NORMAL PEOPLE UNDER PATHOCRATIC RULE
	
	
	As adduced above, the anomaly distinguished as essential psychopathy 
	inspires the overall phenomenon in a well-developed pathocracy and betrays 
	biological analogies to the well known phenomenon called Daltonism, 
	color-blindness or near-blindness as regard to red and green. For the 
	purpose of an intellectual exercise, let us thus imagine that Daltonists 
	have managed to take over power in some country and have forbidden the 
	citizens from distinguishing these colors, thus eliminating the distinction 
	between green (unripe) and ripe tomatoes. 
	
	 
	
	Special vegetable patch inspectors armed with 
	pistols and pickets would patrol the areas to make sure the citizens were 
	not selecting only ripe tomatoes to pick, which would indicate that they 
	were distinguishing between red and green. Such inspectors could not, of 
	course, be totally color-blind themselves (otherwise they could not exercise 
	this extremely important function), They could not suffer more than 
	near-blindness as regards these colors. However, they would have to belong 
	to the clan of people made nervous by any discussion about colors.
	
	
	With such authorities around, the citizens might even be willing to eat a 
	green tomato and affirm quite convincingly that it was ripe. But once the 
	severe inspectors left for some other garden far away, there would be the 
	shower of comments it does not behoove me to reproduce in a scientific work. 
	The citizens would than pick nicely vine-ripened tomatoes, make a salad with 
	cream, and add a few drops of rum for flavor.
	
	
	May I suggest that all normal people whom fate has forced to live under 
	pathocratic rule make the serving of a salad according to the above recipe 
	into a symbolic custom. Any guest recognizing the symbol by its color and 
	aroma will refrain from making any comments. Such a custom might hasten the 
	reinstallation of a normal man’s system.
	
	
	The pathological authorities are convinced that the appropriate pedagogical, 
	indoctrinational, propaganda, and terrorist means can teach a person with a 
	normal instinctive substratum, range of feelings, and basic intelligence to 
	think and feel according to their own different fashion. This conviction is 
	only slightly less unrealistic, psychologically speaking, than the belief 
	that people able to see colors normally can be broken of this habit.
	
	
	Actually, normal people cannot get rid of the characteristics with which the 
	Homo sapiens species was endowed by its phylogenetic past. Such people will 
	thus never stop feeling and perceiving psychological and socio-moral 
	phenomena in much the same way their ancestors had been doing for hundreds 
	of generations. 
	
	 
	
	Any attempt to make a society subjugated to the 
	above phenomenon “learn” this different experiential manner imposed by 
	pathological egotism is, in principle, fated for failure regardless of how 
	many generations it might last. It does, however, call forth a series of 
	improper psychological results which may give the pathocrats the appearance 
	of success. However, it also provokes society to elaborate pinpointed, 
	well-thought-out self-defense measures based on its cognitive and creative 
	efforts.
	
	
	Pathocratic leadership believes that it can achieve a state wherein those 
	“other” people’s minds become dependent by means of the effects of their 
	personality, perfidious pedagogical means, the means of mass-disinformation, 
	and psychological terror; such faith has a basic meaning for them. In their 
	conceptual world, pathocrats consider it virtually self-evident that the 
	“others” should accept their obvious, realistic, and simple way of 
	apprehending reality. For some mysterious reason, though, the “others” 
	wriggle out, slither away, and tell each other jokes about pathocrats.
	
	
	 
	
	Someone must be responsible for this: 
	pre-revolutionary oldsters, or some radio stations abroad. It thus becomes 
	necessary to improve the methodology of action, find better “soul engineers” 
	with a certain literary talent, and isolate society from improper literature 
	and any foreign influence. Those experiences and intuitions whispering that 
	this is a Sisyphean labor must be repressed from the field of consciousness 
	of the pathocrat.
	
	
	The conflict is thus dramatic for both sides. The first feels insulted in 
	its humanity, rendered obtuse, and forced to think in a manner contrary to 
	healthy common sense. The other stifles the premonition that if this goal 
	cannot be reached, sooner or later things will revert to normal man’s rule, 
	including their vengeful lack of understanding of the pathocrats’ 
	personalities. So if it does not work, it is best not to think about the 
	future, just prolong the status quo by means of the above-mentioned efforts. 
	Toward the end of this book, it will behoove us to consider the 
	possibilities for untying this Gordian knot.
	
	
	However, such a pedagogical system, rife with pathological egotisation and 
	limitations, produces serious negative results, especially in those 
	generations unfamiliar with any other conditions of life. Personality 
	development is impoverished, particularly regarding the more subtle values 
	widely accepted in societies. 
	
	 
	
	We observe the characteristic lack of respect 
	for one’s own organism and the voice of nature and instinct, accompanied by 
	brutalization of feelings and customs, to be explained away by the excuse of 
	injustice. The tendency to be morally judgmental in interpreting the 
	behavior of those who caused one’s suffering sometimes leads to a 
	demonological world view. At the same time, adaptation and resourcefulness 
	within these different conditions become the object of cognition.
	
	
	A person who has been the object of the egotistic behavior of pathological 
	individuals for a long time becomes saturated with their characteristic 
	psychological material to such an extent that we can frequently discern the 
	kind of psychological anomalies which affected him. The personalities of 
	former concentration-camp inmates were saturated with generally psychopathic 
	material ingested from camp commanders and tormentors, creating a phenomenon 
	so widespread that it later became a primary motive to seek psychotherapy.
	
	
	 
	
	Becoming aware of this makes it easier for them 
	to throw off this burden and re-establish contact with the normal human 
	world. In particular, being shown appropriate statistical data concerning 
	the appearance of psychopathy in a given population facilitates their search 
	for understanding of their nightmare years and a rebuilding of trust in 
	their fellow man.
	
	
	This kind of psychotherapy would be extremely useful for those people who 
	need it most, but it has unfortunately proved too risky for a 
	psychotherapist. Patients easily make connective transfers, unfortunately 
	all too often correct, between the information learned during such therapy 
	(particularly in the area of psychopathy) and the reality surrounding them 
	under the rule of so-called “popular democracy”. Former camp inmates are 
	unhappily unable to hold their tongues in check, which causes intervention 
	on the part of political authorities.
	
	
	When American soldiers returned from North Vietnamese prison camps, many of 
	them proved to have been subjected to indoctrination and other methods of 
	influencing by pathological material. A certain degree of 
	transpersonification appeared in many of these. In the U.S.A. this was 
	called “programming” and outstanding psychotherapists proceeded to effect 
	therapy for the purpose of deprogramming them. 
	
	 
	
	It turned out that they met with opposition and 
	critical commentary concerning their skills, among other things. When I 
	heard about this, I breathed a deep sigh and thought: Dear God, what 
	interesting work that would make for a psychotherapist who understands such 
	matters well.
	
	
	The pathocratic world, the world of pathological egotism and terror, is so 
	difficult to understand for people raised outside the scope of this 
	phenomenon that they often manifest childlike naiveté, even if they have 
	studied psychopathology and are psychologists by profession. There are no 
	real data in their behavior, advice, rebukes, and psychotherapy. That 
	explains why their efforts are boring and hurtful and frequently come to 
	naught. Their egotism transforms their good will into bad results.
	
	If someone has personally experienced such a nightmarish reality, he 
	considers people who have not progressed in understanding it within the same 
	time frame to be simply presumptuous, sometimes even malicious. In the 
	course of his experience and contact with this macrosocial phenomenon, he 
	has collected a certain amount of practical knowledge about the phenomenon 
	and its psychology and learned to protect his own personality. 
	
	 
	
	This experience, unceremoniously rejected by 
	“people who don’t understand anything”, becomes a psychological burden for 
	him, forcing him to live within a narrow circle of persons whose experiences 
	have been similar. Such a person should rather be treated as the bearer of 
	valuable scientific data; understanding would constitute at least partial 
	psychotherapy for him, and would simultaneously open the door to a 
	comprehension of reality.
	
	
	I would here like to remind psychologists that these kinds of experiences 
	and their destructive effects upon the human personality are not unknown to 
	scientific practice and experience. We often meet with patients requiring 
	appropriate assistance: individuals raised under the influence of 
	pathological, especially psychopathic, personalities who were forced with a 
	pathological egotism to accept an abnormal way of thinking. 
	
	 
	
	Even an approximate determination of the type of 
	pathological factors which operated on him allow us to pinpoint 
	psycho-therapeutic measures. In practice we most frequently meet cases 
	wherein such a pathological situation operated on a patient’s personality in 
	early childhood, as a result of which we must utilize long term measures and 
	work very carefully, using various techniques, in order to help him develop 
	his true personality.
	
	
	Children under parental pathocratic rule are “protected” until school age. 
	Then they meet with decent, normal people who attempt to limit the 
	destructive influences as much as possible. The most intense effects occur 
	during adolescence and the ensuing time frame of intellectual maturation 
	which can occur with the input of decent people. 
	
	 
	
	This rescues the society of normal people from 
	deeper deformations in personality development and widespread neurosis. This 
	period remains within persistent memory and is thus amenable to insight, 
	reflection, and disillusion. Such people’s psychotherapy would consist 
	almost exclusively of utilizing the correct knowledge of the essence of the 
	phenomenon.
	
	
	Regardless of the social scale within which human individuals were forcibly 
	reared by pathological persons, whether individual, group, societal, or 
	macrosocial, the principles of psychotherapeutic action will thus be 
	similar, and should be based upon data known to us, and an understanding of 
	the psychological situation. Making a patient aware of the kind of 
	pathological factors which affected him, and jointly understanding the 
	results of such effects, is basic to such therapy. We do not utilize this 
	method if, in an individual case, we have indications that the patient has 
	inherited this factor. 
	
	 
	
	However, such limitations should not be 
	consistent with regard to macro-social phenomena affecting the welfare of 
	entire nations.
	
	 
	
	
	From the Perspective of Time
	
	
	If a person with a normal instinctive substratum and basic intelligence has 
	already heard and read about such a system of ruthless autocratic rule 
	“based on a fanatical ideology”, he feels he has already formed an opinion 
	on the subject. However, direct confrontation with the phenomenon will 
	inevitably produce in him the feeling of intellectual helplessness. All his 
	prior imaginings prove to be virtually useless; they explain next to 
	nothing. This provokes a nagging sensation that he and the society in which 
	he was educated were quite naive.
	
	
	Anyone capable of accepting this bitter void with an awareness of his own 
	nescience, which would do a philosopher proud, can also find an orientation 
	path within this deviant world. However, egotistically protecting his world 
	view from disintegrative disillusionment and attempting to combine them with 
	observations from this new divergent reality, only reaps mental chaos.
	
	
	 
	
	The latter has produced unnecessary conflicts 
	and disillusionment with the new rulership in some people; others have 
	subordinated themselves to the pathological reality. One of the differences 
	observed between a normally resistant person and somebody who has undergone 
	a transpersonifica-tion is that the former is better able to survive this 
	disintegrating cognitive void, whereas the latter fills the void with the 
	pathologic propaganda material without sufficient controls.
	
	
	When the human mind comes into contact with this new reality so different 
	from any experiences encountered by a person raised in a society dominated 
	by normal people, it releases psychophysiological shock symptoms in the 
	human brain with a higher tonus of cortex inhibition and a stifling of 
	feelings, which then sometimes gush forth uncontrollably. The mind then 
	works more slowly and less keenly because the associative mechanisms have 
	become inefficient.
	
	 
	
	Especially when a person has direct contact with 
	psychopathic representatives of the new rule, who use their specific 
	experience so as to traumatize the minds of the “others” with their own 
	personalities, his mind succumbs to a state of short-term catatonia. Their 
	humiliating and arrogant techniques, brutal paramoralizations, and so forth 
	deaden his thought processes and his self-defense capabilities, and their 
	divergent experiential method anchors in his mind. In the presence of this 
	kind of phenomenon, any moralizing evaluation of a person’s behavior in such 
	a situation thus becomes inaccurate at best.
	
	
	Only once these unbelievably unpleasant psychological states have passed, 
	thanks to rest in benevolent company, is it possible to reflect, always a 
	difficult and painful process, or to become aware that one’s mind and common 
	sense have been fooled by something which cannot fit into the normal human 
	imagination.
	
	
	Man and society stand at the beginning of a long road of unknown experiences 
	which, after much trial and error, finally leads to a certain hermetic 
	knowledge of what the qualities of the phenomenon are and how best to build 
	up psychological resistance thereto. Especially during the dissimulative 
	phase, which makes it possible to adapt to life in this different world and 
	thus arrange more tolerable living conditions. We shall then be able to 
	observe psychological phenomena, knowledge, immunization, and adaptation 
	such as could not have been predicted before and which cannot be understood 
	in the world remaining under the rule of normal man’s systems. A normal 
	person, however, can never completely adapt to a pathological system; it is 
	easy to be pessimistic about the final results of this.
	
	
	Such experiences are exchanged during evening discussions among a circle of 
	friends, thereby creating within people’s minds a kind of cognitive 
	conglomeration which is initially incoherent and contains factual 
	deficiencies. The participation of moral categories in such a comprehension 
	of the macrosocial phenomenon, and the manner in which particular 
	individuals behave, is proportionally much greater within such a new world 
	view than the above adduced scientific knowledge would dictate. The ideology 
	officially preached by the pathocracy continues to retain its 
	ever-diminishing suggestive powers until such time as human reason manages 
	to localize it as something subordinate, which is not descriptive of the 
	essence of phenomenon.
	
	
	Moral and religious values, as well as a nation’s centuries-old cultural 
	heritage, furnish most societies with support for the long road of both 
	individual and collective searching through the jungle of strange phenomena. 
	This apperceptive capacity possessed by people within the framework of the 
	natural world view contains a deficiency which hides the nucleus of the 
	phenomenon for many years. Under such conditions, both instinct and 
	feelings, and the resulting basic intelligence, play instrumental roles, 
	stimulating man to make selections which are to a great extent subconscious.
	
	
	Under the conditions created by imposed pathocratic rule in particular, 
	where the described psychological deficiencies are decisive in joining the 
	activities of such a system, our natural human instinctive substratum is an 
	instrumental factor in joining the opposition.
	
	
	Similarly, the environmental, economic, and ideological motivations which 
	influenced the formation of an individual personality, including those 
	political attitudes which were assumed earlier, play the role of modifying 
	factors, though they are not as enduring in time. The activity of these 
	latter factors, albeit relatively clear with relation to individuals, 
	disappear within the statistical approach and diminish through the years of 
	pathocratic rule. The decisions and the choices made for the side of the 
	society of normal people are once again finally decided by factors usually 
	inherited by biological means, and thus not the product of the person’s 
	option, and predominantly in subconscious processes.
	
	
	Man’s general intelligence, especially his intellectual level, plays a 
	relatively limited role in this process of selecting a path of action, as 
	expressed by statistically significant but low correlation (-0.16). The 
	higher a person’s general level of talent, the harder it usually is for him 
	to reconcile himself with this different reality and to find a modus vivendi 
	within it.
	
	
	At the same time, there are gifted and talented people who join the 
	pathocracy, and harsh words of contempt for the system can be heard on the 
	part of simple, uneducated people. Only those people with the highest degree 
	of intelligence, which, as mentioned, does not accompany psychopathies, are 
	unable to find meaning to life within such a system.106 
	
	
	 
	
	They are sometimes able to take advantage of their superior mentality in 
	order to find exceptional ways in which to be useful to others. Wasting the 
	best talents spells eventual catastrophe for any social system.
	
	 
	
	106 Historically, 
	pathocracies target the intelligentsia for elimination first. As Lobaczewski 
	points out, this wasting of the best minds and talents eventually leads to 
	catastrophe. [Editor’s note.]
	
	
	Since those factors subject to the laws of genetics prove decisive, society 
	becomes divided, by means of criteria not known before, into the adherents 
	of the new rule, the new middle class mentioned above, and the majority 
	opposition. Since the properties which cause this new division appear in 
	more or less equal proportions within any old social group or level, this 
	new division cuts right through the traditional layers of society. If we 
	treat the former stratification, whose formation was decisively influenced 
	by the talent factor, as horizontal, the new one should be referred to as 
	vertical. The most instrumental factor in the latter is good basic 
	intelligence which, as we already know, is widely distributed throughout all 
	social groups.
	
	
	Even those people who were the object of social injustice in the former 
	system and then bestowed with another system, which allegedly protected 
	them, slowly start criticizing the latter. Even though they were forced to 
	join the pathocratic party, most of the former prewar Communists in the 
	author’s homeland later gradually became critical, using the most emphatic 
	of language. 
	
	 
	
	They were first to deny that the ruling system 
	was Communist in nature, persuasively pointing out the actual differences 
	between the ideology and reality. They tried to inform their comrades in 
	still independent countries of this by letters. Worried about this 
	“treason”, these comrades transmitted such letters to their local party in 
	those other countries, from where these were returned to the security police 
	of the country of origin. The authors of the letters paid with their lives 
	or with years of prison; no other social group was finally subjected to such 
	stringent police surveillance as were they.
	
	
	Regardless of whatever our evaluation of Communist ideology or the parties 
	might be, we are presumably justified in believing that the old Communists 
	were quite competent to distinguish what was and what was not in accordance 
	with their ideology and beliefs. 
	
	 
	
	Their highly emphatic statements on the subject, 
	quite popular among Poland’s old Communists circles, are impressive or even 
	persuasive.107 Because of the 
	operational language used therein, however, we must designate them as overly 
	moralizing interpretations not in keeping with the character of this work. 
	At the same time, we must admit that the majority of Poland’s prewar 
	Communists were not psychopaths.
	
	 
	
	107 “A hoard of 
	sons of bitches who climbed up to the feeding trough upon the backs of the 
	working class.”
	
	
	From the point of view of economics and reality, any system wherein most of 
	the property and workplaces are state owned de jure and de facto is state 
	capitalism and not Communism. Such a system exhibits the traits of a 
	primitive nineteenth-century capitalist exploiter who had an insufficient 
	grasp of his role in society and of how his interests were linked to his 
	workers’ welfare. Workers are very much aware of these traits, especially if 
	they have collected a certain amount of knowledge in connection with their 
	political activities.
	
	
	A reasonable socialist aiming to replace capitalism with some system in 
	conformity with his idea, which would be based on worker participation in 
	the administration of the work place and the profits, will reject such a 
	system as the “worst variety of capitalism”. After all, concentrating 
	capital and rulership in one place always leads to degeneration. Capital 
	must be subject to the authority of fairness. Eliminating such a degenerate 
	form of capitalism should thus be a priority task for any socialist. 
	Nonetheless, such reasoning by means of social and economic categories 
	obviously misses the crux of the matter.
	
	
	The experience of history teaches us that any attempt to realize the 
	Communist idea by way of revolutionary means, whether violent or 
	underhanded, leads to a skewing of this process in the direction of 
	anachronic and pathological forms whose essence and contents remain 
	inaccessible to minds utilizing the concepts of the natural world view. 
	Evolution constructs and transforms faster than revolution, and without such 
	tragic complications.
	
	
	One of the first discoveries made by a society of normal people is that it 
	is superior to the new rulers in intelligence and practical skills, no 
	matter what geniuses they seek to appear to be. The knots stultifying reason 
	are gradually loosened, and fascination with the new rulership’s 
	non-existent secret knowledge and plan of action begins to diminish, 
	followed by familiarization with the accurate knowledge about this new 
	deviant reality.
	
	
	The world of normal people is always superior to the deviant one whenever 
	constructive activity is needed, whether it be the reconstruction of a 
	devastated country, the area of technology, the organization of economic 
	life, or scientific and medical work. 
	
		
		“They want to build things, but they can’t 
		get much done without us.” 
	
	
	Qualified experts are frequently able to make 
	certain demands; unfortunately, they are just as often only considered 
	qualified until the job has been done, at which point they can be 
	eliminated. Once the factory has started up, the experts can leave; 
	management will be taken over by someone else, incapable of further 
	progress, under whose leadership much of the effort expended will be wasted.
	
	
	As we have already pointed out, every psychological anomaly is in fact a 
	kind of deficiency. Psychopathies are based primarily upon deficiencies in 
	the instinctive substratum; however, their influence exerted upon the mental 
	development of others also leads to deficiencies in general intelligence, as 
	discussed above. This deficiency of intelligence in a normal person, induced 
	by psychopathy, is not compensated by the special psychological knowledge we 
	observe among some psychopaths. 
	
	 
	
	Such knowledge loses its mesmerizing power when 
	normal people learn to understand these phenomena as well. The 
	psychopathologist was thus not surprised by the fact that the world of 
	normal people is dominant regarding skill and talent. For that society, 
	however, this represented a discovery which engendered hope and 
	psychological relaxation.
	
	
	Since our intelligence is superior to theirs, we can recognize them and 
	understand how they think and act. This is what a person learns in such a 
	system on his own initiative, forced by everyday needs. He learns it while 
	working in his office, school, or factory, when he needs to deal with the 
	authorities, and when he is arrested, something only a few people manage to 
	avoid. 
	
	 
	
	The author and many others learned a good deal 
	about the psychology of this macrosocial phenomenon during compulsory 
	indoctrinational schooling. The organizers and lecturers cannot have 
	intended such a result. Practical knowledge of this new reality thus grows, 
	thanks to which the society gains a resourcefulness of action which enables 
	it to take ever better advantage of the weak spots of the rulership system. 
	This permits gradual reorganization of societal links, which bears fruit 
	with time.
	
	
	This new science is incalculably rich in casuist108 
	detail; I would nevertheless characterize it as overly literary. It contains 
	knowledge and a description of the phenomenon in the categories of the 
	natural world view, correspondingly modified in accordance with the need to 
	understand matters which are in fact outside the scope of its applicability.
	
	
	 
	
	This also opens the door to the creation of 
	certain doctrines which merit separate study because they contain a partial 
	truth, such as a demonological interpretation of the phenomenon.
	
	
	108 
	Casuistry (argument by cases) is an attempt to determine the correct 
	response to a moral problem, often a moral dilemma, by drawing conclusions 
	based on parallels with agreed responses to pure cases, also called 
	paradigms. Casuistry is a method of ethical case analysis. [Editor’s note.]
	
	The development of familiarity with the phenomenon is accompanied by 
	development of communicative language, by means of which society can stay 
	informed and issue warnings of danger. 
	
	 
	
	A third language thus appears alongside the 
	ideological doubletalk described above; in part, it borrows names used by 
	the official ideology in their transformed modified meanings. In part, this 
	language operates with words borrowed from still more lively circulating 
	jokes. In spite of its strangeness, this language becomes a useful means of 
	communication and plays a part in regenerating societal links. 
	
	 
	
	Lo and behold, this language can be translated 
	and communicated in relations with residents of other countries with 
	analogous governmental systems, even if the other country’s “official 
	ideology” is different. However, in spite of efforts on the part of literati 
	and journalists, this language remains only communicative inside; it becomes 
	hermetic outside the scope of the phenomenon, uncomprehended by people 
	lacking the appropriate personal experience.
	
	
	The specific role of certain individuals during such times is worth pointing 
	out; they participate in the discovery of the nature of this new reality and 
	help others find the right path. They have a normal nature but experienced 
	an unfortunate childhood, being subjected very early to the domination of 
	individuals with various psychological deviations, including pathological 
	egotism and methods of terrorizing others. 
	
	 
	
	The new rulership system strikes such people as 
	a large scale societal multiplication of what they knew from personal 
	experience. From the very outset, such individuals saw this reality much 
	more prosaically, immediately treating the ideology in accordance with the 
	paralogistic stories well known to them, whose purpose was to cloak the 
	bitter reality of their youthful experiences. They soon reach the truth, 
	since the genesis and nature of evil are analogous irrespective of the 
	social scale in which it appears.
	
	
	Such people are rarely understood in happy societies, but they were 
	invaluable then; their explanations and advice proved accurate and were 
	transmitted to others joining the network of this apperceptive heritage. 
	However, their own suffering was doubled, since this was too much of a 
	similar kind of abuse for one life to handle. They therefore nursed dreams 
	of escaping into the freedom still existing in the outside world.
	
	Finally, society sees the appearance of individuals who have collected 
	exceptional intuitive perception and practical knowledge in the area of how 
	pathocrats think and how such a system of rule operates. Some of them become 
	so proficient in their deviant language and its idiomatics that they are 
	able to use it, much like a foreign language they have learned well. Since 
	they are able to decipher the rulership’s intentions, such people then offer 
	advice to people who are having trouble with the authorities. These 
	advocates of the society of normal people play a irreplaceable role in the 
	life of society.
	
	
	The pathocrats, however, can never learn to think in normal human 
	categories. At the same time, the inability to predict the reaction of 
	normal people to such an authority also leads to the conclusion that the 
	system is rigidly causative and lacking in the natural freedom of choice.
	
	
	This new science, expressed in language derived from a deviant reality, is 
	something foreign to people who wish to understand this macrosocial 
	phenomenon but think in the categories of the countries of normal man. 
	Attempts to understand this language produce a certain feeling of 
	helplessness which gives rise to the tendency of creating one’s own 
	doctrines, built from the concepts of one’s own world and a certain amount 
	of appropriately co-opted pathocratic propaganda material. Such a doctrine, 
	for example, would be the American anti-Communist propaganda. Such twisted 
	and distorted concepts makes it even more difficult to understand that other 
	reality. May the objective description adduced herein enable them to 
	overcome the impasse thus engendered.
	
	
	In countries subjected to pathocratic rule, this knowledge and language, 
	especially human experience, create a mediating concatenation in such a way 
	that most people could assimilate this objective description of the 
	phenomenon without major difficulties with the help of active apperception. 
	Difficulties will only be encountered by the oldest generation and a certain 
	proportion of young people raised in the system from childhood, and these 
	are psychologically understandable.
	
	
	I was once referred a patient who had been an inmate in a Nazi concentration 
	camp. She came back from that hell in such exceptionally good condition that 
	she was able to marry and bear three children. However, her child rearing 
	methods were so extremely iron-fisted as to be reminiscent of the 
	concentration camp life so stubbornly persevering in former prisoners. The 
	children’s reaction was neurotic protest and aggressiveness against other 
	children.
	
	
	During the mother’s psychotherapy, we recalled the figures of male and 
	female SS officers to her mind, pointing out their psychopathic 
	characteristics (such people were primary recruits). In order to help her 
	eliminate their pathological material from her person, I furnished her with 
	the approximate statistical data regarding the appearance of such 
	individuals within the population as a whole. This helped her reach a more 
	objective view of that reality and re-establish trust in the society of 
	normal people.
	
	
	During the next visit, the patient showed to me a little card on which she 
	had written the names of local pathocratic notables and added her own 
	diagnoses, which were largely correct. So I made a hushing gesture with my 
	finger and admonished her with emphasis that we were dealing only with her 
	problems. The patient understood and, I am sure, she did not make her 
	reflections on the matter known in the wrong places.
	
	
	Parallel to the development of practical knowledge and a language of insider 
	communication, other psychological phenomena take form; they are truly 
	significant in the transformation of social life under pathocratic rule, and 
	discerning them is essential if one wishes to understand individuals and 
	nations fated to live under such conditions and to evaluate the situation in 
	the political sphere. They include people’s psychological immunization and 
	their adaptation to life under such deviant conditions.
	
	
	The methods of psychological terror (that specific pathocratic art), the 
	techniques of pathological arrogance, and the striding roughshod into other 
	people’s souls initially have such traumatic effects that people are 
	deprived of their capacity for purposeful reaction; I have already adduced 
	the psycho-physiological aspects of such states. 
	
	 
	
	Ten or twenty years later, analogous behavior is 
	already recognized as well known buffoonery and does not deprive the victim 
	of his ability to think and react purposefully. His answers are usually 
	well-thought-out strategies, issued from the position of a normal person’s 
	superiority and often laced with ridicule. When Man can look suffering and 
	even death in the eye with the required calm, a dangerous weapon falls out 
	of the ruler’s hands.
	
	
	We have to understand that this process of immunization is not merely a 
	result of the above-described increase in practical knowledge of the 
	macrosocial phenomenon. It is the effect of a many-layered, gradual process 
	of growth in knowledge, familiarization with the phenomenon, creation of the 
	appropriate reactive habits, and self-control, with an overall conception, 
	and moral principles, being worked out in the meantime. After several years, 
	the same stimuli which formerly caused chilly spiritual impotence or mental 
	paralysis now provoke the desire to gargle with something strong so as to 
	get rid of this filth.
	
	
	There was a time when many people dreamed of finding some pill which would 
	make it easier to endure dealing with the authorities or attending the 
	forced indoctrination sessions generally chaired by a psychopathic 
	character. Some antidepressants did in fact prove to have the desired 
	effect. Twenty years later, this had been forgotten entirely.
	
	
	When I was arrested for the first time in 1951, force, arrogance, and 
	psychopathic methods of forcible confession deprived me almost entirely of 
	my self-defense capabilities. My brain stopped functioning after only a few 
	days without water, to such a point that I couldn’t even properly remember 
	the incident which resulted in my sudden arrest. I was not even aware that 
	it had been purposely provoked and that conditions permitting self-defense 
	did in fact exist. They did almost anything they wanted to me.
	
	
	When I was arrested for last time in 1968, I was interrogated by five 
	fierce-looking security functionaries. At one particular moment, after 
	thinking through their predicted reactions, I let my gaze take in each face 
	sequentially with great attentiveness. 
	
	 
	
	The most important one asked me, 
	
		
		“What’s on your mind, buster, staring at us 
		like that?” 
	
	
	I answered without any fear of consequences:
	
		
		“I’m just wondering why so many of the 
		gentlemen in your line of work end up in a psychiatric hospital.” 
		
	
	
	They were taken aback for a while, whereupon the 
	same man exclaimed, 
	
		
		“Because it’s such damned horrible work!”
		
		 
		
		“I am of the opinion that it’s the other way 
		round”, I calmly responded. 
	
	
	Then I was taken back to my cell.
	
	
	Three days later, I had the opportunity to talk to him again, but this time 
	he was much more respectful. Then he ordered me to be taken away - outside, 
	as it turned out. I rode the streetcar home past a large park, still unable 
	to believe my eyes. Once in my room, I lay down on the bed; the world was 
	not quite real yet, but exhausted people fall asleep quickly. 
	
	 
	
	When I awoke, I spoke out loud: 
	
		
		“Dear God, aren’t you supposed to be in 
		charge here in this world?!”
	
	
	At that time, I knew not only that up to 1/5 of 
	all secret police officials wind up in psychiatric hospitals, I also knew 
	that their “occupational disease” is the congestive dementia formerly 
	encountered only among old prostitutes. Man cannot violate the natural human 
	feelings inside him with impunity, no matter what kind of profession he 
	performs. From that viewpoint, Comrade Captain was partially right. At the 
	same time, however, my reactions had become resistant, a far cry from what 
	they had been seventeen years earlier.
	
	
	All these transformations of human consciousness and unconsciousness result 
	in individual and collective adaptation to living under such a system. Under 
	altered conditions of both material and moral limitations, an existential 
	resourcefulness emerges which is prepared to overcome many difficulties. A 
	new network of the society of normal people is also created for self-help 
	and mutual assistance.
	
	
	This society acts in concert and is aware of the true state of affairs; it 
	begins to develop ways of influencing various elements of authority and 
	achieving goals which are socially useful. Patiently instructing and 
	convincing the rulership’s mediocre representatives takes considerable time 
	and requires pedagogical skills. 
	
	 
	
	Therefore, the most even-tempered people are 
	selected for this job, people with sufficient familiarity with their 
	psychology and a specific talent for influencing pathocrats. The opinion 
	that society is totally deprived of any influence upon government in such a 
	country is thus inaccurate. In reality, society does co-govern to a certain 
	extent, sometimes succeeding and sometimes failing in its attempt to create 
	more tolerable living conditions. This, however, occurs in a manner totally 
	different from what happens in democratic countries.
	
	
	These cognitive processes, psychological immunization, and adaptation, 
	permit the creation of new interpersonal and societal links, which operate 
	within the scope of the large majority we have already called the “society 
	of normal people”. 
	
	 
	
	These links extend discretely into the world of the 
	regime’s middle class, among people who can be trusted to a certain extent. 
	In time, the social links created are significantly more effective than 
	those active in societies governed by normal human systems. Exchange of 
	information, warnings, and assistance encompass the entire society. 
	
	 
	
	Whoever is able to do so offers aid to anyone 
	who finds himself in trouble, often in such a way that the person helped 
	does not even know who rendered the assistance. However, if he caused his 
	misfortune by his own lack of circumspection with regard to the authorities, 
	he meets with reproach, but never the withholding of assistance.
	
	
	It is possible to create such links because this new division of society 
	gives only limited consideration to factors such as the level of talent, 
	education or traditions attached to the former social layers. Neither do 
	reduced prosperity differences dissolve these links. One side of this 
	division contains those of the highest mental culture, simple ordinary 
	people, intellectuals, headwork specialists, factory workers, and peasants 
	joined by the common protest of their human nature against the domination of 
	para-human experiential and governmental methods. 
	
	 
	
	These links engender interpersonal understanding 
	and fellow-feeling among people and social groups formerly divided by 
	economic differences and social traditions. The thought processes serving 
	these links are of a more psychological character, able to comprehend 
	someone else’s motivations. At the same time, the ordinary folk retain 
	respect for people who have been educated and represent intellectual values. 
	Certain social and moral values also appear and may prove to be permanent.
	
	
	The genesis, however, of this great interpersonal solidarity only becomes 
	comprehensible when we know the nature of the pathological macrosocial 
	phenomenon which brought about the liberation of such attitudes, complete 
	with recognition of one’s own humanity and that of others. Another 
	reflection suggests itself, namely how very different these great links are 
	from America’s “competitive society”, for whom the former – economic and 
	social differences - represent something which is operational even though it 
	crosses the boundaries of the imagination.
	
	
	One would think that a nation’s cultural and intellectual life would quickly 
	degenerate when subjected to the country’s isolation from the cultural and 
	scientific links with other nations, pathocratic limitations upon the 
	development of one’s thought, a censorship system, the mental level of the 
	executives, and all those other attributes of such rule. Reality 
	nevertheless does not validate such pessimistic predictions.
	
	
	The necessity for constant mental effort so crucial for finding some 
	tolerable way of life, not totally bereft of moral sense within such a 
	deviant reality, causes the development of realistic perception, especially 
	in the area of socio-psychological phenomena. Protecting one’s mind from the 
	effects of paralogistic propaganda, as well as one’s personality from the 
	influence of paramoralisms and the other techniques already described, 
	sharpens controlled thinking processes and the ability to discern these 
	phenomena. Such training is also a special kind of common man’s university.
	
	
	During such times, society reaches for historical sources in searching for 
	the ancient causes of its misfortunes and for ways to improve its fate in 
	the future. Scientific and societal minds laboriously review the national 
	history in quest of interpretations of the facts which would be more 
	profound from the point of view of psychological and moral realism. 
	
	 
	
	We soberly discern what happened years and 
	centuries ago, perceiving the errors of former generations and the results 
	of intolerance or emotionally weighted decision-making. Such a great review 
	of individual, social, and historical world views in this search for meaning 
	of life and history is a product of unhappy times and will help along the 
	way back to happy ones.
	
	
	Another object of consideration became: moral problems applicable in 
	individual life as well as in history and politics. The mind starts reaching 
	ever deeper in this area, achieving ever more subtle understanding of the 
	matter, because it is precisely in this world that the old 
	oversimplifications proved to be unsatisfactory. An understanding of other 
	people, including those who commit errors and crimes, appears in a 
	problem-solving way which was formerly underrated. Forgiveness is only one 
	step beyond understanding. 
	
	 
	
	As Mme. de Stael wrote: 
	
		
		“Tout comprendere, c’est tout pardoner” 
		109
	
	
	109 “To 
	understand all is to forgive all.”
	
	 
	
	A society’s religion is affected by analogous 
	transformations. The proportion of the people maintaining religious beliefs 
	is not significantly affected, particularly in countries wherein the 
	pathocracy was imposed; it does, however, undergo a modification of the 
	contents and quality of such beliefs in such a way that religion in time 
	becomes more attractive to people raised indifferent to faith. The old 
	religion, dominated by tradition, ritual, and insincerity, now becomes 
	transformed into faith, conditioned by necessary studies and convictions 
	which determine behavioral criteria.
	
	
	Anyone reading the Gospel during such times finds something that is hard to 
	understand for other Christians. So real is the similarity between the 
	social relations, there under the government of ancient pagan Rome, and 
	these under the atheistic pathocracy, that the reader imagines the 
	situations described more easily and senses the reality of occurrences more 
	vividly. Such reading also furnishes him with encouragement and advice which 
	he can use in his situations. 
	
	 
	
	Thus, during brutal times of confrontation with 
	evil, human capabilities of discriminating phenomena become subtler; 
	apperceptive and moral sensibility develops. 
	
	 
	
	Critical faculties sometimes border with 
	cynicism.
	
		
		~~~ “I once got into a mountain-bound bus 
		full of young high-school and university students. During the trip, song 
		filled the vehicle and the neighboring hills. Old prewar songs both 
		witty and frivolous Le”mian’s110 
		poems: ‘Our ancestor Noah was a brave man...’, and others. The text, 
		however, had been corrected with humor and literary talent, eliminating 
		whatever irritated these young people raised during difficult times. Was 
		it an unintended result?”
	
	
	110 Boles”aw Le#mian (born Boles”aw Lesman; 
	18781-1937) was a Polish poet, artist and member of the Polish Academy of 
	Literature. He was one of the most influential poets of the early 20th 
	century in Poland. [Editor’s note.]
	
	As a result of all these transformations, including the de-egotization of 
	thought and attitude connected thereto, society becomes capable of a mental 
	creativity which goes beyond normal conditions. This effort could be useful 
	in any cultural, technical, or economic area if the authorities did not 
	oppose and stifle it because they feel threatened by such activity.
	
	
	Human genius is not born of lazy prosperity and among genteel camaraderie, 
	but rather stands in perpetual confrontation with a recalcitrant reality 
	which is different from ordinary human imaginations. Under such conditions, 
	wide-scale theoretical approaches are found to have practical existential 
	value. The old system of thought which remains in use in free countries 
	starts to look backward, naive, and bereft of feeling of values.
	
	
	If nations which arrived at such a state were to regain their freedom, many 
	valuable accomplishments of human thought would mature within a short time. 
	No excessive fears would be in order as to whether such a nation would then 
	be capable of elaborating a workable socio-economic system. 
	
	 
	
	Quite the contrary: the absence of egoistical 
	pressure groups, the conciliatory nature of a society which has years of 
	bitter experience behind it, and the penetrating, morally profound thought 
	processes would permit the way out to be found relatively rapidly. Danger 
	and difficulty would rather come from outside pressures on the part of 
	nations which do not adequately understand the conditions in such a country. 
	But unfortunately, the pathocracy cannot be dosed as a bitter medicine!
	
	
	The older generation, raised in a normal man’s country, generally reacts by 
	developing the above-mentioned skills, i.e. by enrichment; the younger 
	generation, however, was raised under pathocratic rule and thus succumbs to 
	a greater world view impoverishment, reflex rigidification of personality, 
	and domination by habitual structures, those typical results of the 
	operation of pathological personalities. 
	
	 
	
	Paralogistic propaganda and its corresponding 
	indoctrination are consciously rejected; however, this process demands time 
	and effort which could better be used for active apperception of valuable 
	contents. The latter are accessible only with difficulty, due both to 
	limitations and to apperceptive problems. There arises the feeling of a 
	certain void which is hard to fill. In spite of human good will, certain 
	paralogisms and paramoralisms, as well as cognitive materialism, anchor and 
	persevere in brains. The human mind is not able to disprove every single 
	falsity which has been suggested to it.
	
	
	The emotional life of people raised within such a deviant psychological 
	reality is also fraught with difficulties. In spite of critical reason, a 
	certain saturation of a youngster’s personality with pathological 
	psychological material is unavoidable, as is a degree of primitivization and 
	rigidity of feelings. The constant efforts to control one’s emotions, so as 
	to avoid having some stormy reaction provoke repression on the part of a 
	vindictive and retentive regime, cause feelings to be repressed into a role 
	of something rather problematic, something which should not be given a 
	natural outlet. 
	
	 
	
	Suppressed emotional reactions surface later, 
	when the person can afford to express them; they are delayed and 
	inappropriate to the situation at hand. Worries about the future awaken 
	egotism among people thus adapted to life in a pathological social 
	structure.
	
	
	Neurosis is a natural response of human nature if a normal person is 
	subordinated to domination of pathological people. The same applies to the 
	subordination of a society and its members to a pathological system of 
	authority. In a pathocratic state, every person with a normal nature thus 
	exhibits a certain chronic neurotic state, controlled by the efforts of 
	reason. The intensity of these states varies among individuals, depending 
	upon different circumstances, usually more serious in direct proportion to 
	the individual’s intelligence. Psychotherapy upon such people is only 
	possible and effective if we can rely on adequate familiarity with the 
	causes of these states. Western educated psychologists thus prove completely 
	impractical with regard to such patients.
	
	
	A psychologist working in such a country must develop special operational 
	techniques unknown and even unfathomable to specialists practicing in the 
	free world. They have the purpose of partially liberating the voice of 
	instinct and feeling from this abnormal over-control, and of rediscovering 
	the voice of nature’s wisdom within, but this must be done in such a way as 
	to avoid exposing the patient to the unfortunate results of excessive 
	freedom of reaction in the conditions under which he must live. 
	
	 
	
	A psychotherapist must operate carefully, with 
	the help of allusions, because only rarely may he openly inform the patient 
	of the system’s pathological nature. However, even under such conditions, we 
	can achieve a greater experiential freedom, more appropriate thought 
	processes, and better decision making capabilities. As a result of all this, 
	the patient subsequently behaves with greater caution and feels much safer.
	
	
	If Western radio stations, unhampered by the fears of psychologists on the 
	other side, abandoned the simple counter propaganda in favor of a similar 
	psychotherapeutic technique, they would contribute mightily to the future of 
	countries still under pathocratic rule today. 
	
	 
	
	Toward the end of this book, I shall attempt to 
	persuade the reader that psychological matters are as important to the 
	future as grand politics or powerful weapons.
	
	 
	
	
	Understanding
	
	
	Comprehending those normal people, whether outstanding or average, fated to 
	live under pathocratic rule, their human nature and their responses to this 
	basically deviant reality, their dreams, their methods of comprehending such 
	a reality (including all the difficulties along the road), and their need to 
	adapt and become resistant (including the side-effects) is a sine qua non 
	precondition for learning the behavior that would effectively assist them in 
	their efforts to achieve a normal man’s system. 
	
	 
	
	It would be psychologically impossible for a 
	politician in a free country to incorporate the practical knowledge such 
	people acquired over many years of day to day experience. This knowledge 
	cannot be transmitted; no journalistic or literary efforts will ever achieve 
	anything in this area. However, an analogous science formulated in objective 
	naturalistic language can be communicated in both directions. It can be 
	assimilated by people who have no such specific experiences; it can also be 
	back transmitted over there where a great need for this science exists as do 
	the minds which are already prepared to receive it. Such a science would 
	actually act upon their battered personalities in much the same way as the 
	best of medicines. Mere awareness that one was subject to the influence of a 
	mental deviant is in and of itself a crucial part of treatment.
	
	
	Whoever wants to maintain the freedom of his country and of the world 
	already threatened by this macrosocial pathological phenomenon, whoever 
	would like to heal this sick planet of ours, should not only understand the 
	nature of this great disease, but should also be conscious of potentially 
	regenerative healing powers.
	
	
	Every country within the scope of this macrosocial phenomenon contains a 
	large majority of normal people living and suffering there who will never 
	accept pathocracy; their protest against it derives from the depths of their 
	own souls and their human nature as conditioned by properties transmitted by 
	means of biological heredity. The forms of this protest and the ideologies 
	by which they would like to realize their natural wishes may nevertheless 
	change.
	
	
	The ideology or societal structure via which they would like to regain their 
	human right to live in a normal man’s system are, however, of secondary 
	importance to these people. There are of course differences of opinion in 
	this area, but they are not likely to lead to overly violent conflict among 
	persons who see before them a goal worthy of sacrifice.
	
	
	Those whose attitudes are more penetrating and balanced see the original 
	ideology as it was before its caricaturization by the ponerization process, 
	as the most practical basis for effecting society’s aims. Certain 
	modifications would endow this ideology with a more mature form more in 
	keeping with the demands of present times; it could thereupon serve as the 
	foundation for a process of evolution, or rather transformation, into an 
	socio-economic system capable of adequate functioning.
	
	
	The author’s convictions are somewhat different. Grave difficulties could be 
	caused by outside pressure aiming at the introduction of an economic system 
	which has lost its historically conditioned roots in such a country.
	
	
	People who have long had to live in the strange world of this divergence are 
	therefore hard to understand for someone who has fortunately avoided that 
	fate. Let us refrain from imposing imaginings upon them which are only 
	meaningful within the world of normal man’s governments; let us not 
	pigeonhole them into any political doctrines which are often quite unlike 
	the reality they are familiar with. 
	
	 
	
	Let us welcome them with feelings of human 
	solidarity, reciprocal respect, and a greater trust in their normal human 
	nature and their reason.
	
	 
	
	
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