Catherine Austin Fitts: Ignota nulla curatio morbid
The Catherine Austin Fitts Blog January 15, 2007
Ignotas nulla curatio morbid - do not attempt to cure what you do not understand - is the opening theme in this study of evil. Political Ponerology is “a science on the nature of of evil adjusted for political purposes.” The author, Andrzej Lobaczewski, describes himself as a Polish psychologist who — with many other colleagues — found meaning living through Nazism and then Communism by studying how evil happens and triumphs in a wider political and economic system.
Lobaczewski’s hypothesis is that a small percentage of humans are born psychopaths. He describes the research to back up that data that was destroyed and supressed. Another minority percentage are of a nature to go along with psychopaths while the vast majority of people are essentially healthy. The majority who are healthy have a difficult time understanding that some people are not — they can not fathom being a psychopath or acting like one.
No one has worked harder in the last five years to understand the Tapeworm than Harry Blazer. It was Harry who discovered Political Ponerology and sent it to me. I found it chock full of deeply useful insights that can inform organizing to shift our situation. For example, Lobaczewski discovered that dealing with psychopathic systems made healthy people neurotic. However, they could heal very quickly when he gave them a scientific framework for understanding what had happened and why. With a sound framework, they could start to differentiate who was healthy and who was not and to devise strategies to deal effectively with psychopaths in power. Rather than having their relations with all humans destroyed, they were able to discriminate between healthy and unhealthy and increase their immunity to the drain of unhealthy culture and systems.
I strongly recommend this book for anyone who is managing human or financial risk in this environment or is looking to create healthy change. Traditionally, the Tapeworm’s greatest advantage is that healthy people can not fathom what they are up against and so keep inviting the Tapeworm back into their intimate spaces. This book helps you understand why that will not work. It helps you understand why conspiracies of the healthy and ‘coming clean’ are essential.
Political Ponerology is a book to read slowly. Lobaczewski uses a lot of academic and long words. The insights are deep and rich — they require focus and concentration. And the point comes home again and again: Ignotas nulla curatio morbid — do not attempt to cure what you do not understand.
Political Ponerology is available from:
Red Pill Press http://www.redpillpress.com/
1 Comments:
1st contact! Someone was kind enough to open a LiveJournal account just to let me know about Casiopaeia and "Signs". And here I am! (BTW I'm only about 100 miles from RPP Canada, and know / am fond of it's hometown.)
"Lobaczewski’s hypothesis is that a small percentage of humans are born psychopaths." I think that sort of statement a) does us a dis-service and b) detaches who should be kindred in solidarity. That a small percentage are born psychopaths is the stuff of any good first year course in cognitive psychology; at least in Canada we are no longer in the grips of behaviourism. Thanks to such as Dr. Hare (and his now graduated students like Steve Porter at Dalousie) this is foundational knowledge. To make it seem esoteric or exotice estranges fellows and makes the whole of the study seems dissonant.
As a touch for the moment, I learned in my youth that another name for Satan was "Prince of Confusion". I don't know that this is just why I have always been so directed at technical communications ... I suspect that has more to do with the clarity of teachings delivered by, for example, St Dominic Savio ... but it is, always, operative.
cheers
ben
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