The Gage Matrix in the Written Word -- or how to recognize a Klippoth/Preta in writing.
by Hr. Vad
- Exaggerated politeness in letter that signals antipathy or hostility. Snide
remarks. Fake questions concealing insult (instead of just stating
one's sincere opinion). E.g. "Dear John, good luck with your exams, you're
gonna need it -- you idiot."
- Lacking ability to understand the authors intentions and premises. E.g. they are
likely to "forget" or otherwise totally miss even self-explanatory TITLES
of an essay. Later they'll inquire whatever your essay has to do with "apples"
when you've explicitly written that it deals ONLY with "oranges."
- Context and connexions are consistently misinterpreted. Context might as well be
an unknown in the vocabulary of the diseased.
- "Referential Ideation." The diseased is unable to read a text loyally
and has a tendency to "read his own opinions into the text." I.e. he sees
things that ostensibly are NOT there. He is having DELUSIONS or hallucinations. Unable
to grasp the NEW perspective.
- Words are often not just words, and words only seldomly mean what they ordinarily
do. Words do not refer to the thing-in-itself, but the word is only the sum of its
associations. E.g. "nazi" is not just a description of a person with a certain,
well defined political opinion.
- In a discussion, whenever the introductory superficialities are done with,
everything this person says regarding the subject will be SO wrong that the other
party will be having trouble knowing even where to start correcting the diseased.
The AMOUNT of errors, small as well as big ones, will seem overpowering. E.g. each
and every time he says "what you're saying here is that blah, blah, blah...."
it will ALWAYS -- to a higher or lesser degree -- be wrong. Often EXACTLY that phrase
is used by the diseased as if to explain to himself the content of the essay.
- Words or sentences are not evaluated in relation to their objective truth but only
on their ego-value, i.e. in relation to how the words reflect on the ego of the diseased.
E.g. "The nazi I know said that 2+2=4, the professor that 2+2=5." To support
the Nazi's statement would "reflect badly on the person" and he would often
support the professors statement regardless of its objective truth. Nazi could be
"Russian, Communist, harsh critic, Satanist, Atheist" or anybody "on
the other side." Professor could be "American, Liberalist, Libertarian,
favorable critic, Christian" or anyone on "our side."
- Others get the impression that the diseased is consciously misrepresenting their
views, i.e. the diseased is LYING about them. This is an impression that comes about
the tenth time you explain that you did NOT say "this" but "that" -- and that the "that"
is what you actually wrote in the original post. Consequently, some
will view them as spies or saboteurs, in other words: as ENEMIES. Neurological and
psychological tests (e.g. polygraphs) will show that they are not lying in the
ordinary sense of the word -- they do it unconsciously.
- Exaggerated staging of one self. Look for pompous or highly stylized language, overdone
signatures, over-use of difficult words, anything "too fancy" or self-important.
- Any offer about a peace or truce will be accompanied by patronizing, pitying, arrogant,
gloating or snide remarks.
- Anything they do seems intended to create strife and controversy. They incite anger
in those they correspond with.
- Often a single word will be taken completely out of context, yet be presented as
if it was terribly important to the argument. This is in some ways equivalent to presenting
a straw man. Taken out of context a word can be twisted to mean anything, and it WILL
BE.
- Valid criticisms are seldomly answered, and errors NEVER admitted. Criticisms are
never answered properly, e.g. the diseased will often refer back to already established
facts (trivia) as if that was going to answer the NEW points brought up. Very evasive.
- If it is possible at all for the diseased to find something which will "justify"
a summary dismissal of an opponent this straw will be grasped. E.g. "Oh,
he's just a disgruntled <insert the blank> and that's why he's critical of it
(and hence we don't have to listen to what he's SAYING)" or "he has an agenda
(and therefore nothing he says can be right)."
- Content must always give way to wrapping, image, style, layout and form. E.g. substantial
criticism will often be dismissed by pointing out that the opponent is being impolite,
in violation of dress-code, is not using the proper lingo or is holding the fork in
the wrong hand. This is akin to ad hominem attacks and are likely fallacies.
- The diseased will always find it more important WHO says something than WHAT is
being said. E.g. "Anonymous criticism cannot be answered", "someone
already said that before so I'll not answer you", "you're a <fill in
the blanks>, so I'm not gonna answer you (you dork)," or "you're just
a measly student/trainee/freshman." Argumentum ad verecundiam, or The
Appeal to Authority will work well on these people, even if the source cited is
unreliable (they want rules and other people to think for them).
- Exaggerated focus on details and single words. Compared to the big picture they
focus on the smaller frames. Nit picking.
- One will most often observe a break-down in rationality at the late stages of the
logic. Will often happen when the diseased comes to a point in the discussion where
he has to think for himself, i.e. where he cannot go by memorized facts anymore. Once
out of the "shell of superficialities" (memorized facts) he CAN be indentified.
- Anosognosic behaviour. Often the diseased "will not know that he does not know
something." Often the best arguments will be brushed away, not because the diseased
can't understand the argument, but simply because he does not know that he is walking
on thin ice. Normal people would say "hey, you may be right, but it's really
over my head to judge in this matter." E.i. normal people will KNOW when they
do not grasp, say, a mathematical solution, but anosognosics do NOT exhibit this self-understanding.
- Extreme skepticism. Often you'll hear "the highest knowledge is knowing that
you don't know anything." This will NOT necessarily correspond to the degree
of pontification, preaching and appearance of the diseased. These persons are clearly
NOT completely anosognosic, because they DO HAVE an faint suspicion that they really
do NOT know anything; this, incidentally, is a very accurate diagnosis! Skepticism
is often used as a justification mechanism, i.e. they do not ACT like skeptic or doubtful
people normally do, but they use the skepticism as a wall to lean their backs against,
when it IS proven that "they do not know and can not know."
- Everything is dualized. Everything is perceived as (antagonistic) dualisms, i.e.
good vs. evil, black vs. white, dog vs. cat, etc. E.g. should another person say that
he's fond of tall girls, the diseased would infer that this person HATES short girls.
Binary thinking.
- The fallacy of Bifurcation will often be committed, i.e. everything is presented
as having only two possible alternatives. E.g. everything is perceived as either
"right or left wing," "good or evil," "black or white,"
and everything must be fitted into this simplistic model. Binary thinking.
- Cannot understand or conceptualize non-dualist ideas (especially Eastern thinking).
They are bad dialectic materialists. When thesis meets anti- thesis there is a synthesis, but
the synthesis is NOT always a compromise or mixture, but often a completely THIRD
alternative. The idea of a third alternative is not likely to be understood by the
diseased.
- Poor deconstructionists: will tend to see things that are not really there -- they embellish
what they see or hear with details and judgements, and even when pointed out to them, they
have difficulty realizing that they did in fact NOT see "this and that" when they only saw
"this". Cannot "ground" things in physical reality. May take (mytho)poetic language literally.
They are Mysterians and make up fantasies.
- "Sage on Stage" behavior. Will often present themselves as being very
smart, having secret knowledge or great education, but what they are saying specifically
will often be old news, nothing really new, uninteresting, just not very profound
at all, banal, and not worth mentioning. Inaccurate even.
- Reacts strongly to "buzz words," i.e. epithets.
- I appears that these people have a large, dominant unconscious in the Freudian
sense.
- May appear unduly "reasonable" or "sensible" when in fact they
are being overly polite to the point of distorting meaning. "Reasonable"
may often be translated to mean: keeping things very nebulous in order to avoid having
to say ANYTHING.
Note regarding "matrices." A matrix like the one just shown tend to pose
serious problems for someone unacquainted with such lists. It is impossible to say whether
a particular klippoth will exhibit all the symptions above or only some. It would be
unlikely that all the signs fit on a person, and it is worth noting that even
though some of the above characteristics fit on a person it does NOT automatically
make him a klippoth. Thus, there is absolutely NO reason to conclude "...but <whimper>
then we're all klippoths." It is also worth noting that such a lists is
analytical in its nature (breaking things down into small components) and this
may cause one to miss the big picture here. To ultimately be useful the above list would
have to be "learnt by heart," i.e. it has to be internalized and felt;
as you will notice many of the points are essentially overlapping which illustrates
the impossibility of making a clear cut algorithm for spotting these individuals --
it just doesn't work that way. This requires an insight into the nature of the klippoth
and it does not come automatically, only by experience. It's like getting to know a
new word and all the help you get is from a dictionary which explains the word with
other, synonymous words, yet to really understand the real thing it will require
getting accustomed to the object in question. Thus, this list is only a pointer to the real
phenomenon, but when something like the following happens, you have probably gotten
the message: you're reading a post and suddenly you're struck by the hunch that "there's
something WRONG here!" Following this hunch you discover that the text you're reading
actually corresponds to several points on the list above. The better you get you'll
be able to spot the klippoths faster. At the beginning you might not be able to spot
them and only too late you'll discover that the psychic vampire have backstabbed
you or suckered you into a discussion which is essentially draining. Getting better
at it you'll only have to read one post or even just a few lines of text and
you KNOW who they are.
Copyright 1995-2003 Hr. Vad Visit: Satanic Reds
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