A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, April 5, 2019
Startling Similarity Between Politicians And Psychopaths
A politician spends more time, energy and money trying to get
elected/and reelected to public office than any other single pursuit or
pastime.
Robert Hare, the leading expert on psychopathy as a mental disorder, who devised a psychopathic checklist, observed that psychopaths representing just one percent of the general population possess an especially heightened need for both power and prestige, seemingly prerequisite essentials for every aspiring politician. A startling accuracy of referring to Politicians as 'Psychopaths'
It is an understanding among honourable and educated elite to think of
politicians being natural-born psychopaths - Callous, manipulative,
exploitative, unrepentant and smarmy – these are the diagnostic traits
of the psychopath. And it seems so right.
As the twenty-first century gets into its stride, we judge politicians
to be self-serving and not straight-talking but also out of touch, all
the same, and a joke.
This finding cannot be dismissed as simply a reflection of a general culture of deference at the time.
In the same responses, people wrote about doctors as ‘selfish’ and ‘ignorant’, scientists as ‘inhuman ’with ‘one-track minds’, and lawyers as dishonest, thieving‘ sharks ’Citizens described their ‘loathing’ for politicians who made them ‘angry’, ‘disgusted’, and‘ depressed.
In the same responses, people wrote about doctors as ‘selfish’ and ‘ignorant’, scientists as ‘inhuman ’with ‘one-track minds’, and lawyers as dishonest, thieving‘ sharks ’Citizens described their ‘loathing’ for politicians who made them ‘angry’, ‘disgusted’, and‘ depressed.
The current economic, political, and legal system in Sri Lanka breeds
political psychopaths. We are on a path, rewarding
psychopathic behavior and punishing those with conscience and integrity.
Political Psychopaths are in love with power and risk taking, masters of
manipulation, self-serving opportunism and self-aggrandizement, and
hold virtual doctorates in deceit and deception; and they can
comfortably operate without conscience, guilt or any genuine level of
empathy toward others.
The behaviour and speeches of our politicians both in and outside the
parliament, show that these political psychopaths are highly skilled at
playing others in order to get what they want.
We have been primed for extravagant hope. We’ve been deceived into
thinking that if we work really, really hard, we’ll own that dangling
carrot. But nothing could be further from the truth. We are a nation
awash in hope.
These scheming politicians are keenly perceptive at reading people,
understanding their motives and values, brilliant at learning their
weaknesses and blind spots, and highly effective at inducing both
sympathy and guilt in others. They appear to be caring and considerate,
but only on the most superficial, disingenuous level – It means that
they are not straightforward, giving a false appearance of frankness at
every turn.
The supporters of politicians, collaborators, confederates and partners
in crime have an uncanny ability to pick brains, soliciting information,
knowledge, creative ideas and even secrets from others. These
scoundrels opportunistically utilize them to their own advantage
parading them as their own ideas and knowledge, and craftily taking and
receiving undeserving credit and accolades from bosses and those in
power.
Equally our politicians are also gifted actors, able to take on
chameleon-like colors according to their particular social setting and
company. Though they lack a capacity to feel emotions with any depth or
intensity, as actors and manipulators they are able to manufacture
crocodile tears for effect whenever it suits and benefits them. Their
obtuse and reprehensible acts become acceptable.
They have no trouble putting on the act of emotions when they are
determined to manipulate others most often into feeling guilty or
sympathetic toward them. The only genuine emotion these psychoneurotics
express is anger whenever their manipulations are thwarted or rebuffed.
We have seen them use intimidation tactics and behave impulsively and
even violently when angered, especially in response to a perceived
personal insult or perceived betrayal of trust or perceived lack of
respect for their authority. They are perennial predators bloodthirstily
lusting for more and more power. But most often their emotional tirades
are to manipulate, gain power and control over others.
Their gamey nature and sexual impropriety, lusts for insatiable desire
to win at all costs, and a gloating, short lived gratification that
brings victor’s spoils.
(The term Victor’s spoils was derived from the phrase "to the victor
belong the spoils" by New York Senator William L. Marcy, referring to
the victory of Andrew Jackson in the election of 1828, with the term
spoils meaning goods or benefits taken from the loser in a competition,
election or military victory.)
A politician spends more time, energy and money trying to get
elected/and reelected to public office than any other single pursuit or
pastime. In this pragmatic way, the psychopathic description that they
are mere public cons and hustlers selling themselves on the highest,
competitively demanding stage is neither too simplistic nor an
exaggeration.
Just as effective as they are at absolving themselves of any and all
responsibility and culpability of being completely blameless, they are
equally skilled at pointing the finger at others and throwing them under
the bus. In order to get elected and stay elected, they use their chief
assets of cunning charm and capacity to fabricate seamlessly at will,
their power to manipulate.
Once these political degenerates believe others have served their
purpose, they are deemed no longer of any real value and quickly
disposed of, discarded and/or betrayed.
What are we going to do about it? We are aware that whether we like it
or not we have to dwell in such an atmosphere, engage in collective
conversations and try to do our best hoping for a reasonably better
future for our country and its citizens.
In conclusion, we have shown that popular images of the good politician
have changed and as such it has become our bounden duty to establish a
new image rooted in the professionalisation of politics, the ideology of
intimacy, and democratic egalitarianism.
We understand that this new image is more difficult for politicians to
perform. It is more demanding, since it asks politicians to be not only
for the people–to be honest, capable, moderate, and strong–but also of
the people–to be ‘normal’ and ‘in touch’ with ‘real’ life and ‘ordinary’
people. In addition, the professionalisation of politics means that
politicians are less able collectively to represent the different
virtues expected of them. Furthermore, the contexts of interaction
between politicians and citizen have changed. The modes of interaction
afforded by media events and professionalised campaigning make it more
difficult for politicians to perform virtues and for citizens to
calibrate judgments.
Citizens want a multi-faceted relationship with their elected
representatives but are offered a series of one-dimensional experiences
that disappoint and frustrate and so provide the driving force behind
negative attitudes towards formal politics.
We should be able to guide mainstream institutional practices that might
lend themselves to a process by which citizens could judge politicians
in a multi-dimensional way.
Finally, the outcomes of the political process are seldom clear-cut. For
long periods, there appears to be nothing noble about politics at all.
Politics, after all, is a battle for influence and the exercise of
power. That this activity involves politicians in hustle, intrigue,
lies, and deceit pro-vides little surprise to most citizens who have
long understood that politics is prone to such a dynamic. Politics has
the quality of being both the decent pursuit of the common good and a
rather unedifying process that involves humans behaving badly. So, any
reforms offered will have to embrace this split personality of politics
and work with the grain of an inherently imperfect system.
Concluding with a point to ponder:
“In his book Manufacturing Consent, Noam Chomsky writes about how
“elementary truths” are consistently overlooked because the state does
such a good job of obfuscating what is really going on. This obfuscation
is essential in a free society where there always exists the threat
that a free population might hinder the mechanisms of power.”