The question lately in our post-Internet culture is who gets to rule the roost now? Sadly, the quickest ticket to notoriety for those who feel lost and desperate has become the surefire formula of the mass murderer, gone media viral.
This method is disturbingly easy and instantaneous for a disaffected individual, given the ready access to guns, social media, and then the greater media. Many of the recent killers noted in their “manifestos”, with disturbing clockwork-like similarity, feeling that they were denied what they felt was owed to them: the attention of beautiful women, the popularity they felt they deserved, the power they craved.
For various reasons, they had become social pariahs instead. To counteract this, they upload their own selfie shots and movies on social media, their own writings, as they prepare for their final act and expect an afterlife of the fame and recognition they never got in their own lives. They seethe with anger, the “narcissistic rage” characterized by the famous psychoanalyst Heinz Kohut: “the need for revenge…for undoing a hurt by whatever means…” by giving their pain to others and in doing so build up the remnants of their self-worth through violence.
So how do we let these lost souls feel connected to America again, feel that there is a better dream than the dark road to hell they have chosen? Gatsby is being killed over and over again.
Read more at: https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/culture-shrink/201510/american-narcissism-and-mass-shooters
do any of those 'traits' sound familiar,,,

could narcissim be more a culprit for war and terrorism than religion? after all religion teaches about recognizing the world as it relates to someone bigger than us,,,,and narcisissm is only concerned with the world according to us
(whether that be according to us with respect to religion, or us with respect to politics)
Edited by
msharmony
on Sat 12/05/15 09:09 AM