jorolat1
The Archeotrauma and why Hamas terrorists commit atrocities
A brief note on the psychological origin of an unnatural capability to inflict harm.
First, an extract from, Why Arab nations don't want to take in Palestinian refugees from Gaza:
The US presidential hopeful Nikki Haley made a strong point when she asked the Islamic countries why they are not opening up their gates for Palestinian civilians from Gaza who want to flee their homes amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas.
"We should care about the Palestinian citizens, especially the innocent ones because they didn't ask for this. But where are the Arab countries? Where are they? Where is Qatar? Where is Lebanon? Where is Jordan? Where is Egypt? Do you know we give Egypt over a billion dollars a year? Why aren't they opening the gates? Why aren't they taking the Palestinians?" Haley told CNN in an interview.
She claimed that the Arab nations are not allowing the Palestinians because they know they "can't vet them" and they don't want "Hamas in their neighbourhood," asserting that "if Arab nations don't want them, then why would Israel?"
The aim of abuse is to break the spirit of a child in the same way a horse is broken (the archeotrauma*) and thereafter destroy any residual resistance until all that is left is a programmable doll.
If the programming consists of repetitive ideological indoctrination then layers of repression accumulate that subsequently may go off all at once - just like an airbag in a car.
Hence, atrocities in Israel and a reluctance on the part of other Arab nations to welcome Palestinians.
After all, Palestinians and Hamas are not different species - one is breeding the other.
War crimes that started the Israel Hamas conflict of 2023: An AI (artificial intelligence) image.
*The archeotrauma (alt. archaeotrauma) is the psychological wound, human beings, horses, and other animals sustain when their spirit is broken.
Also see Evolution and Psychology Research (just a bare-bones holding page at the time of writing, but one that outlines unconventional areas of interest).
An AI (artificial intelligence) image.
The Archeotrauma and why Hamas terrorists commit atrocities
A brief note on the psychological origin of an unnatural capability to inflict harm.
First, an extract from, Why Arab nations don't want to take in Palestinian refugees from Gaza:
The US presidential hopeful Nikki Haley made a strong point when she asked the Islamic countries why they are not opening up their gates for Palestinian civilians from Gaza who want to flee their homes amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas.
"We should care about the Palestinian citizens, especially the innocent ones because they didn't ask for this. But where are the Arab countries? Where are they? Where is Qatar? Where is Lebanon? Where is Jordan? Where is Egypt? Do you know we give Egypt over a billion dollars a year? Why aren't they opening the gates? Why aren't they taking the Palestinians?" Haley told CNN in an interview.
She claimed that the Arab nations are not allowing the Palestinians because they know they "can't vet them" and they don't want "Hamas in their neighbourhood," asserting that "if Arab nations don't want them, then why would Israel?"
The aim of abuse is to break the spirit of a child in the same way a horse is broken (the archeotrauma*) and thereafter destroy any residual resistance until all that is left is a programmable doll.
If the programming consists of repetitive ideological indoctrination then layers of repression accumulate that subsequently may go off all at once - just like an airbag in a car.
Hence, atrocities in Israel and a reluctance on the part of other Arab nations to welcome Palestinians.
After all, Palestinians and Hamas are not different species - one is breeding the other.
War crimes that started the Israel Hamas conflict of 2023: An AI (artificial intelligence) image.
*The archeotrauma (alt. archaeotrauma) is the psychological wound, human beings, horses, and other animals sustain when their spirit is broken.
Also see Evolution and Psychology Research (just a bare-bones holding page at the time of writing, but one that outlines unconventional areas of interest).
An AI (artificial intelligence) image.