Worst case re: Trump 2020, via U Penn criminologist1 , Mary Trump, et al.: President’s one of ~ 77 million psychopaths imperiled (PsIMP) by a dvances in m olecular genetics; he knows P sIMP; he’s part of Ps’ resistance, which: 1) includes many D HS- ers & police, 2) seeks p retexts partly via (violent) provocations (e.g., P ortland kidnappings, police riots ). 1 Download pdf for clickable links on pages 1-3. #SlideShareBug Summary (12 pages; details follow) From said UPenn-er’s 2013 b ook: PsIMP via said advances. Keywords: “ i ndefinite detention” b y 2034 (e.g., Ps who haven’t committed a crime would be imprisoned). From a 2020 a rticle in N ature magazine: “I n the past decade, studies of psycho- pathological genetics have become large enough to draw robust conclusions.” From the 2020 b ook by Mary Trump, the clinical psychologist (Ph.D.) who’s the president’s niece: “ A case could be made that he [Trump] also meets the criteria for antisocial personality disorder, which in its most severe form is generally consider- ed sociopathy.” F rom the 2018 a rticle on PsychologyToday.com titled “The Differences Between Psychopaths and Sociopaths”: “M any psychiatrists, f orensic psychologists, criminologists, and police officers . . . use the terms s ociopath and psychopath interchangeably.” From a 2018 a rticle on BusinessInsider.com: “[L]aw enforcement is a popular career choice for psychopaths.” F rom the June 2020 a rticle on WPXI.com1 titled “Former FBI assistant director: Derek Chauvin showed ‘sociopathic behavior’ during George Floyd’s death”: “[ Former FBI-er] Fuentes said research shows about seven percent of people exhibit some sociopathic behavior, but in applicants for law enforcement that number jumps up to m ore than 40% [ my emphasis].” 1 WPXI is the NBC-TV affiliate in Pittsburgh, PA. It’s (very) likely that a growing number of Ps: 1) a re aware that PsIMP, 2) have been r esisting. In particular, there are indicators that: ● Ps have been attempting to weaponize l ife science in two specific ways that are ideal for “a symmetric warfare” ● Ps’ attempts have been funded/enabled via: 1) the d e facto legalization of huge fraud in America, 2) Deutsche Bank (DB), 3+) . . . ● Ps’ resisting has turned DB into a next-gen variant of the defunct, w ildly violent, p olitically influential/coercive, w orldwide c riminal enterprise of the 1980s known as Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI)1 1 From 2020 book D ark Towers: Deutsche Bank, Donald Trump and an Epic Trail of Destruction, by the finance editor of T he New York Times: To any government official paying attention [in 2017], this was a powerful signal: Investigate Deutsche and risk the president’s wrath. From 1993 book T he Outlaw Bank: A Wild Ride into the Secret Heart of BCCI, c o- authored by two journalists who covered BCCI for T ime magazine ( my emphases): Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the BCCI affair in the U nited States was the failure of U.S. government and federal law enforcement to move against the outlaw bank. Instead of swift retribution, what took place over more than a d ecade was a c over-up of major, alarming proportions, often orchestrated from the very h ighest levels of government. Much more below re: DB and BCCI. Worst-case for non-Ps Said attempts to weaponize life science have succeeded. Ps believe the coming months are the ideal time to maximize their resistance. Reason 1 of 4: A big threat to Ps is counter-resistance by very wealthy people who aren’t Ps (VWPnPs). It’s very likely1 that (almost) all VWPnPs have been committing a variant of the “c ategory error” made in the 1930s b y Neville Chamberlain et al. that led to World War II (55 million killed). From 2008 book T he Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy, by C olumbia University historian A dam Tooze: Hitler had seen himself as locked in a global confrontation with world Jewry. . . . For Hitler, a war of conquest was not one policy option amongst others. Either the German race struggled for Lebensraum [i.e., territory] or its racial enemies would condemn it to extinction. From 2019 book A ppeasement: Chamberlain, Hitler, Churchill, and the Road to War: The failure to perceive the true character of the Nazi regime and Adolf Hitler stands as the single greatest failure of British policy makers during this period, since it was from this that all subsequent failures— the failure to rearm sufficiently, the failure to build alliances (not least with the Soviet Union), the failure to project British power, and the failure to educate public opinion—stemmed. Going forward, it’s likely that a growing number of VWPnPs (e.g., many/ most of America’s d e facto policy-makers) will: 1) become aware that PsIMP, 2) counter-resist. 1 Details below. Keywords: m y experiences since 2016 with U.S. govern- ment agencies. Reason 2: Another big threat to Ps is counter-resistance by many/most U.S. adults who aren’t members of the military (e.g., voters in elections for public office). Precedents suggest this counter-resistance could be prevented/subdued via Ps’ weaponizing of life science. F rom the 2018 a rticle titled “L os Extraditables, the Pablo Escobar-Led Gang That Launched a Bloody Campaign [during the 1980s] Against U.S. Extradition”: The terrorist group . . . claimed “we prefer a grave in Colombia to a prison in the United States . . .” Escobar was a drug-trafficker whose net worth reached $58 billion (in 2018 dollars). The other leaders of Los Extraditables were wealthy drug- traffickers. From 2001 book K illing Pablo: The Hunt for the World’s Greatest Outlaw (my emphases): “[Escobar] intended, he said, to use the public’s weariness with [Extraditables-funded] violence to his benefit. He planned to turn up the violence until the public cried out for a solution, a deal. . . . A communiqué from the Extraditables not long after hammered home the point: We are declaring t otal and absolute war on the government, on the individual and political oligarchy, on the journalists who have attacked and insulted us, on the judges that have sold themselves to the government, on the extraditing magistrates . . . on all those who have persecuted and attacked us. We will not respect the families of those who have not respected our families. We will burn and destroy the industries, properties and mansions of the oligarchy.” “A t his [Pablo’s] peak, he would threaten to usurp the Colombian State.” “Ever since Pablo’s men had blown that Avianca flight out of the sky . . .” “[A] total of 457 police had been killed since Colonel Martinez had started his hunt. Young gunmen in that city were being paid 5 million pesos for killing a cop.” From 1998 book G uns, Germs and Steel: The Fate of Human Societies, for which the author r eceived a Pulitzer Prize: When [Spanish conquistador] Pizarro and [Inca emperor] Atahuallpa met [in 1532] at Cajamarca [in Peru], why did Pizarro capture Atahuallpa and kill so many of his followers, instead of Atahuallpa’s vastly more numerous forces capturing and killing Pizarro? After all, Pizarro had only 62 soldiers mounted on horses, along with 106 foot soldiers, while Atahuallpa commanded an army of about 80,000. . . . Pizarro’s military advantages lay in the Spaniards’ steel swords and other weapons, steel armor, guns, and horses. To those weapons, Atahuallpa’s troops, without animals on which to ride into battle, could oppose only stone, bronze, or wooden clubs, maces, and hand axes, plus slingshots and quilted armor. Reason 3: The biggest threat to Ps worldwide is counter-resistance by the U.S. military and U.S intelligence agencies. This threat to Ps is REDUCED while a P is commander-in-chief (i.e., worst case, a P is president of the U.S.)1 . Keywords: appointees/hires who are Ps, their Rolodexes2 , their contacts’ Rolodexes . . . A non-P might be elected president of the U.S. in November 2020. 1 From 2020 book T oo Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man, by Mary Trump: “A case could be made that he [Trump] also meets the criteria for antisocial personality disorder, which in its most severe form is generally considered sociopathy[1 .1] but can also refer to chronic criminality, arrogance, and disregard for the rights of others. Is there comorbidity? Probably.” “I received my PhD in clinical psychology from the Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, and while doing research for my dissertation I spent a year working on the admissions ward of Manhattan Psychiatric Center, a state facility, where we diagnosed, evaluated, and treated some of the sickest, most vulnerable patients. In addition to teaching graduate psychology, including courses in trauma, psychopathology, and developmental psychology, for several years as an adjunct professor, I provided therapy and psychological testing for patients at a community clinic specializing in addictions.” 1.1 From the 2018 article on PsychologyToday.com titled “The Differences Between Psychopaths and Sociopaths”: Leading experts also disagree on the meaningful differences between the two conditions—and those who agree that there are differences often disagree on what those differences are. 2 F rom 2020 book H iding in Plain Sight: The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion of America: In March 2016, Trump hired Paul Manafort as his campaign adviser. . . . In the 1980s and 1990s, Manafort and Roger Stone—another old Trump friend and presidential campaign adviser—partnered in a D.C. firm nicknamed “the torturers’ lobby” because their clients included the most brutal dictators in the world. Summary of reason 4 (details below; again, this is a hypothetical worst-case for non-Ps): Many years before Trump’s presidency, Ps started gaining A LOT of political influence (PI) in the U.S., in part because: ● Ps have been willing to gain PI and judicial influence1 (JI) illegally (as well as legally) ● BCCI provided Ps with a playbook/template for leveraging huge fraud to gain PI/JI illegally As indicators suggest, Ps’ b ribes and/or coercion h ave helped to place Ps in government jobs that give the employees the ability to prevent/sabotage (some) counter-resistance by non-Ps. 1 From H iding in Plain Sight: Manafort’s criminal history was so expansive he was initially set to potentially face over three hundred years in prison1 5— until the judge in his [2017] case, T. S. Ellis, was threatened to the point that he had to be protected by US Marshals.1 6 Ellis said that the jury was also receiving threats. He refused to make their names public, saying he feared for their safety.1 7 Despite the threats, Manafort’s trial led to a conviction, which Manafort then attempted to circumvent through a plea deal with Mueller—a deal that he broke. At Manafort’s sentencing months later, Ellis shocked the country by proclaiming Manafort—now well known by Americans as a crime machine—a man who had led an “otherwise blameless life.” He reduced his sentence to below the recommended guidelines, prompting a series of ethics inquiries that were later dismissed.1 8 No one followed up on the threats to Ellis—a frightening pattern that played out with many who attempted to hold the Trump team accountable. Title of a July 2020 a rticle in N ewsweek: Judge Esther Salas Assigned to [Jeffrey] Epstein Deutsche Bank Case 4 Days Before Husband, Son Shot From 2020 book O n Corruption in America—And What Is at Stake: [E]verywhere, I have found one [government function] that kleptocratic networks must control: the justice function. The author of O n Corruption s erved as special assistant to the top U.S. military officer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen. She participated in Cabinet-level decision-making on Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Arab Spring. Previously, she was a special advisor to two commanders of the international troops in Afghanistan (ISAF), Generals David McKiernan and Stanley McChrystal. Her 2015 book is T hieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security. Toward maximizing their resistance, Ps want pretexts: ● for escalating their resistance ● that help to delay/prevent counter-resistance So . . . tactics that have a high likelihood of yielding pretexts . . . DHS/ police provocations (e.g., violence)1 . . . 1 From 2011 book T he Psychopath Test: A Journey Through the Madness Industry: [“]She said, ‘I’ve got a b ad personality. I like to hurt people.’ I thought she was winding me up. I said, ‘Okay, fine.’ So we went through the [fMRI] tests [i.e., brain scans]. When she was looking at the photographs of the mutilated bodies, the sensors showed that she was getting a kick off of them. Her s exual reward center—it’s a sexual thing—was fired up by blood and death [ my emphasis]. It’s subconscious. It happens in milliseconds. She found those things p leasant. ” From 2019 book T he New Evil: Understanding the Emergence of Modern Violent Crime: As we move along the continuum to Category 9 [of 22 categories of violent crime], we traverse an important threshold. The remainder of the scale encompasses persons who commit “evil” acts partly or wholly as the result of varying degrees of psychopathy . . . TNE co-author Michael H. Stone, MD, is a professor of clinical psychiatry at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. TNE co-author Gary Brucato, PhD, is: 1) a clinical psychologist and researcher in the areas of violence, psychosis, and other serious psychopathology, 2) the assistant director of the Center of Prevention and Evaluation at the New York State Psychiatric Institute/Columbia University Medical Center. Worst case for me Summary (some details follow; more below) To ADVANCE non-Ps’ counter-resistance, I’ll pay out 84% of my ownership stake in the startup that’ll result from my Amazon-/Microsoft-/V C- praised1 plan to establish the most popular online market for artificial intelligence and customized education (e.g., CE for AI, which almost certainly will be to the A I economy w hat oil has been to the industrial economy). 1 L inks to the praise are on page 12 below, along with excerpts. Keywords re: “pay out”: 20% f inders’-fee (e.g., paid to you, and someone in your Rolodex, and . . .). Keywords re: my plan: said praise was for 1998 and 2004 versions; current version is a product of my efforts since 2005 t o make my business model d isruptive to Amazon, Microsoft, etc.; from mid-2016 to mid-2019 my primary focus was updating/adapting my work (e.g., updating my innovation that’s designed to disrupt; adapting my Amazon-/VC-praised design of a next-gen variant of LinkedIn) to yield a n IDEAL f ront company for gathering ( anticipatory) intelligence re: threats posed by PsIMP (e.g., threats to many thousands of non-Ps who’ll expedite PsIMP by being the most valuable of the AI-CE industry’s customers, entrepreneurs and employees1 ) . 1 Re: “who’ll expedite”: Details below. Re: the business case for my work on said front company (i.e., on helping to protect said “most valuable”): Warren B uffett is a longtime investor i n many insurance companies; from Buffett’s 2 016 annual letter to shareholders: It would be foolish, however, for me or anyone to demand 100% proof of huge forthcoming damage to the world if that outcome seemed at all possible and if prompt action had even a small chance of thwarting the danger. Corollary: Many/most/all of said “most valuable” might favor the company that’s the sole/leading provider of PsIMP-insurance.