Understanding Obama and other People Who Kill
May 7, 2013
When Barack Obama orders the US military to attack people in another country, whether in a war or by using an illegal
drone strike, he knows that people, including innocent men, women and children (called 'collateral damage'), will be
killed. How can he do this? When Benjamin Netanyahu orders Israeli military attacks on unarmed Palestinians, he knows
that innocent men, women and children will be killed. How can he do this? When corporate executives, such as Hugh Grant
(chief of Monsanto) and Gregory R. Page (boss of Cargill), make decisions that deprive people - including those in
Africa, Asia and Central/South America - of the means of economic survival, they know that people will be exploited and
killed. How can they do this?
It takes someone with a particular psychological profile to kill people. Most of us cannot do it even when ordered to do
so. Studies have shown that even in combat situations under enemy fire many soldiers either do not shoot or 'aim to
miss'.
People who deliberately kill have suffered an extraordinary level of terror and violence during their own childhood and
this leaves them particularly badly emotionally damaged. This might be concealed behind a good-looking face and/or a
superficially pleasant personality. So what is the psychological profile of a killer, whether political leader,
corporate executive, terrorist or someone who commits murder on our streets? Careful scrutiny and analysis reveals that
these individuals share at least 23 feelings/attributes most of which are invisible to casual observation. (See 'Why Violence?') I will identify just twelve here.
Fundamentally, perpetrators of violence are terrified and they are particularly terrified of those individuals who
perpetrated violence against them when they were a child although this terror remains unconscious to them. Second, this
terror is so extreme that archetype perpetrators are too terrified to consciously identify to themselves their own
perpetrator (one or both parents and/or other significant adults who are supposed to love them) and to say that it is
this individual or individuals who are violent and wrong.
Third, because they are terrified, they are unable to defend themselves against the original perpetrator(s) but also, as
a result, they are unable to defend themselves against other perpetrators who attack them later in life. This lack of
capacity to defend themselves leads to the fourth and fifth attributes – a deep sense of powerlessness and a deep sense
of self-hatred and this latter attribute, in turn, negates any sense of personal self-worth, leaving them with an
extremely negative conception of themselves as 'bad', the sixth attribute. However, and this is vitally important, it is
too terrifying and painful for the perpetrator to be consciously aware of any of these feelings/attributes: they remain
deeply embedded within their unconscious and they are not necessarily apparent to others.
Seventh, the extreme social terrorisation experience to which archetype perpetrators of violence have been subjected
means that the feelings of love, compassion, empathy and sympathy, as well as the mental function of conscience, are
prevented from developing. This is because the human potential to have a conscience and to have the feelings of love,
compassion, empathy and sympathy depend on exposure to these and cultivation of them during childhood: they cannot be
fully developed later. Devoid of conscience and these feelings, perpetrators can inflict violence on others without
experiencing the feedback that conscience, love, compassion, empathy and sympathy would provide.
Eighth, archetype perpetrators of violence have a delusional belief in the effectiveness and morality of violence; they
have no capacity to perceive its dysfunctionality and immorality. Ninth, because they are terrified of identifying that
they are the victim of the violence of their own parents (and/or other significant adults from their childhood) and that
this violence terrified them, archetype perpetrators unconsciously delude themselves about the identity of their own
perpetrator. They will unconsciously identify their 'perpetrator' as one or more individuals of whom they are not
actually afraid from an existing 'legitimised victim' group because this or these individuals are either clearly not
threatening (to them) and/or are vulnerable in some way. This identification might be limited to their own children
and/or be a larger social group such as people who are black, Islamic or Palestinian, for example. It might also include
the impoverished masses of people in Africa, Asia and Central/South America.
Tenth, archetype perpetrators unconsciously project their self-hatred, one outcome of their own victimhood, as hatred
for their victim. This enables them to both self-justify their behaviour and to obscure from themselves their true but
unconscious motivation: to remain unaware of their own terror, defencelessness, powerlessness, self-hatred,
self-worthlessness, and all of the other unpleasant feelings that make them become perpetrators of violence.
Eleventh, archetype perpetrators have an intense fear of knowing the truth: it is safer to believe that their carefully
but unconsciously chosen victim, who is always much less powerful than the perpetrator, is 'the problem' (and thus gain
the desired, but delusionary, sense of 'having control'). The truth would require them to stand up to the actual
perpetrator and, of course, this is utterly terrifying.
Twelfth, archetype perpetrators of violence lack the courage to heal; that is, they delude themselves that their own
fear and terror are not responsible for their violence because they are too terrified to take responsibility for feeling
this fear and terror as the central component of any strategy for dealing truthfully and powerfully with their violence.
Perpetrators of violence need our understanding and support: they are people who are badly emotionally damaged. But
their violence needs to be nonviolently resisted as well. If not, perpetrators in powerful positions will drive us to
extinction as they endlessly seek delusional relief from their own fear, self-hatred and powerlessness by inflicting
violence on the rest of us.
In contrast to perpetrators, why do some people resist violence? Why, for example, do professors like Noam Chomsky and
Chandra Muzaffar, and individuals such as Bradley Manning, resist violence? Why do nonviolent activists such as Mairead
Maguire, Kathy Kelly and Dr Teck Young Wee (Hakim) resist violence?
They do so because they feel courageous and powerful; they have a deep sense of Self-worth and can ascribe worth to
others; they have well-developed feelings of compassion, empathy and sympathy; they have a clear conscience; they abhor
violence and injustice, as any emotionally undamaged individual must do, and they know that violence cannot achieve any
desirable social outcome; because of their courage and power to act, they have no self-hatred to project; they love the
truth and do what they can to expose it, even at risk to themselves; and, perhaps most importantly of all, they are
self-loving which means that they can love others too. Self-love is true love: the individual that does not truly love
itself cannot love another.
If you like, you can ask yourself this: which of these two psychological profiles most accurately fits you? If you see
yourself with something like the latter profile, you might wish to consider signing online 'The People’s Charter to
Create a Nonviolent World' http://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com
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Robert J. Burrowes has a lifetime commitment to understanding and ending human violence. He has done extensive research
since 1966 in an effort to understand why human beings are violent and has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is
the author of 'The Strategy of Nonviolent Defense: A Gandhian Approach', State University of New York Press, 1996. His website is at http://robertjburrowes.wordpress.com