
	by Mark Sircus 
	06 October 2011
	
	from
	IMVA 
	Website
	
	 
	
	The list of countries and cities disintegrating 
	or unraveling because of violence, economic and political turmoil, lack of 
	food and civil unrest is growing. Human violence is a very important subject 
	at this particular moment in time. 
	
	 
	
	Violence has 'always' been a basic part of human 
	nature and we have a lot to be ashamed of.
	
	It is a shame to find out that the most dangerous place for women and 
	children is actually in their own homes - homes being the place where we 
	actually find the most violence. Family life in our insane civilization has 
	turned into a nightmare for way too many people, but then again we have had 
	the same problems throughout history.
	
	In the first part of this essay we will talk about the violence happening 
	out there but at the end we will come back full circle to the many forms of 
	intimate violence that betrays and abuses our deepest vulnerabilities. One 
	would be astounded at the spectrum of human violence and how well that 
	violence can be hidden. 
	
	 
	
	Some of the cruelest, most violent men in 
	history are actually the ones who started the war on drugs - a war destined 
	to destroy not only huge segments of society but entire nations as well.
	
	Mexico is a nightmare of unprecedented dimensions unfolding in America’s own 
	backyard. Mexico is descending into a bottomless pit of drug violence and 
	civil war. Nearly a 
	
	dozen people were shot to death in the Pacific coast 
	resort of Acapulco. 
	
	 
	
	Authorities in the central state of Mexico 
	arrested a suspected drug-gang leader who 
	
	confessed to directly carrying out 
	300 homicides and ordering 600 others.
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Governments & Cruelty
	
	
	Syrian security forces swept through neighborhoods in a restive central city 
	firing machine guns and pulling people from their homes in a series of 
	arrests and killings. 
	
	 
	
	On the last day of July 2011, Syrian tanks, 
	firing shells and machineguns, stormed the city of Hama on Sunday, killing 
	80 civilians. The Syrian president is just one more madman who thinks he has 
	the right to have his men going around killing hundreds upon hundreds of 
	people as the rest of the world watches in pathetic silence.
	
	Two weeks later on Sunday, August 14, 2011, 
	
	Syrian gunboats firing heavy 
	machine guns pounded impoverished districts of Latakia, killing at least 19 
	people in a renewed assault on the Mediterranean coastal city, activists 
	said. As the gunships blasted waterfront districts, ground troops backed by 
	tanks and security agents stormed several neighborhoods. 
	
	 
	
	The sharp crackle of machine-gun fire and loud 
	explosions could be heard across the city. Now the bullets are raining down 
	on the people of Yemen.
	
	Don’t get too comfortable - one day this kind of violence could come to a 
	city near you. Even if you live in the first world and only have the 
	occasional madman running around shooting people, someday it could be the 
	police, national guard, homeland security, 
	FEMA and even the army doing much 
	the same.
	
	Last month a riot tore through parts of north London’s 
	
	deprived Tottenham 
	neighborhood casting a pall over Britain’s capital. 
	
	 
	
	Eight officers were hospitalized during the 
	rampage, with rioters torching a double-decker bus, destroying patrol cars 
	and trashing a shopping mall. 
	
		
		“This is just a glimpse into the abyss,” 
		former Metropolitan Police Commander John O’Connor told Sky News 
		television Sunday.
	
	
	 
	
	Thousands of rioters took to the streets in 
	China, with some
	smashing and burning vehicles, after a city official injured
	a female cyclist. Last month, hundreds of people in another
	southern Chinese city rioted after a policeman was reported
	to have beaten up a one-legged fruit seller. The seller, who
	had apparently protested against the confiscation of his
	cart for illegal parking, later died of his injuries.
	
	
	Sino Daily
 
	
	Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said about the 
	shooting massacre in Norway, 
	
		
		“A paradise island has been transformed into 
		a hell.” 
	
	
	Erik Kursetgjerde described the panic on Utoeya 
	when the gunman began shooting, 
	
		
		“I heard screams. I heard people begging for 
		their lives and I heard shots. He just blew them away. The killer, 
		dressed as a policeman, would tell people to come over: ‘It’s okay, 
		you’re safe, we’re coming to help you.’ And then I saw about 20 people 
		come toward him and he shot them at close range.”
	
	
	 
	
	
	Some Hate Love
	
	In an 
	
	Afghan love story that flouted dominant traditions of arranged 
	marriages and close family scrutiny, a romance between two teenagers of 
	different ethnicities brought the beastly side out of these kids’ families 
	and neighbors. 
	
	 
	
	A group of men spotted the couple riding 
	together in a car, yanked them into the road and began to interrogate the 
	boy and girl. 
	
		
			- 
			
			Why were they together?  
- 
			
			What right had they?  
	
	An angry crowd of 300 surged around them, 
	calling them adulterers and demanding that they be stoned to death or 
	hanged.
	
	When security forces swooped in and rescued the couple, the mob’s anger 
	exploded. They overwhelmed the local police, set fire to cars and stormed a 
	police station. The riot, which lasted for hours, ended with one man dead, a 
	police station charred and the two teenagers, Halima Mohammedi and her 
	boyfriend, Rafi Mohammed, confined to juvenile prison. 
	
	 
	
	Ms. Mohammedi’s uncle visited her in jail to say 
	she had shamed the family and promised that they would kill her once she was 
	released.
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Understanding Violence
	
	Dr. 
	Aletha Solter, Ph.D., founder and director of the 
	
	Aware Parenting 
	Institute says,
	
		
		“There are two basic conditions that produce 
		violent tendencies in human beings. One condition is that the person has 
		been hurt. A child who is spanked, hit, beaten, or threatened with 
		violence will have a tendency to become violent himself. 
		 
		
		Sexual abuse and emotional neglect are also 
		hurts that can lead to violent tendencies. The accumulation of minor 
		hurts (stress) can lead to violent behavior as well. The anxieties, 
		disappointments, and frustrations of childhood can build up and cause a 
		child to hit or bite.
		
		“The second basic condition is less well understood. 
		 
		
		The person has not been allowed to release 
		the emotions resulting from the hurts. He has unresolved and unexpressed 
		feelings about what he has experienced. Only then will he have a 
		tendency to be violent towards others. Being the victim of violence and 
		other distressing experiences breeds violence in the child only when the 
		emotions are blocked and repressed. 
		 
		
		When this situation occurs, violence toward 
		self or others is almost an inevitable outcome. Violence is a distorted 
		expression of the person’s rage or terror in an environment where it is 
		not safe to reveal or release strong feelings,” continued Solter.
	
	
	Violence is tolerated and even glorified in most 
	industrialized countries and is culturally linked to “appropriate” male 
	behavior.
 
	
	One of the greatest hidden forms of violence is 
	the mass
	drugging of children. Yet it’s perpetrated within schools,
	doctors’ offices, foster homes and juvenile facilities daily.
 
	
	Dr. 
	
	John Monahan, Ph.D., Psychologist and 
	Professor, School of Law, University of Virginia-Charlottesville, asks why 
	so many Americans are afraid to walk home alone at night. 
	
	 
	
	He says,
	
		
		“Many biological factors have been nominated 
		as candidates for causes of violence. 
		 
		
		Hormones like testosterone, transmitters in 
		the brain like serotonin, and blood abnormalities like hypoglycemia are 
		only a few that have been mentioned. Biological factors do not have to 
		be hereditary. They could be caused by a head injury, poor nutrition, or 
		environmental events, such as exposure to lead paint. 
		 
		
		Compared with Japan, a nation of roughly 
		comparable industrialization with cities much more crowded than ours, 
		the U.S. homicide rate is over five times higher, the rape rate is 22 
		times higher, and the armed robbery rate is an astounding 114 times 
		higher.”
	
	
	 
	
	To prevent violence, we must first, stop 
	perpetrating violence on children.
	This means no spanking or hitting. It is important to know that children
	need the most love and attention when they act the least deserving of it.
	Dr. Aletha Solter
 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	When we begin to look at domestic violence we can see what brutes we humans 
	can be.
 
	
	
	
	
	 
	
	Violence against women (or children) manifests 
	as physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse, isolation, and threats:
	
	 
	
		
		Physical Abuse
		
			- 
			
			Pushing or shoving a woman 
- 
			
			Holding or keeping her from leaving 
- 
			
			Slapping or biting her 
- 
			
			Kicking, choking, hitting, or punching 
			her 
- 
			
			Refusing to help a woman when she is 
			sick, injured, or pregnant 
- 
			
			Threatening or hurting her with a weapon 
		
		Sexual Abuse
		
			- 
			
			Forcing a woman to strip when she does 
			not want to 
- 
			
			Having affairs with others after 
			agreeing to a monogamous relationship 
- 
			
			Forcing a woman to have unwanted sex 
			with others or forcing her to watch others having sex 
- 
			
			Forcing sex after a beating 
- 
			
			Forcing sex when she is sick or when it 
			endangers her health 
- 
			
			Forcing sex for the purpose of hurting 
			her with objects or weapons 
		
		Emotional Abuse
		
			- 
			
			Ignoring a woman’s feelings 
- 
			
			Continually criticizing her, calling her 
			names, shouting at her 
- 
			
			Humiliating her in public or privately 
- 
			
			Refusing to socialize with her 
- 
			
			Keeping her from working, controlling 
			her money, making all decisions 
- 
			
			Manipulating her with lies and 
			contradictions 
- 
			
			Threatening to kidnap the child(ren) if 
			she leaves 
- 
			
			Harassing her about affairs the abuser 
			imagines she is having 
		
		Isolation
		
			- 
			
			Stopping a woman from going to visit her 
			relatives and friends 
- 
			
			Confining her to the house 
- 
			
			Stopping her from socialising with 
			others 
		
		Threat
		
			- 
			
			Threatening to kill a woman 
- 
			
			Threatening to take her child(ren) away 
- 
			
			Threatening her that he will commit 
			suicide 
 
		
		Physical Violence
		Physical violence occurs when 
		someone uses a part of their body or an object to control your actions. 
		Physical violence includes, but is not limited to, the following:
		
			- 
			
			Pushing 
- 
			
			Shoving 
- 
			
			Pinning or holding a person down 
- 
			
			Confinement 
- 
			
			Pinching 
- 
			
			Hair-pulling 
- 
			
			Slapping 
- 
			
			Punching 
- 
			
			Arm twisting 
- 
			
			Kicking 
- 
			
			Biting 
- 
			
			Strangling 
- 
			
			Choking 
- 
			
			Burning 
- 
			
			Overmedication 
- 
			
			Assault with an object or weapon 
- 
			
			Threats with an object or weapon 
- 
			
			Stabbing 
- 
			
			Murder 
 
		
		Sexual Violence
		Sexual violence occurs when someone forces you to take part in sexual 
		activity when you do not want to. Sexual violence includes, but is not 
		limited to, the following:
		
			- 
			
			Touching you in a sexual manner against 
			your will (i.e. kissing, grabbing, fondling) 
- 
			
			Forced sexual intercourse 
- 
			
			Forcing you to perform sexual acts you 
			find degrading or painful 
- 
			
			Use of a weapon to make you comply with 
			a sexual act 
- 
			
			Beating sexual parts of your body 
- 
			
			Exhibitionism (need to expose body parts 
			to others) 
- 
			
			Denial of a woman’s sexuality 
- 
			
			Humiliating, criticizing or trying to 
			control a woman’s sexuality 
- 
			
			Denial of sexual information and 
			education (i.e. birth control) 
- 
			
			Withholding sexual affection 
- 
			
			Exposure to AIDS or other sexually 
			transmitted infections 
- 
			
			Forced abortion or sterilization 
- 
			
			Forced prostitution 
- 
			
			Unfounded allegations of promiscuity 
			and/or infidelity 
		
		Emotional Violence
		Emotional violence occurs when someone says or does something to make 
		you feel stupid or worthless. Emotional violence includes, but is not 
		limited to, the following:
		
			- 
			
			Name calling 
- 
			
			Constant criticism 
- 
			
			Blaming all relationship problems on you 
- 
			
			Humiliating or belittling you in front 
			of others 
- 
			
			Using silent treatment 
- 
			
			Confinement to the home 
- 
			
			Not allowing you to have contact with 
			family and friends 
- 
			
			Destroying possessions 
- 
			
			Threats 
- 
			
			Jealousy 
- 
			
			Intimidation 
- 
			
			Stalking 
- 
			
			Threatening to take the children 
- 
			
			Threatening to commit suicide 
		
		Psychological Violence
		Psychological violence occurs when someone uses threats and causes fear 
		in you to gain control. Psychological violence includes, but is not 
		limited to, the following:
		
			- 
			
			Threatening to harm you, your children 
			or your family if you leave 
- 
			
			Threatening to harm themselves 
- 
			
			Threats of violence 
- 
			
			Threats of abandonment 
- 
			
			Destruction of your personal property 
- 
			
			Social isolation from your family and 
			friends 
- 
			
			Confinement to the home 
- 
			
			Verbal aggression 
- 
			
			Constant humiliation 
		
		Spiritual Violence
		Spiritual violence occurs when someone uses your religious or spiritual 
		beliefs to manipulate, dominate, or control you. Spiritual violence 
		includes, but is not limited to, the following:
		
			- 
			
			Trying to prevent you from practicing 
			your religious or spiritual beliefs 
- 
			
			Making fun of your religious or 
			spiritual beliefs 
- 
			
			Forcing you to raise your children in 
			another religion or spiritual choice 
- 
			
			Using your religious or spiritual 
			beliefs to manipulate, dominate or control you 
		
		Cultural Violence
		Cultural violence occurs when you are harmed as a result of practices 
		condoned by your culture, religion or tradition. Cultural violence 
		includes, but is not limited to, the following:
		
		
		
		Verbal Abuse
		Verbal abuse occurs when someone uses language, whether spoken or 
		written, to cause you harm. Verbal abuse includes, but is not limited 
		to, the following:
		
			- 
			
			Constant criticism 
- 
			
			Cursing 
- 
			
			Name calling 
- 
			
			Repeated insults 
- 
			
			Recalling your past mistakes 
- 
			
			Expressing negative expectations 
- 
			
			Expressing distrust 
- 
			
			Threats of violence against you, your 
			children or other family members 
- 
			
			For immigrants, threats of deportation 
			if you decide to leave. 
 
		
		Financial Abuse
		Financial abuse occurs when someone controls your financial resources 
		without your consent. Financial abuse includes, but is not limited to, 
		the following:
		
			- 
			
			Destruction of your personal property 
- 
			
			Not allowing you to attend school 
- 
			
			Forcing you to work outside the home 
- 
			
			Refusing to let you work outside the 
			home 
- 
			
			Controlling your choice of occupation 
- 
			
			Forbidding you to have access to the 
			family income and bank accounts 
- 
			
			Giving you an allowance and requiring 
			justification for all money spent 
- 
			
			Taking money needed for the care of the 
			family 
- 
			
			Refusal to contribute financially to 
			family 
- 
			
			Denying access to basic needs such as 
			food and health care 
		
		Neglect
		Neglect occurs when someone has the responsibility to provide care or 
		assistance for you but does not. Neglect includes, but is not limited 
		to, the following:
		
		
		
 
		
		Pharmaceutical-induced violence
		In 2006, 
		
		David Crespi, a former banking executive with no criminal 
		record or history of violence, killed his twin five-year-old daughters, 
		stabbing them multiple times with a kitchen knife. 
		 
		
		Crespi was taking 
		
		Prozac when he killed his 
		daughters, along with the sleeping pill
		
		Ambien.
		
		Modern psychiatry’s love affair with pharmaceutical drugs has turned psychiatrists into killers. 
		
		Psychiatric medications are known to cause 
		extremely violent thoughts and behavior in young males. Ten percent of 
		Americans over age six take antidepressants.
		
		In the United States we have seen similar shootings by men with a 
		history of treatment with psychotropic drugs - typically SSRI 
		antidepressants. These shootings have three things in common: 
		
		
			
				- 
				
				the shooters are young males 
- 
				
				the shooters exhibit a mind-numbed 
			disconnect with reality 
- 
				
				the shooters have a history of taking 
			psychiatric medications 
		
		An estimated 2.2 million Americans are 
		hospitalized each year for adverse drug reactions. Over 100,000 die from 
		them.
	
	
	 
	
	Violence is normal for our race though most of 
	it is hidden from plain sight.
	
	 
	
	I am afraid that we are going into a new Dark 
	Age where violence will grow exponentially again as it has before. The 
	police and security forces around the world have trained heavily this past 
	decade preparing for civil violence and disobedience.
	
	 
	
	 What will we do to protect our families?
	
	Most of us fail miserably when it comes to protecting our loved ones from 
	the violence of the main institutions of civilization, from governments and 
	companies who love to bring harm to others with their poisons. Ninety 
	percent of parents cannot even utter a cry of protest as the pediatric 
	doctors inject vaccines laced with dangerous heavy metals and toxic 
	chemicals. 
	
	 
	
	How many Americans understand and complain about 
	the violence of 
	water fluoridation?
	 
	
	 
	
	Somehow we have left ourselves vulnerable to 
	massive abuse and violence.