Sunday 17 April 2016

Abuse within authoritarian and individualistic paradigms - YouTube

Abuse within authoritarian and individualistic paradigms - YouTubeWomen Of The Night7 minutes ago (edited)LINKED COMMENT

It seems in the authoritarian (as you mention, humble, obedience, submission) revolves around who are job providers and who gives money to others to live. It has nothing to do with anything else from my point of view. When there is a problem at the top with an outsider or someone on the bottom, the whole enslaved group is used to shame and guilt trip someone in any way they can. If this does not work, then physical violence and mob action are used (im pretty sure you have mentioned this). If there was no money or power involved, nobody would be out to harm someone for looking or acting different. all though Im kind of interested in a men's right viewpoint, when a woman outsider is brought into a community, the majority of the people take glee in turning her into a prostitute if possible. It is sickening. I have seen where people who do not have ancestry in certain European countries turned into drug addicts so they can become prostitutes, where certain backgrounds and hair colors are protected from becoming a prostitute. Deep inside this issue, insider men's and women's organizations run psychological operations in the community and are usually the ones who decide who gets extrajudicial punishment. When you look how some towns or cities were created in McNugget land, you see that women were kidnapped and turned into prostitutes, and travelling men were drugged, forced to sign their lives away, and ended up tied up on a government or community pirate ship to work as a servant. These incidents are just a small portion of how society is structured and how "strongholds" for a community were created. Organized men and some women running scams.
Jennifer Armstrong 
+Women Of The Night Yup. The present day society still has the same dominance and submissions systems at the old ones. The difference is that the ideology of individualism prevents most people from seeing what is there, whereas in a self-acknowledged authoritarian system, the dominance and submission systems are there but with the additional obligations required of those who have power and status -- an expectation of noblesse oblige.

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Cultural barriers to objectivity