Suppression, 10

If by any chance you think it is incredible, in the sense of not credible, well, not only reality doesn’t give a damn about being credible, not having to ask anyone’s permission, and not only the best way to hide something, particularly in plain sight, is making it appear incredible. In addition to that, what may appear not credible to some has been done. Actually accomplished. Reportedly, the “war booty” of Nazi psychology was thoughtfully transplanted and farmed home by the governments of the winning nations, and huge and diversified secret investments were made to the aim of controlling their own citizens; documentation exists within this field of investigation on how individuals have been artificially put in an hallucinated state where a friend were an enemy in a “kill or be killed” situation, and they acted in a murderous way accordingly, entirely contrary to who they were in a normal state. Since this is what has been artificially achieved by shady individuals with their apprentice sorcerer’s tools, you can easily estimate how likely it is that some individual may be “naturally” in such a state, only a more deep, hidden and articulated one.

It probably takes a bit of pondering to envision such a hell, and how would we feel and act were we in it. I suppose we would not only live in terror, but we would also do anything to conceal it: animals are said they can feel when one is scared, and it triggers them to attack. This said, deeming our survival on such a knife−edge, imagine how we would feel if anyone around us became more clever, able, strong: we would see that as our finishing blow. It’s worth repeating again that we would be seeing any other human being around us as an active enemy on the verge of butchering us; in fact it has been said that the suppressive sees others as a hostile generality, and this term is carefully chosen: the suppressive is in such a state of mind that not only all others are deemed hostile, but even the distinction between individual and individual becomes blurred and immaterial. It therefore becomes understandable why nobody can trust a suppressive: a suppressive trusts nobody at all in the first place.