Suppression, 11

And it becomes understandable as well why a suppressive is fixated on things like keeping others down, small, weak, dependent, ignorant, incapable of reaching, and under a useless, obsessive, absurd, spasmodic, ruthless – in other words, suppressive – control: every second, every one of them may attack him or her.

Whenever we’re so stupid to start digging our grave by taking suppressive advice as to how to conduct our lives and societies, we see the world drift towards 1984. We unwittingly find ourselves exiled from our humanity to homo homini lupus, where help is betrayal, our neighbour is an enemy, and communication lines are usurped by distraction, deceit and surveillance. We find ourselves stealthily educated into taking all that for granted as just the way it is. And this is not just the way it is; this is a fabrication.
And there is no limit to the amount of oppression and asphyxiation through pathological control that can pile up. So, well before we even realize it we find ourselves in a hell where rules are a boundless minefield instead of an essential shelter, where there are more bumph to fill than time to live, more fines than schools, more speed limits than roads, more checkpoints than lawns, more surveillance than anyone will ever exploit, more cages than freedoms, and more prison guards than inmates.
What kind of person, of point of view, of mental state can lead us there? This end result demonstrates conclusively the insanity of the suppressive, but alas time and again history proved this insanity does not prevent it from taking place, too.

And at the bottom of this hell understandable as well becomes what went maybe unnoticed in this quote in the opening overflight: “The social personality wants to survive and wants others to survive, whereas the antisocial personality really and covertly wants others to succumb.” Did you notice? Survival of self is not even an issue for the suppressive. To this paradoxical extent this condition can get: such is the terror that so absolute is the struggle to let anyone else succumb, that if this involves the suppressive him or herself to succumb, well be it.