DESTROYING UKRAINE - DESTROYING THE ENTIRE WORLD (BUCHA AND BEYOND)
I would like to explore some of the darkest emotions within the human psyche. Those peaks of incensed feeling that are generated at times of overwhelming concepts of wrongness around us or directed at us.
These emotions are not felt commonly by all of us but are most likely to be experienced at their most keenly at a young age. These are occasions when we feel we are the victim of some unbearable wrongness being applied to us.
Not all children will experience this sense of victimhood and “wrongness”, those with parents who have happily learned the art of guarding a child’s feelings and gently and with best intent surreptitiously manipulating a child for the most good for all will largely escape such emotions. However, when a child has become ‘spoiled’ by parents who, out of the best of intentions, attempted to provide everything a child wanted these emotions can be seen to arise and often. The contract is broken from the child’s point of view when the parents lose the nurturing instinct at some later point and may even become more irritated than loving in response to the child's needs and wants. Then the explosion of unfulfilled desires can erupt.
This involves wanting something that is denied, or wishing to stay where you are told you cannot, or do what you are refused permission to, or any of many breakages in what the child assumed was the contract that delivered what he or she knows it is ‘entitled to’.
The emotion that then ensues may be mild or extreme. For some it will mean a little tearfullness, a petted lip or stamping of feet, a frown or grimace and mournful voice. For others however, who have grown expecting all to be done for him or her and all needs and wants delivered a far greater degree of emotion can be expected culminating in a potentially highly destructive rage.
At the far end of the entitlement/victimhood rage the explosive element can become extreme. Objects of previous joy can be destroyed to show just how ‘wrong’ parents have been, to portray just how hurt and miserable they have made the victim and provide a loud and destructive message that someone better come and make this right.
I feel sure most who are reading this would have felt at least one occasion when the red mist came down in childhood and the urge was to demonstrate with loud and bitter emotions how wrong it was what was happening and how unfair it was what was being done and with an outraged determination that they pay, that someone pays, that even the entire rotten world pays for what is being felt.
These are some of the worst feelings we can have as a child. And if we sense that the previously doting parents have lost much of their love for us and not simply boss us around denying us our previously learned right that we were in control… then the sense of bitter disappointment and latent anger can be, in some cases, I believe, quite extreme. I am sure we have all come across the scene of such wars within a family where a child conceives he or she is being hard done by and impotent rage takes over.
In adulthood such instances where the red mist descends are usually quite infrequent, though in modern times a certain over-sensitivity can be found where such a reaction can be stimulated is certainly found. But the worst effects are within a partnership where previous behaviours of loving or at least toleration have begun breaking down. We all know the scenario I’m sure, the bitter upsets, rows, arguments and irascible moments of tension, irritation and negativity. These relatively minor moments can lead to something much worse at time however, to physical violence, even on thankfully rare occasions, to murder. Outside of family relationships the effects of considered wrongness can be even more extreme, as for instance in war.
The adrenaline pumping hatred felt as a child or adult for some circumstance can easily lead to extreme levels of violence due to unbridled hatred for the ‘other’ that can easily lead to an abandonment of all empathy, conscience or fellow-feeling allowing the most brutal and unconscionable acts of sadism and other forms of merciless conduct. At its most extreme we see such effects in the cold-hearted sociopath or the total lack of conscience of the psychopathic serial killer.
War generates the worst in most. With the hardened heart comes the hate as comrades or communities are destroyed. Instincts more commonly associated with criminality or psychopathy can easily emerge. The Geneva Convention is arguably likely to be noticeable by its absence in these modern times and old concepts of honour in conflict and principled behaviour despite the circumstances can be almost quaint, old-fashioned concepts of an earlier era (if that era even existed in reality which many may doubt).
The peak experience of such negative emotions in this spectrum bring about a willingness to destroy even that which has previously been loved. A child may smash his or most treasured toy to instigate the attention required, to demonstrate the depth of the wrong and invite someone, anyone, to come and make things right. The world as a whole can be seen to be rotten to the core and huge destructive effects can be seen to be required to make a big enough effect on those who seem immune to the pleading of those in unbearable pain and insufferable rage.
I am of course referring to recent acts of torture and murder of Russian prisoners of war which have been captured on video recently, but also to an entire range of extremely destructive false flag events where civilians and civilian infrastructure have been attacked and many lives lost.
This also has a harmonic effect in the wider world where western elites have been utterly reckless in an attempt to destroy the present Russian system of governance and undermine its president. The potentially devastating effect on the entire world will be increasingly hard to ignore. It is almost as if the western powers would rather have no world at all than one they cannot control.
These effects stem from the darkest regions of the human soul where an extreme of need is frustrated and the urge to destroy widens as the extremes of emotion replace previously logical and generally protective trains of thought. Entitlement to this or that and absolute rejection of forces not delivering as required lead to an explosive situation we know as war.
A child will have a tantrum from time to time, mild or extreme, at the most extreme end the impulse to hurt and/or destroy, to draw the attention of the parental controller to the perceived wrongness will be effected.
In adulthood with greater power comes the ability to effect violence and naturally far greater levels of violence, even to oneself or one’s own people to effect the required attention and assistance from others to “right” the perceived “wrong”.
In the present moment the events in Bucha, a town near Kiev in Ukraine is the focus of an attempt to draw outside assistance to an aggrieved force approaching their total defeat.
Any method will be countenanced at such a point to achieve the desired goal, to destroy an enemy, even if those methods involve destroying some of their own in the process.
In the wider sphere the western elites needing to establish their complete dominance of the world for what they perceive as their urgent need for total control, for global hegemony, are quite clearly willing to destroy the entire world to achieve their goals.
We are at the most insane period of our world’s long and dysfunctional history of internecine strife, psychopathic behaviours, desire for others’ lands/resources and the corruption of human motivations as expressed by war. May Heaven help us all in the most dangerous, destructive and traumatic times the human race has even experience, and save us from those who are willing to do absolutely ANYTHING to win.