of Madigan Army Medical Center, said he began evaluating Anderson in mid-July, eventually diagnosing him with bipolar disorder, also known as manic depression.

He said Anderson has always been socially awkward. "The friends he has had usually revolved around their mutual involvement in some arcane interest," Norris said.

Anderson was videotaped providing military information to federal agents who prosecutors say he thought were al Qaeda agents. Testimony concluded Wednesday with closing arguments set for Thursday.

A second defense expert said Wednesday that Anderson is able to tell right from wrong.

Dr. Russell Hicks, a retired Army colonel and a staff psychiatrist at Madigan, said he had diagnosed Anderson with Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism that impairs cognitive and social functioning.

He said his diagnosis did not conflict with Norris' assessment.

During cross-examination, Norris read an e-mail Anderson wrote about his fellow soldiers.

"I do not hate them but I do not feel at home in their company," Anderson wrote, adding that they were "crude and immoral."

The Army presented a rebuttal witness, Anderson's superior officer, who testified that Anderson whispered, a day before his Feb. 12 arrest, that he had been contacted by al Qaeda.

"They contacted me, sergeant," Sgt. Francisco Velez quoted Anderson as saying Feb. 11 at the Fort Lewis cafeteria.

Velez asked what he meant.

"Al Qaeda," Anderson whispered.

Velez said he noted that others could hear, and suggested he and Anderson go to the base commanders. Prosecutors did not ask Velez if he reported the conversation to his superiors.

Military spokesmen were not available to discuss Velez's testimony.

Anderson, a Muslim convert, is charged with five counts of trying to provide al Qaeda with information about U.S. troop strength and tactics, as well as methods for killing American soldiers. He could face up to life in prison if convicted.

©MMIV The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

http://www.ottawamenscentre.com/news/20040902_experts.htm



Bobby Garner is a researcher on the phenomenon of One-Worldism with an emphasis on the methods and techniques employed in it's attendant deception without which the New World Order cannot happen. He may be reached via E-mail from http://www.congregator.net/pages/contact.html. He welcomes your comments. Visit his website www.congregator.net This article may be posted in it's entirety on any website provided this statement remains attached.

Top of page

Comment On This Page