That would be hard to figure out Bob as there is no sociopath diagnosis. Technically the answer would be zero. Even if you asked "How many people with a personality disorder kill annually" it would be hard to answer because I'm not sure mental health status is always documented. I think it should be noted though, that several of the mass shooting that have occurred where by people who were schizophrenic, which is not a personality disorder.
I've said it before and I'll say it again, people with schizophrenia can be very dangerous, much more so than someone with a personality disorder. I wonder if most people make the distinction?
Try addressing from the other direction - how many people with ASPD have killed annually, instead of how many people killed other people who were diagnosed with ASPD after-the-fact? In otherwords, from a known before-effect.
Bob, please help your socio brothers. They stew in their own juice. The complacency in this blog you can find in all associations of expellees. Help them to reduce their false sence of superiority and they will make some progress.
Already noted below in another thread, without thoroughly comprehensive data on the population, we could potentially take advantage of statistical analysis using a much smaller representative sample.
It might be more accurate to average out the multiplier, to take into account higher functioning sociopaths (both criminal and non-criminal) who don't commit murder (either no violence or a granular level of violence that comes before killing). Generally speaking, using ballpark theory, the multiplier could be reduce to 7x, give or take? What do you think?
No, I don't understand the relevance. Or how that is even an insult. We're computing a theoretical number to see where sociopaths would be placed in the blog post's hierarchy of deaths.
Erik, you crack me up Sociopaths: twice as scary as hamburgers :)
Fun exercise, but it would be impossible to calculate. What about missing persons? Some of them surely got killed. Suicides as a result of being really ruined? Deaths ruled as suicides/accidents that were actually murders? Not really a sociopath, but Machiavellian, narcissist or beeper did it... The list goes on.
On an unrelated note, since I am not exactly good with computers... everything was working well last night, but this morning my computer and phone will not show SW at all. My friend's phone shows up fine. And when I switched ip on my phone to say I'm in Europe, it started working beautifully again. Anyone know wtf is up with that?
Yes, though to get an accurate weight out of the first proportion it should be based on premeditated murder cases (since accidental and crimes of passion are not typically sociopathically based). From that, we can weigh the proportion of premeditated sociopathic murderers to all sociopaths in the general population. That should eliminate the non-applicable sociopaths from the final number.
These are more "off the napkin" ballpark numbers for entertainment and curiousity sake. The final number, while inaccurate, can still give a general idea of where it fits on the scale.
I saw ME's tweet. I almost think she's mocking some of the comments on here sometimes. Most murderers have ASPD?? What about crimes of passion??What about borderlines that kill?? What about paranoid schizos that go on killing sprees?? I mean come on..
Well it goes back to the old saying that newspaperman Sinclar Lewis (?) said: "When dog bites man, the story is of no interest. When man bites dog, that's an important story." As a society, we are oblivious to the SLOW SUCIDE taking place everyday. When a sociopath commits a rare, unpresidented act, the media plays it up especially if it is a celeberity, sexual, or racist white on black crime. The satanic media has it's own agenda, so if the victim of a crime is white, the crime is ALL RIGHT. Take the case of Mass. math teacher Colleen Ritzer. How many people outside of Mass. know the story? I assure you if the assilent was white and the victim was black, the media drumbeat would never cease from October of last year (When the atroicity occurred) up to the present moment.
The non psychopath partner, of every couple that stayed together, has died of a chronic illness before the age of sixty. If you have any years on you take a look at the couples you have known and you will find this to be a fact.
It is a false premise to use absence of facts, as facts. In statistics, there is fallacy which is commonly adopted by people. Correlation does not equal causation. In this case, you are seeing a negative correlation between sociopathy and age of death, and attributing it as cause. What you will need to do is is look at other factors to support the claim.
I can't really answer that Bob. We are all just words on a screen. For good or bad, people can be much different in real life than online. Also, there is no way to determine if someone who identifies themself as a socio on this blog really is. For that matter, you might not be male and I might not be female.
I can add that the people I've encountered with ASPD can actually be quite stable in some aspects. They can be quite reliable; if they tell you that are going to meet you at 2:00 they will definitely be there (you will hear about it if you're the one late!). They can be very independent in doing things themselves to the point where they are very uncomfortable asking for help. And they can be very meticulous in recordkeeping and this like paying their bills on time. They can do things in a very exacting way and/or be perfectionist is some aspects of their lives. These aren't very bad traits at all to have imo.
It depends on the individual I think. James Fallon noted having obsessive-compulsive traits. Don't know if ME does. I have a little, but not much. I can't say anecdotally if that is consistently true, but I suppose it is possible depending on the person.
There is a propensity for rational thinking, which might explain your observations of rigidity. However the rigidity would be selective in this case.
The autoerotic asphyxiation figure in it, with the disassociated picture, was funny. I didn't find the rest hilarious. The baby hippo was quaint, but adult hippos are extremely dangerous. As for being crushed by vending machines, why anyone would tip one over seems stupid - the vandalism to get access to a bag of chips is ridiculous. I will say though, that 100 deaths by icicles in Russia is interesting. It makes sense when you think about all of the ice that forms.
Sociopaths do not scare me. Borderlines can be nasty little fucks. And have mob mentality if they don't like you anymore. Lol. All the splitting.... triggers - and valueing you, and then devaluing you as soon as you don't meet up to their perfect standards. Huh. Give me a sociopath in my life anyday. A borderline can be your good friend for years and ditch you in a flash as soon as you make a mistake. And they can't see there own mistakes. But deflect shit back on you and treat you like trash.They are double standard a lot. And rangaholics. And yes I'm a borderline. I'm just being brutally honest of their negative standards. There is a lot of positive to them also. But that's a whole other story.
Sociopaths can impose a double-standard if it suits them. Usually as a form of taking an advantage in a given situation. Though in this case, I suppose the borderline does not see it, while the sociopath does.
For me: The sociopath who's in my life -- we've known eachother for 30 + years, ever since kindergarten. Yes, we've run into very minor minor conflict when teens, but he manages to make things right, (right) and work things out, always. Never has ditched me to the curb. Thats trophy value to me. He's not emotionally driven and has stayed consistent in my life. consistency is very huge for me, where as the borderline is emotionally unstable and in-consistant a lot of the times. There are negatives im sure to aspd (as any personality disorder), but in my experience the borderline is more damaging because of the intense rage emotions of splitting.
Again Bob, when there in the active throws of borderline, they have the fog glasses on and choose not to see their bad behaviour. But a recovered borderline -- or at least on the road to recovery can see this. {the emotional choatic-abuse of the borderline}. Most active borderlines cant see this, thus repeating the vicious cycle over and over. (They'd rather blame everyone else around them.). And ive seen borderlines shame people - just like mob mentality. Im very careful now. You'll think there the nicest sweetest as pie full of compassion, then you'll become an enemy at any given moment when they choose to split into black and white thinking.
This makes sense. That is an incompatible way of thinking for a sociopath. Perceptions change, but the object being perceived never did.
This actually explains a few interactions I have had with borderlines. I'll have to consider potential spontaneous duality - despite its unpredictable occurrence - when interacting with them in the future. Thank you for the insight.
:-) thank you for yr insight also Bob. don't mean to sound like im putting down borderlines, they do have many many positives about them. Id just rather interact with a sociopath, even a narc now -- then a full blown splitting borderline. i joined a non-borderline group years ago, and some of the victims have endured drastic abuse time and time again. Tell that to a borderline, they get all defensive and even can threaten all self-harm. O and your the one they blame for their problems too (deflection). Because you said this and this wrong. your walking on eggshells. depending on their mood, which drastically changes within an hour, lol. The problem is them, not others most of the time. But that takes responsibility to admit -- and knocking down the individuals pride for help. I was there Bob. Not too extreme and fullblown, milder end spectrum. But i did anything to get help for myself. Ive been hurt by borderlines. endless cycle. When they're recovered, or even on the road to recovery -- there beautiful individuals to be around.
In my experience Borderline people can be quite unstable, or at the least have a lot of drama in their lives. My analogy is that they are like Pigpen from the Peanuts; they constantly have this cloud of debris flying around them and if you get just a little too close you can get sucked right in to that cloud.
The zodiac sign Scorpio is scary. They come from The Land of the Dead were they are royalty, according to legend. Psychopaths appear far more human, the really "unsane" ones often give an impression of being dullards, slightly retarded or weird. They sure can be scary when one realizes there are no moral brakes, but compared to Big Bad Scorpy most psychopaths seem tiny & trite..
What scares in sociopathy is the tight hard grip they have on their reality (and the reality of those around them). Its the high dominanance that scares others. Some clinical distinctions need to be made between Adam Lanza types and your Ted Bundy characters-and what of the armed forces? They indulge in creating a state of occupational psychopathy so their recruits acan kill with a degree of impugnity-should we count them as well?
In that case, it would be more beneficial - and representative of a sample - to count those disgnosed pre-event to see the statistical significance properly weighted.
Maybe we need to envision a time when we are all under constant scrutiny-a form of psycho social diagnosis that is not that far away from the way the education system already functions. Maybe its niaeve to assume such characters are not already being flagged upo, and if not now maybe sometime in the near future?
Are you referring to a lack of pre-diagnosed sociopaths? While there are probably many, I would assume there are enough for a statistically significant measurement. Of course practical identification and gathering of the data from a largely confidential population would be extraordinarily difficult. I wonder if a sufficiently representative sample could be obtained by the non-murdering prison population? I am not sure how representative it would be, but it would give at least some insight as to the ratios
I think most teachers off the record would be able to point out with some degree of accuracy those with the relevant traits, but there is a reluctance on the part of psychologists to label kids as sociopathic. So I doubt it could be that difficult, a little training and learning the right diagnostic jargon and teachers, being at the rock face of personality and character development could help identify possible sociopaths.Prison seems to just feature very specific types of sociopathy-the iceberg tip I suggest, there are many others who function in the grey areas of human potential, and for the most part evade scrutiny as adults.
Using the pre-adult population would not be properly representative, because most sociopathy does not typically fully develop until adulthood. Teachers are also not ideal, because observations are too dependent on passionately subjective perceptions. Even then, multiple observed traits can be explained due to adolescent development/behavior, or sometimes a non-evolving form of conduct disorder. Simply put, you can not accurately diagnose children until their mental age reaches maturity.
Not the Satanic bogeyman again-thought that shit had been blown out of the water-but clearly there is still some fundeMENTAL types holding onto this crap!
The impression when meeting someone (suspected/obviously) sociopathic is often more of a "repellant" experience than a scary one, like spending time with folks that lean too close with bad breath or eat/talk at the same time. Slimy "airy" people (similar to what "air people" means in the zodiac universe: detached)
I also experiment intense fascination at the moon, its my guide and my only God through the world, if I am lost I will try to put the balance back with moon staring. it soothes me and appease my thirst(btw I never considered astrology useful, but maybe I could enhance my thought process)
Comments are unmoderated. Blog owner is not responsible for third party content. By leaving comments on the blog, commenters give license to the blog owner to reprint attributed comments in any form.
How many people do sociopaths kill annually, as a point of comparison?
ReplyDeleteNow that would be impossible to calculate, but a fun thought.
DeleteHad a good laugh at autoerotic asphyxiation. Seriously, 600? Is it really that good?
That would be hard to figure out Bob as there is no sociopath diagnosis. Technically the answer would be zero. Even if you asked "How many people with a personality disorder kill annually" it would be hard to answer because I'm not sure mental health status is always documented. I think it should be noted though, that several of the mass shooting that have occurred where by people who were schizophrenic, which is not a personality disorder.
DeleteI've said it before and I'll say it again, people with schizophrenia can be very dangerous, much more so than someone with a personality disorder. I wonder if most people make the distinction?
MelissaR
As a psychologist, I do like you Melissa :) You seem very bright and perceptive. I won't touch paranoid schizophrenia with a ten foot pole.
DeleteDoes replying to your own posts qualify you as being schizophrenic?
DeleteMelissaR
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteTry addressing from the other direction - how many people with ASPD have killed annually, instead of how many people killed other people who were diagnosed with ASPD after-the-fact? In otherwords, from a known before-effect.
DeleteBob, please help your socio brothers. They stew in their own juice. The complacency in this blog you can find in all associations of expellees. Help them to reduce their false sence of superiority and they will make some progress.
DeleteCan you clarify your request? What do you mean by complacency?
DeleteAlready noted below in another thread, without thoroughly comprehensive data on the population, we could potentially take advantage of statistical analysis using a much smaller representative sample.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteIt might be more accurate to average out the multiplier, to take into account higher functioning sociopaths (both criminal and non-criminal) who don't commit murder (either no violence or a granular level of violence that comes before killing). Generally speaking, using ballpark theory, the multiplier could be reduce to 7x, give or take? What do you think?
DeleteThe other mitigating factor would be the number of deaths due to war, since some can be attributed to the death being attributed to a non-sociopath.
Delete'Bob', you wouldn't happen to be a member of the Sociopath/Jewish Internet Defense Force, would you?
Delete"Leading the Fight Against Antisemitism and Terrorism on the Web.
DeleteCoordinating Concerned Citizens Around the Globe. Promoting Jewish Pride, Knowledge, and Unity.
Israel advocacy"
No, I don't understand the relevance. Or how that is even an insult. We're computing a theoretical number to see where sociopaths would be placed in the blog post's hierarchy of deaths.
DeleteAdmit it you fucking kike.
DeleteYou post here all fucking day, I'm sure that you're getting paid to do it.
Or maybe I am not working today?
DeleteYou are a little more one-dimensional than the usual humiliators.
Working for the JIDF is an insult, because you'd be getting paid to lie.
DeleteAlso, you post here all the time.
DeleteI knew it.
Ok.
DeleteNice try Anon 7:00.
DeleteMelissaR
Nothing I can say will humiliate you.
DeleteVermin, scum of the earth... you're beneath that. The only thing that can get to you is truth.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteOf course, hence the ballpark theory. However, with that in mind, it does give a vague number to form a point of basis.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteErik, you crack me up
DeleteSociopaths: twice as scary as hamburgers :)
Fun exercise, but it would be impossible to calculate.
What about missing persons? Some of them surely got killed.
Suicides as a result of being really ruined?
Deaths ruled as suicides/accidents that were actually murders?
Not really a sociopath, but Machiavellian, narcissist or beeper did it...
The list goes on.
On an unrelated note, since I am not exactly good with computers... everything was working well last night, but this morning my computer and phone will not show SW at all.
My friend's phone shows up fine. And when I switched ip on my phone to say I'm in Europe, it started working beautifully again. Anyone know wtf is up with that?
G.E.
Yes, though to get an accurate weight out of the first proportion it should be based on premeditated murder cases (since accidental and crimes of passion are not typically sociopathically based). From that, we can weigh the proportion of premeditated sociopathic murderers to all sociopaths in the general population. That should eliminate the non-applicable sociopaths from the final number.
DeleteThese are more "off the napkin" ballpark numbers for entertainment and curiousity sake. The final number, while inaccurate, can still give a general idea of where it fits on the scale.
DeleteI saw ME's tweet. I almost think she's mocking some of the comments on here sometimes. Most murderers have ASPD?? What about crimes of passion??What about borderlines that kill?? What about paranoid schizos that go on killing sprees?? I mean come on..
DeleteAs noted previously, this exercise is for entertainment and curiosity sake only.
DeletePoor sharkys!!!!!
ReplyDeleteWell it goes back to the old saying that newspaperman
ReplyDeleteSinclar Lewis (?) said: "When dog bites man, the story is of
no interest. When man bites dog, that's an important story."
As a society, we are oblivious to the SLOW SUCIDE taking place
everyday. When a sociopath commits a rare, unpresidented act,
the media plays it up especially if it is a celeberity, sexual, or
racist white on black crime.
The satanic media has it's own agenda, so if the victim of a crime
is white, the crime is ALL RIGHT.
Take the case of Mass. math teacher Colleen Ritzer. How many
people outside of Mass. know the story? I assure you if the
assilent was white and the victim was black, the media drumbeat
would never cease from October of last year (When the atroicity
occurred) up to the present moment.
The non psychopath partner, of every couple that stayed together, has died of a chronic illness before the age of sixty. If you have any years on you take a look at the couples you have known and you will find this to be a fact.
ReplyDeleteOMG
DeleteYou are right!
yep,have some years on me and I've seen it. passive killing through extreme distress that is difficult for others to understand or see?
DeleteIt is a false premise to use absence of facts, as facts. In statistics, there is fallacy which is commonly adopted by people. Correlation does not equal causation. In this case, you are seeing a negative correlation between sociopathy and age of death, and attributing it as cause. What you will need to do is is look at other factors to support the claim.
DeleteJust because someone isn't scary doesn't mean they are pleasant to be around.
ReplyDeleteMelissaR
Using a sphere of experience everyone has in common here, do you find the sociopaths you have encountered on the site as unpleasant?
DeleteI can't really answer that Bob. We are all just words on a screen. For good or bad, people can be much different in real life than online. Also, there is no way to determine if someone who identifies themself as a socio on this blog really is. For that matter, you might not be male and I might not be female.
DeleteMelissaR
True enough.
DeleteI can add that the people I've encountered with ASPD can actually be quite stable in some aspects. They can be quite reliable; if they tell you that are going to meet you at 2:00 they will definitely be there (you will hear about it if you're the one late!). They can be very independent in doing things themselves to the point where they are very uncomfortable asking for help. And they can be very meticulous in recordkeeping and this like paying their bills on time. They can do things in a very exacting way and/or be perfectionist is some aspects of their lives. These aren't very bad traits at all to have imo.
DeleteMelissaR
problem is you never know when their going to explode.
DeleteAnon 8:18, explode is not the word I'd use; take action would be more accurate.
DeleteMelissaR
Melissa, that's a very interesting observation because I have also noticed rigidity in this regard in sociopaths.
DeleteIt depends on the individual I think. James Fallon noted having obsessive-compulsive traits. Don't know if ME does. I have a little, but not much. I can't say anecdotally if that is consistently true, but I suppose it is possible depending on the person.
DeleteThere is a propensity for rational thinking, which might explain your observations of rigidity. However the rigidity would be selective in this case.
Bob, I can't recall...did you say you are a sociopath?
Deleteomg I laughed so hard at this post
ReplyDeleteWhy?
DeleteDid you not see the humor in it?
DeleteThe autoerotic asphyxiation figure in it, with the disassociated picture, was funny. I didn't find the rest hilarious. The baby hippo was quaint, but adult hippos are extremely dangerous. As for being crushed by vending machines, why anyone would tip one over seems stupid - the vandalism to get access to a bag of chips is ridiculous. I will say though, that 100 deaths by icicles in Russia is interesting. It makes sense when you think about all of the ice that forms.
DeleteSociopaths do not scare me. Borderlines can be nasty little fucks. And have mob mentality if they don't like you anymore. Lol. All the splitting.... triggers - and valueing you, and then devaluing you as soon as you don't meet up to their perfect standards. Huh. Give me a sociopath in my life anyday. A borderline can be your good friend for years and ditch you in a flash as soon as you make a mistake. And they can't see there own mistakes. But deflect shit back on you and treat you like trash.They are double standard a lot. And rangaholics. And yes I'm a borderline. I'm just being brutally honest of their negative standards. There is a lot of positive to them also. But that's a whole other story.
ReplyDeleteSociopaths can impose a double-standard if it suits them. Usually as a form of taking an advantage in a given situation. Though in this case, I suppose the borderline does not see it, while the sociopath does.
DeleteVery true Bob.
DeleteFor me: The sociopath who's in my life -- we've known eachother for 30 + years, ever since kindergarten. Yes, we've run into very minor minor conflict when teens, but he manages to make things right, (right) and work things out, always. Never has ditched me to the curb. Thats trophy value to me. He's not emotionally driven and has stayed consistent in my life. consistency is very huge for me, where as the borderline is emotionally unstable and in-consistant a lot of the times. There are negatives im sure to aspd (as any personality disorder), but in my experience the borderline is more damaging because of the intense rage emotions of splitting.
Again Bob, when there in the active throws of borderline, they have the fog glasses on and choose not to see their bad behaviour. But a recovered borderline -- or at least on the road to recovery can see this. {the emotional choatic-abuse of the borderline}. Most active borderlines cant see this, thus repeating the vicious cycle over and over. (They'd rather blame everyone else around them.). And ive seen borderlines shame people - just like mob mentality. Im very careful now. You'll think there the nicest sweetest as pie full of compassion, then you'll become an enemy at any given moment when they choose to split into black and white thinking.
DeleteThis makes sense. That is an incompatible way of thinking for a sociopath. Perceptions change, but the object being perceived never did.
DeleteThis actually explains a few interactions I have had with borderlines. I'll have to consider potential spontaneous duality - despite its unpredictable occurrence - when interacting with them in the future. Thank you for the insight.
:-) thank you for yr insight also Bob. don't mean to sound like im putting down borderlines, they do have many many positives about them. Id just rather interact with a sociopath, even a narc now -- then a full blown splitting borderline. i joined a non-borderline group years ago, and some of the victims have endured drastic abuse time and time again. Tell that to a borderline, they get all defensive and even can threaten all self-harm. O and your the one they blame for their problems too (deflection). Because you said this and this wrong. your walking on eggshells. depending on their mood, which drastically changes within an hour, lol.
DeleteThe problem is them, not others most of the time. But that takes responsibility to admit -- and knocking down the individuals pride for help.
I was there Bob. Not too extreme and fullblown, milder end spectrum. But i did anything to get help for myself. Ive been hurt by borderlines. endless cycle. When they're recovered, or even on the road to recovery -- there beautiful individuals to be around.
In my experience Borderline people can be quite unstable, or at the least have a lot of drama in their lives. My analogy is that they are like Pigpen from the Peanuts; they constantly have this cloud of debris flying around them and if you get just a little too close you can get sucked right in to that cloud.
DeleteMelissaR
Very true Melissa, couldn't have said it any better.
DeleteThe zodiac sign Scorpio is scary. They come from The Land of the Dead were they are royalty, according to legend. Psychopaths appear far more human, the really "unsane" ones often give an impression of being dullards, slightly retarded or weird. They sure can be scary when one realizes there are no moral brakes, but compared to Big Bad Scorpy most psychopaths seem tiny & trite..
ReplyDeleteWhat scares in sociopathy is the tight hard grip they have on their reality (and the reality of those around them). Its the high dominanance that scares others. Some clinical distinctions need to be made between Adam Lanza types and your Ted Bundy characters-and what of the armed forces? They indulge in creating a state of occupational psychopathy so their recruits acan kill with a degree of impugnity-should we count them as well?
ReplyDeleteIn that case, it would be more beneficial - and representative of a sample - to count those disgnosed pre-event to see the statistical significance properly weighted.
DeleteMaybe we need to envision a time when we are all under constant scrutiny-a form of psycho social diagnosis that is not that far away from the way the education system already functions. Maybe its niaeve to assume such characters are not already being flagged upo, and if not now maybe sometime in the near future?
DeleteAre you referring to a lack of pre-diagnosed sociopaths? While there are probably many, I would assume there are enough for a statistically significant measurement. Of course practical identification and gathering of the data from a largely confidential population would be extraordinarily difficult. I wonder if a sufficiently representative sample could be obtained by the non-murdering prison population? I am not sure how representative it would be, but it would give at least some insight as to the ratios
DeleteCorrection: Pre-event diagnosed sociopaths.
DeleteI think most teachers off the record would be able to point out with some degree of accuracy those with the relevant traits, but there is a reluctance on the part of psychologists to label kids as sociopathic. So I doubt it could be that difficult, a little training and learning the right diagnostic jargon and teachers, being at the rock face of personality and character development could help identify possible sociopaths.Prison seems to just feature very specific types of sociopathy-the iceberg tip I suggest, there are many others who function in the grey areas of human potential, and for the most part evade scrutiny as adults.
DeleteUsing the pre-adult population would not be properly representative, because most sociopathy does not typically fully develop until adulthood. Teachers are also not ideal, because observations are too dependent on passionately subjective perceptions. Even then, multiple observed traits can be explained due to adolescent development/behavior, or sometimes a non-evolving form of conduct disorder. Simply put, you can not accurately diagnose children until their mental age reaches maturity.
Delete[PEDOPHILIA AND ABUSE IN HOLLYWOOD]
ReplyDeleteCorey Feldmen Says: #1 Problem With Hollywood is Child Sex Abuse
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/corey feldman-pedophilia-problem-child-actors contributed-demise/story? id=14256781#.UYNTM8rtvHR
Judge Who Sold Children to Private Detention
ReplyDeleteCenters
http://www.dailykos.com/
story/2013/06/15/1216470/-Judge-that-sold-
children-to-prison-only-gets-28-years
Vicki Polin -- Jewish Satanic Ritual Abuse
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsTm46RzVh8
Not the Satanic bogeyman again-thought that shit had been blown out of the water-but clearly there is still some fundeMENTAL types holding onto this crap!
DeleteGo and Jew somewhere else, faggot.
DeleteThe impression when meeting someone (suspected/obviously) sociopathic is often more of a "repellant" experience than a scary one, like spending time with folks that lean too close with bad breath or eat/talk at the same time. Slimy "airy" people (similar to what "air people" means in the zodiac universe: detached)
ReplyDeleteWhat happens if I was born in betweens? Im Libra-scorpio, what is your thought?
DeleteI also experiment intense fascination at the moon, its my guide and my only God through the world, if I am lost I will try to put the balance back with moon staring. it soothes me and appease my thirst(btw I never considered astrology useful, but maybe I could enhance my thought process)
DeleteLibrans & virgoans do not exist, they are all Scorpio creatures according to original zodiac.
DeleteSharky the sharkasaurus!
ReplyDelete