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Why We Elect Narcissists and Sociopaths- And How We Can Stop!

Page 17

by Bill Eddy


  whether he or she wanted to unify or divide the nation. A nation can

  go either way. Barack Obama didn’t make an issue of race, so people

  didn’t vote based on that. Donald Trump did make an issue of race,

  so it “activated” people’s residual racism more than their residual tol-

  erance, and it helped him more.249

  What gave us the 2016 election, then, was not changes among voters. It was

  changes in the candidates…. [w]hat the candidates chose to do and say.250

  And Wannabe Kings will do and say anything because they lack

  empathy or a conscience. Trump frequently said things such as “illegal

  immigrants are treated better in America than many of our vets, ”251

  which isn’t true but created a feeling of crisis—a fantasy crisis.

  3. And it really was about the media repetition of emotional messages.

  “The news media value things that make for ‘good stories’— interesting

  characters, novelty, drama, conflict, and controversy—and Trump

  supplied those in spades. ”252 He received the most coverage.

  5 5 5

  Conclusion: Who’s Next?

  Joe McCarthy had a history of lying in politics that began by the time he was

  in his twenties. He certainly had Targets of Blame and showed no empathy

  or remorse in falsely accusing them in public on television. He eventually

  had his downfall, but he still had a lot of support. McCarthyism is named

  after him.

  Richard Nixon also lied a lot. He promoted an illegal scheme to break

  into the office of the Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate Hotel

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  116 Part II: The Fantasy Crisis Triad Worldwide

  during the election of 1972. He also had an enemies list, which was written

  down for him by his staff.

  Donald Trump has been a good example of an HCP using Fantasy Crisis

  Triads to divide voters and win. This appears to be because today’s high-

  emotion media, in all its forms, emphasizes faces, voices, and emotional

  messages. This ultimately favors high- conflict politicians (and all high-

  conflict personalities) who have far less self- restraint and ability to solve

  problems in the gray areas of real life.

  Yet it seems that elections are no longer about good government, but

  about “good stories.” In the all- or- nothing world of heroes and villains,

  Trump won.

  But who will be next? Will it be someone on the far right or the far left?

  In Russia, the far- left Stalin was replaced (with a period of democracy in

  between) by a far- right Putin. In Hungary, pro- democracy Orban became

  far- right Orban.

  Today’s high- emotion media in America has helped create an environ-

  ment in which a high- conflict personality can succeed with fantasy crises

  when real daily life is actually going okay for most people, including his fol-

  lowers. Yes, there are problems to be solved, but they don’t compare to the

  problems that a Wannabe King can create in their endless quest for unlim-

  ited power.

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  9

  10 COMMON MISTAKES

  WITH HIGH- CONFLICT

  POLITICIANS

  In the examples in the prior chapters in this book, a minority of enthusi-

  astic citizens made the mistake—or are currently making the mistake—of

  following Wannabe Kings to their own doom as well as everyone else’s. In

  most cases, this minority was only 30 to 40 percent of the adult popula-

  tion. The other 60 to 70 percent of the potential electorate either opposed

  or came to oppose these HCP Wannabe Kings, but they too made many

  mistakes that no one should make in the future.

  Mostly, they either believed and followed the Wannabe King, or allowed

  themselves to be split into at least three other groups, which allowed these

  Wannabe Kings to take power, and then gain more power, until they became

  unstoppable. As we have seen, after HCPs are elected and dismantle their

  democracies to impose authoritarian rule, it takes outside forces to stop

  them. We can no longer afford to let that happen anywhere in the world, so

  we must learn from the common mistakes so many have made.

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  Mistake 1: Missing the Warning Signs

  In every case in this book, voters missed how dangerous and deceptive

  these HCP Wannabe Kings were until it was too late or almost too late.

  Some never varied from supporting their narcissistic and/or sociopathic

  leaders. In some cases, voters paid with their lives for not realizing that

  their endlessly aggressive HCP would turn on them eventually. You

  might wonder whether these voters and leaders saw any warning signs

  and had any doubts about the HCP early on when they could have voted

  against them.

  The reality is that most didn’t. They saw individual behaviors in isolation

  (a serious insult, a physical assault against someone else, a cruel joke, and so

  on) and didn’t recognize that these individual behaviors were warning signs

  of patterns of future behavior. When you hitch your wagon to someone as

  grandiose, cruel, and lacking in empathy and remorse as these Wannabe

  Kings, you’re going to get worse behavior in the future, not better. These

  voters naively believed the opposite.

  Hitler, Stalin, and Mao routinely killed their closest colleagues to remove

  any perceived threats. Putin, Orban, Trump, and others appear to fire their

  closest colleagues on a regular basis to remove perceived threats or simply

  to show everyone who’s boss. If everyone knew that high- conflict politicians

  are always adversarial and endlessly aggressive toward everyone (as you

  now know), then they would realize what was coming and that their loyalty

  means nothing to a Wannabe King even though the Wannabe King demands

  it all along.

  I am hoping that this book will provide this general awareness and spe-

  cific knowledge. It’s important to know that this is an area of knowledge that

  you may not have needed in the past when there were fewer of these per-

  sonalities present and they had less ability to impact your life. Now everyone

  needs to know these personality patterns and the warning signs.

  Mistake 2: Believing in Fantasy Crises

  Most of the high- conflict politicians described in this part of the book spent

  very little time explaining why their “crisis” was real and needed emergency

  action. They just presented it emotionally and quickly moved on to talk

  about their alleged villains and how they, the HCPs, were the “heroes.” The

  crises became a given, an assumption.

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  In Germany, Loyalists just accepted that their loss of World War I, the

  reparations they had to pay to France, and the shambles of their economy

  were crises that could be blamed on a small group (1 percent) of people: Jews.

  Stalin and the Soviet government created famines in Russia and Ukraine,

  and then blamed them on t
he uncooperative peasants, the successful small

  farmers—the kulaks—who had worked hard doing what they thought was

  right. Mao created a devastating famine as well and destroyed the adminis-

  trative and professional classes in an effort to protect the country from his

  own fantasy crises.

  Orban and Trump have their immigrant “crises.” Putin has his propaganda

  of homosexuals “crisis.” Maduro’s “crisis” was the counter- revolutionaries

  who were elected to the legislature among others.

  Nowadays, this is where other politicians and the media make some of

  their biggest mistakes. They don’t explain to the public why the supposed

  crisis is or is not a crisis—and that it might not even be a problem that needs

  solving. Instead, they uniformly focus on emotions—how people feel about

  the crisis, the villains, and the heroes. Journalists often interview alleged

  villains, alleged heroes, and everyday people and then ask how they feel.

  And how does that make you feel? they ask. And how do you feel about

  what so- and- so said about you- know- who today? And how do you feel about

  this politician? Would you still vote for him today? Thank you. No useful

  information is provided in these types of conversations.

  It’s all about high emotions and high- conflict behavior that grab your

  attention. It’s rarely about thoroughly examining the facts and honestly

  reporting that many of these alleged crises are actually nonexistent—or are

  problems that are already being or can be well- managed or solved.

  Mistake 3: Believing in Fantasy Villains

  Many people come to believe that the alleged villains really are villains. In

  the 1930s in the Soviet Union, the urban- based young revolutionaries went

  to the rural peasants in Ukraine to convince them to give up their small plots

  of land and join collectivized farms. They were convinced that these farmers

  were counterrevolutionaries and the cause of people being at risk of starving

  in the cities, when it was actually the Soviet government’s policies that were

  causing food shortages.

  A more recent example of this is the highly negative views of Hillary

  Clinton that were evoked by Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential

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  election campaign. Trump said she was the most corrupt politician that

  had ever run for president, and he lead his followers in chants (even at the

  national Republican Party convention) to “Lock her up!” over her emails.

  Through this emotional repetition of such strong language, he gradually

  persuaded many people, even people who had decided that they would

  never vote for Trump, that Clinton was equally awful, so they would never

  vote for her either.

  It is also amazing to see how successfully Vladimir Putin ran against

  his American villains (Hillary Clinton, George Soros, and US Ambassador

  McFaul) in his successful 2012 election bid for a third term as president.

  Mistake 4: Believing in the Fantasy Hero

  It was and is tempting to want a strongman form of leadership during a

  crisis. Narcissists and sociopaths know this, so they start their rise to power

  by persuading the nation there’s a crisis that requires them to be the hero. If

  a population believes in this fantasy crisis, then they are much more likely

  to look for and accept a high- conflict politician as a good choice for leader.

  This is the message that Wannabe Kings have promoted through the ages— I

  alone can fix this. Many people believe that this is true— We need a strong-

  man like this—and that this is the person who should fulfill that role. But

  instead, they should recognize this statement as a warning sign.

  Appearing strong helps Wannabe Kings gain and keep support from their

  followers. This appearance seems to be more important than actually doing

  things well. The following was written in May 2018, sixteen months into

  Trump’s presidency and five months after he got a tax cut bill through congress:

  Why Trump’s approval has gone up, even as his scandals have piled up:

  The vast majority of the American public long ago concluded that Donald

  Trump is a liar who does not “share their values” or “care about people

  like them.” But at the start of his presidency, 79 percent of conservative

  Republicans believed that he could “get things done”—by December 2017,

  that had fallen to just 60 percent. Once the tax cuts passed, however, con-

  servatives’ confidence in Trump’s “git ’er done” abilities spiked back up

  into the mid-70s.253

  Wannabe Kings know that, above all else, they need to appear strong.

  And, as con artists, they are particularly skilled at making themselves into

  what their followers are looking for.

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  Mistake 5: Believing the HCP Has Been Victimized

  and Needs to Be Defended

  From day one, Wannabe Kings present themselves to their followers as

  being victimized by their “villains.” They ask for their followers’ assistance in

  attacking these fantasy villains. This is a standard tactic of most narcissists

  and sociopaths, even those who have no interest in politics or leadership. It

  appears to be a natural trait for them: the HCPs get sympathy from others

  and then use it to get assistance in attacking the HCPs’ Targets of Blame.

  This tactic works most of the time on the unwary. This is why understand-

  ing the traits of narcissists and sociopaths is such necessary knowledge for

  everyone in our modern times.

  In Turkey, President Erdoğan appears to have traits of an HCP Wan-

  nabe King. He has repeatedly emphasized that the European Union is treat-

  ing him unfairly and therefore, by extension, treating the citizens of Turkey

  unfairly, since the EU is reluctant to accept Turkey as a new member. In

  2018, President Trump tried to isolate Erdoğan by imposing economic sanc-

  tions and public rebukes in an effort to quickly free a Christian minister who

  was being detained there. This tactic ended up helping Erdoğan:

  As the Turkish currency swoons, Erdogan has focused domestic anger

  instead against the United States and portrayed his country as the victim

  of intentional sabotage—shifting attention from economic problems that

  analysts said his government has failed for years to adequately address.254

  So far, being attacked by Trump appears to have brought Erdoğan sym-

  pathy, not only with his own country’s citizens, but with other leaders. But as

  the reality of economic problems increases, at some point his followers may

  realize that he is a fantasy hero and not a victim—and not the wonderful

  leader they thought he was.

  Mistake 6: Believing the HCP Can Be Controlled

  This common mistake is made with all narcissists and sociopaths. In the

  case of Adolf Hitler, many of those in business and government saw him as

  relatively harmless and controllable.

  There were those who met Hitler [in the 1920s] and recognized he rep-

  resented almost a p
rimeval force and possessed an uncanny ability to tap

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  122 Part II: The Fantasy Crisis Triad Worldwide

  into the emotions and anger of the German people, and those who dis-

  missed him as a clownish figure who would vanish from the political scene

  as quickly as he had appeared.255

  One banker with a history of working with the democratic government in

  the 1920s, Hjalmar Schacht, told an American reporter, Edgar Mowrer, that

  he was going to be meeting with Hitler in 1932:

  Three weeks later, Mower met Schacht again, and asked him how his

  conversation went with the Nazi leader. “Brilliantly,” the German banker

  replied. “I’ve got that man right in my pocket. ”256

  How wrong they were.

  Likewise, when Donald Trump became president, many who elected

  him said that he would act “more presidential” once he got into office. He

  even made fun of this idea at rallies after being elected by pretending to be a

  serious and staid politician and then asking the crowd “You don’t really want

  me to be like that, do you?” And of course, the crowd would respond with a

  resounding “No!”

  Such actions reinforce the idea that now the number one goal of a presi-

  dent is to be entertaining. The idea that politics has completely merged with

  entertainment is continually reinforced by Trump’s public behavior and the

  media’s response to it. Yet few see this as a predictable part of the endlessly

  aggressive pattern of a Wannabe King. Power makes them more aggressive,

  not less.

  Mistake 7: Treating Moderate Opponents

  as Enemies

  In all of the cases described in this part, opposition to the high- conflict pol-

  itician is divided. In the case of Hitler, the Social Democrats and other par-

  ties in Berlin were constantly squabbling and he took great advantage of

  that. Both the Nazis and the Communists attacked the Social Democrats

  and weakened them significantly. If the opposition had somehow joined

  together with the Moderates, rather than attacking them and each other,

  they could have stopped him.

  In the 2016 primaries for the presidential election in the United States,

  the progressive wing of the Democratic Party attacked the moderate can-

  didate, Hillary Clinton. And the Democratic Party apparatus apparently

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