Friend,
3 views of pirates:
1.
Any portrayal of them such as the Disney ride
Pirates of the Caribbean is a truly accurate presentation of them historically:
drunk, theft, Red Bead with the fireworks, bloody and ruthless, intimidating,
theft. Anything seen in the books like you have: this is not a fantasy, it was
a reality.
2.
The great period of the pirates we know of these
guys, the Pirate Age, had pirates mostly sanctioned and given ships and
financial support by the warring governments of England, Spain, France, and
others. This was on the down low, and they often had regular meetings with their
government contacts. Some pirates were gentlemen types, and revered as
warriors, otherwise, they were ruthless throat cutters.
3.
There is a counter culture theme also in
pirates. Humans don’t pick up the cultures of killers and put it in pop culture
naturally. So, there has to be some theme: and this is it, pirates also
disrupted the channels of the GREAT THEFTS of England, Spain, and France, as
they robbed, robbed, robbed the New World of ships of gold, gems, native
slaves, precious and rare woods and natural products. So, just who were the
pirates? Was it the Conquistadors that wiped out Mexico City tribe in a mass
throat slashing of a half million persons to get 100 ships of gold, England who
did the same, but all who participated in the land grab, then filling the gold
ships on return with African slaves, 20 million. There is an IDENTITY people
have then with pirates, that they are in a way, a very dirty Robin Hood Steals
from the Rich to Give to the Poor. Why do we identify with the pirate in this
sympathy where we would not have a heart tug to Hannibal Lecter or Mass
Shooters? It’s because of this anti-hero theme: they counter the “Big Man,
Governments that take”. While the
pirates methods were crude, juvenile, criminal, and psychopathic without
sympathy, they were the only counter to the governments stealing at that time.
Alternative current pop icons for current younger generations:
Vampires
Werewolves
Zombies
And instead of Pirates of the Caribbean, the Zombie
Apocalypse
I want to thank you for buying my sliver ingots at buy
price, as my friends offered me cash well below that. I found you honest,
direct, but both some things intrigued me:
The items in your shop are very unusual, interesting
Your interest in pirates astounded me. I first bought a tiny ingot because of the
pirate stamp.
I’m semi-retired now, which means working harder than ever. I’ve
written 50 books, but also started to work with my background in rock hounding,
beading, crafts, and “do it yourself”.
Your wife said; don’t trust a mental health worker after
they get their master’s degree. Surely, that it a “sorting hat” that separates
those with psychopath tendencies, who often climb to the top or amass patients
and abuse them.
I have a PHD in counseling, and began writing about that 20
years ago, and included this topic in ALL books. In fact, this was a major
motive for my first book:
Why do therapists abuse
Why are psychologists so aloof, smug?
And why are psychiatrists undertrained, and truly
psychopathic
(My first book addressed psychiatrists:
Over diagnosing those with common life stress syndromes,
diagnosing patients in 15 minutes, not having medical degrees, getting giant
kickbacks from pharmacy companies (I observed and documented), and why do they
shuffle patients in and out like sheep to slaughter). I listed methods to avert
this, but those are not a part of US mental health at all. Some days I was just
knowledgeable about this, others I could just scream.
I began my studies then of the mythology of pirates, then
merged into the mythology and pop culture of
Vampires, takers and cons
Werewolves, those who can change from good to bad, Jekyll
and Hyde types
And those followers, Zombies, or the blood crop of Vampires,
mesmerized
I got a PHD in world and cultural counseling, that
emphasized understand people from their culture, experience and beliefs
worldwide, not matter how far out it may seem. Since I was not a psychologist
but a licensed therapist with a PHD, my peers were those master’s level
therapists:
(As I studied pirates, I also studied related matters,
including serial killers, world psychopathic dictators, and criminals).
I found
Psychiatrists
The psychiatrists I had contact with had no compassion,
humility, or remorse. Although they didn’t have a medical degree, they were
brilliant in what they were doing, though it had nothing to do with medical
brain disorders. They were brilliant in developing big practices, getting
contracts with police departments, and giving lectures for pharmacy companies
at $5,000 a pop. They were shuffling patients through like sheep, and moving up
hospital ladders fast.
These were the worst of the mental health therapists. They
were prone as psychopaths to shifts of mood and rages all. One book, Countertransference
Reenactment, is about the many ways psychopathic mental health professionals
act out on to their patients. Always, there is not justification or
provocation: the psychiatrist is having a bad day, having a 5 divorce, or
generically angry in life about having to treat lowly worthless patients (sees
them as “cattle”.).
Psychiatrists then:
Full psychopaths, on a scale of 1-10, 10 being worst, in my
books, 9 are all
Psychopaths: uncaring, others are cattle, self-seeking,
egotistical, monger of money and gold, supreme intelligence in game playing and
intimidation of others though not too bright in their medical background,
climbs into positions of leadership, childhood history or bullying others or
other “childhood psychopath traits)
Example of a 10: Hannibal Lecter. That movie is an accurate
portrayal and worth the time watching.
Psychologists
Again, we have the “sorting hat” that comes with master’s
degrees, doctorates, and psychiatrist “pretend” MD licenses (they don’t attend
medical schools).
People either fall into one camp then or another, with that
degree. It’s their permission to “become”.
Psychiatrists:
98% have strong psychopathic traits, and perhaps those other
2% head off into research. I have not known in 35 years of one single
psychiatrist though opposite of those traits. Some, who have a long term or
family history of religion, may “adapt” their psychopathy: several Mormon
psychiatrists I’ve known have adjusted as their church doesn’t allow certain “aggressive
or verbal” acts on others, to
a.
Use the church dogma to subtly abuse others,
telling others they’ll go to hell for divorce homosexuality, going to the gym
regular, this and that…… And, their abuse is well calculated and planned: part
of the game. But, due to the required “tone” from their church, they’re not as
brash in comments, say compared to criticisms like that of Donald Trump. They
become skilled at abuse, pulling people into line, and keeping their giant “flocks”
of patients towing the line with showing up for meetings, paying bills, selling
their acclaim. These psychiatrists also are highly tied in with Mormon pharmacy
reps, and they show a “nepotism”. They
are amassing great wealth, mansions, gold, though they may give their tithes
and their annual work at the Temple. I’ve found several, which includes MD’s
will travel overseas for some medical relief in a poor country and use this to
get out of church obligations of weekly meetings. They get a “special
dispensation” from their Bishop for this, but they use the overseas work not
like the typical Without Borders Aid Doctors, they wring out all the talks,
praise, and books they can out of this, as a part of both psychopath and Mormon
games of climbing the ladder. Once they’ve talked to “most” wards on a Sunday
in your community, Mormon and non-Mormon find it hard to disagree with the
doctor’s diagnosis or treatment approach. It’s a given that what they speak is
the truth.
Then, a worst thing happens to patients: I document in my
books how a bad or few minutes’ diagnosis by one of these up front leads a
patient to years of that same diagnosis. It rolls like a big snowball. It
sticks. It shows up in medical records, it stops job clearances, it prejudices
family and neighbors against you, it causes shame, it disempowers the medical
process of collaboration in treatment, and furthers their game plan.
Psychologists
I think psychologists have less incidents of psychiatrist
psychopathy. Perhaps 60% are narcissists, uncaring, and sold out to making the
money off contracts of evaluations for many agencies. Narcissism: better than
you, professionally bullies against patients, aloof from typical persons, self-seeking.
The primary problem with both psychologists and licensed
therapists is that they sell out over time to the “system”. In order to get contracts
or jobs, they have to give the agency what they want, not what’s professionally
accurate. They fill out forms given, do evaluations as given, and often just
give back the state job or mental health group the results they expect. This
confounds patients, as there is a bias of who gets help and who doesn’t: AND, that
truly mentally ill DO NOT get the help.
Licensed Therapist
40% pathological and 60% valid and compassionate
Therapists and social workers are often “broken persons,
like 40% of psychologists. Perhaps half of counselors and social workers with
master’s degrees have compassion. Unfortunately, the current system of insurance
and agencies promotes the uncaring approach, and to survive, the rest of
therapists are forced to survive by selling out.
This all leaves people who want to have direction of their life’s
to doing their own research, finding online groups, and info, and being sure to
have a motto:
I will Doubt any profession who:
Oversells themselves
Is too slick
Forgets my info
Is rushed
Is from a culture of elitism, narcissism, and “nativisms”,
like the LDS church
Doesn’t offer collaboration in treatment, doesn’t follow the
Hippocratic Oath of no harm, and doesn’t offer “you have many options for
treatment and this is what scientific research (not generated by pharmacy
companies), has to say about this.