Thursday, January 24, 2013

Antisocial Psychopath and Sociopath: Antisocial Personality Disorder

Beavis, You're a stupid dumbass--THERMOTRON FIELD SERVICE- Job Application Fill out the following application to the best of your abilities. Omitted information may hurt your chances as a potential candidate. Please allocate 20-30 minutes to complete the application process.


Field Service Refrigeration / hvac / CT

Department: 
Field Service
Location: 
New Haven, CT


The purpose of this position is to continuously grow revenue

 and profits through building service sales volume.

Actively and continuously involved in

 preventive maintenance contracts,

retrofits,

extended warranties,

installations,

start-up,

relocation packages,

and general service.
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Service functions include performing

 quality installations,

startups,

 troubleshooting,

maintenance,

construction,

 repair,

 modifications,

overhauls,

 retrofits,

 calibration,

inspection and

 servicing of Thermotron products

and like competitor products.


Must develop strong relationships with customers

by acting in a highly responsive and professional manner to meet customer needs.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Family Guy - Bugs Bunny

it's ok

at thermotron you get A-Head, by proving you are loyal to the Big guy

thermotron manager training - Bugs Bunny-- criminal psycopath


come for the opportunity to be all the liar you can be-- cuz it's just politics!

ok start here

Thermotron manager training - Bugs Bunny-- be one of the Guys!!




thermoton -- where it dosen't matter what you do to any one -- so long as you get away with it and blame it on some one else..

learn how to be an accomplished

criminal psychopath--

Thermotron let the games begin

ers


Mission
To grow and improve as individuals and as a company.

Quality

Thermotron will use the precepts of quality to grow and continuously improve our company and employees to meet or exceed the expectations of our customers.

Values

  • Quality
  • Spirit of cooperation
  • Customer Focused
  • Safety
  • Efficiency
  • Continuous Improvement





Culture
  • Research & Development
  • Proven Customer Service Record
  • Pride in Our Uniqueness
  • Lean Management Structure
  • Know Our Core Competencies
  • Open Door Policy/Belief in Collaboration





Saturday, January 19, 2013

What is a psychopath?- The Pros to Being a Psychopath In a new book---or,--get your traiing at thermotron-- smile!!

ok

The Pros to Being a Psychopath

In a new book, Oxford research psychologist Kevin Dutton argues that psychopaths are poised to perform well under pressure


  1. Sounds like schools and politics are set up for the breeding of psychopaths doesn’t it?
    I mean this in complete seriousness. Evan
  2. Hello Evan – I can see where you’re coming from. But don’t give up hope, bro! One of the things about the psychopath is that he generates fear and paranoia because of how dangerous he is and also because of his own inner dread and emptiness – (about which he knows nothing). When you and I read, write, think, talk about psychopathy we sooner or later become afraid and despairing. So it’s a tricky one – some of our bad feeling is ‘correct’ (psychopathy is a dreadful social problem) and some of it is ‘projected’ (put into us by the psychopath – even the thought of a psychopath).
  3. [...] But there is one element that must be added, one proviso made. Yes, it’s my current bugbear – psychopathy. Unless there is good faith, reflection (deep or otherwise) is only going to folded into the [...]
  4. I know you are describing the criminal variety sociopath. But I am amazed at the sync-up to the pathetic, emotionally abusive, emotionally & sexually exploitive, simply-without-conscience variety.
    To have been taken in by that….
    BUT.. What you are giving me here is KNOWLEDGE and therefore preventative ‘ammunition’ from ever letting another sociopath get the best of me! All the more to recognize the slime.
    THANK YOU!!
  5. terraflora – Glad to be of help! The awful thing is that knowing about this stuff can make one cynical and suspicious about regular folks which is unfair.
    (Incidentally, I’m not familar witht he expression ‘sync-up’ but like sound of it. What’s it mean?)
  6. Actually Steve… words failed me at that moment and that is what emerged from my brain. But I was trying to say I was amazed at the alikeness, the alignment, the correlation (AH, there’s the word) … :) I get creative at times. Sometimes it works.
    BUT – I do want to say about the potential cynicism: Boy did I stare THAT one in the face! I really saw the likelihood that I would NEVER trust anyone again. Thank God for the grace (the mysterious good) I have experienced in my recovery because I feel now better informed and therefore safer in the world!!
  7. [...] criminal psychopath is the topic of a post at Top Two Inches, and over at the Deception Blog, a comment on research on [...]
  8. Something like 1 % of the world’s population are psychopaths . There is some differentiation between low intelligence and high intelligence psychopaths . Psychopaths experience and process emotions differently . High intelligence psychopathy can be seen in world leaders both totalitarians and democratic systems , the aristocracy the concept of master and serf a psychopathic invention . Low intelligence psychopaths can be seen in people like Ed Gain , I regard him more as being mentally ill . I think you should be quite clear on your definitions and understanding of psychopathy .
    Are psychopaths bad for human civilisation ? Answer probably not , except the few who inflict suffering on others .
    Most psychopaths are well adapted and live normal lives and are amongst our most “gifted” . There have been many benevolent dictators and Kings who put their people first and had the ability to do that yet were clearly psychopaths .
    In times of crisis it’s usually the psychopath who causes the crisis or is the hero and saves the day .
    My belief is that psychopaths are perhaps a subspecies of homo sapiens . Is there a genetic element to psychopathy? , certainly look at the aristocracy for instance .
    My real Question is where is the concept of Good and Evil . Is there a good psychopath ? and we all know the cliche evil psychopath . What makes a psychopath or a normal person do what they do ? Self gratification or is there a higher purpose in these things? What are the metaphysics of a psychopath .
    I know psychiatry very well yet their are many gaps and misunderstanding with regards to this field .
  9. Salman,
    There is no pscyhopath that puts other people first, I’m sorry ure wrong on this.
    Your other thought – p being subspecies – very interesting thought that is not unlikely to be correct. These guys (mostly) are very different, also, it seems, wrt their brain wiring. See similar stuff among chimpanzees. Also the difference horse-sebra (look very similar, very different pscyholgoical makeup).

Sociopath Test-- thermotron manager training--Whatever, the psychopath gets what he wants because people give it to him.

sure

One of the most frightening examples I’ve seen is in the movie ‘Bundy‘ where the serial killer is driving along in his VW, sees something, swerves across the traffic to a motel where - in broad daylight – he loads two enormous pot-plants into his car and drives off without a care in the world.


Effect 1. Collusion
The criminal psychopath will do anything and everything to get what he wants and people often respond by complying. (I say ‘he’ because there are fewer female psychopaths than male.)


People collude through fear.

The psychopath overtly threatens, or covertly hints, or his reputation precedes him.

Whatever, the psychopath gets what he wants because people give it to him.


People also collude through despair.

By this I don’t mean they despair because of the danger they’re in or because they’re breaking their own values. They despair because very deep down the psychopath despairs.


 He will not recognise his own despair, though – it would lead him to suicide – so he causes others to feel it. The psychological term for this is projective identification.
Example 1: “You’re the only person who can help me; there’s no other hope.” The other becomes convinced of this, goes against his or her own better judgement, and in a flash the psychopath is on his merry way.



Example 2.

 In his memoir ‘Experience‘ Martin Amis discusses the murder of his cousin Lucy Partington by the serial killer Frederick West.

Along the way Amis mentions West’s “beseeching face.” No doubt it was this that lowered his victim’s resistance.


Effect 2. Disbelief


Despite all the evidence to the contrary, people often repsond to the psychopath by refusing to believe that he committed this or that outrage.


This is because of the famed psychopathic charm.
Example: Many people cannot accept OJ Simpson’s guilt because he is such a nice guy.
Warning: beware foiling the nice psychopath. The niceness will be replaced by revenge, sooner or later.
Example:  ‘The Sporanos’ character Paulie ‘Walnuts’ Gualtieri several times on this short video turns nasty on a dime.


Effect 3. Rejection

A third effect the criminal psychopath has on people is condemnation.

Because the criminal psychopath is bad, it’s easy for us to attribute all badness to them and regard them as the dregs. What’s missing from this is the acknowledgement of our own badness.


Example: Carmela Soprano won’t condemn Tony because “there are far bigger crooks than my husband.” In other words: I’m a good person, he’s my husband, therefore he must be a good person – it’s the others who are bad. (This formula is flawed from the start – she is not a good person. Who is?)


Confusing

The confounding thing about the criminal psychopath is that all three of the above effects will be produced by the same person.

As a consequence, an unintended effect of the criminal psychopath is to destroy group functioning.


Effect 4. Acceptance-as-is


This, the psychoanalyst Nevile Symington says, is the correct position to take when treating a psychopath. It means acknowledging one’s own sadism, etc. without disbelieving the psychopath’s far greater sadism; it also means not colluding with or rejecting him.



A TV example: Harry Morgan, Dexter‘s adopted father and a former homicide detective, was first to spot Dexter’s passion for human vivisection and helped his son channel his homicidal impulses in a more constructive pursuit: delivering vigilante justice. (Fun but unlikely, don’t you think?)
One could accept the crimimanal psychopath as he is. Or one could just keep well away!

thermotron- Lie Detector- i heard about you --Can psychopaths have a positive impact on society,

ok sure


Can psychopaths have a positive impact on society, 


as opposed to just using their advantages to get ahead?


I’ve interviewed a lot of special forces troops, especially the British Special Air Service.

 They’re like Navy Seals. That’s a very good example of people who are pretty high on those psychopathic traits who are actually in a perfect occupation.

Also, I interview in the book a top neurosurgeon—this was a surgeon who takes on operations that are especially risky—who said to me, “The most important thing when you’re conducting a dangerous operation, a risky operation, is you’ve got to be very cool under pressure, you’ve got to be focused.

You can’t have too much empathy for the person that you’re operating on, because you wouldn’t be able to conduct that operation.” Surgeons do very nasty things to people when they’re on the operating table.

If things do go wrong, the most important facet in a surgeon’s arsenal is decisiveness. You cannot freeze.

You noted in the book that you’re not a psychopath yourself. 

 Despite my profession, I scored pretty low on your survey as well.


 Can “normals” like you and me learn to develop these psychopathic traits, even if we don’t have them naturally?

Absolutely.
Normal people can work out their psychopath muscles. It’s kind of like going to the gym in a way, to develop these attributes. It’s just like training.

Psychopaths don’t think, should I do this or shouldn’t I do this?


They just go ahead and do stuff. So next time you find yourself putting off that chore or filing that report or something, unchain your inner psychopath and ask yourself this:

“Since when did I need to feel like something in order to do it?”


Another way you can take a leaf out of a psychopath’s book:

 Psychopaths are very reward-driven.

 If they see a benefit in something, they zone in on it and they go for it 100 percent. Let’s take an example of someone who is kind of scared of putting in for a raise at work.


You might be scared about what the boss might think of you.

You might think if you’d don’t get it you’re going to get fired. Forget it.


 Cut all that stuff off. “Psychopath up,” and overwhelm your negative feelings by concentrating on the benefits of getting it.

The bottom line here is, a bit of localized psychopathy is good for all of us.

thomas w bannach - Do What You Feel-- every-1's a manager




“Psychopath” is a term that gets thrown about a lot in our culture. 

Are psychopaths misunderstood?


It’s true, no sooner is the word “psychopath” out than images of your classic psychopathic killers like Ted Bundy and Jeffrey Dahmer and a whole kind of discreditable raft of senior politicians come kind of creeping across our minds.

 But actually, being a psychopath doesn’t mean that you’re a criminal.


 Not by default, anyway. It doesn’t mean that you’re a serial killer, either.

thomas w Bannach-- as the west coast manager-- he chose his "Pet" liars and thieves to support his basic manager  policy.

That it is "OK " to lie cheat steal , deceive defraud miss lead lead astray, lible slander ,character assinate -- any one who was not in aggrement with him--- and besides -- as Harry Grace the final employee he hired for that office said.. Thomas Bannach -- is heavey on personal "loyality" and besides "i lied for you"

Where as Hil sysbesma -- remarked that Gregory V Johnson had Thomas Bannach "around his little finger" and would believe his lies--

In the course of two years--- Thomas bannach Drummed out 4  service and sales support secretaries 2 sales engineers, and the service person-all--

Dean Tripp the long term-- thermotron west coast liar and deceiver-- said he didn't think thomas Bannach had any "morals or Ethics" and that he would only do what ever is easest!!

and as Gregory V Johnson said-- it dosen't matter what lies you say about your co-workers or what you do to your co-workers --

so long as you get away --with--it and -- blame it on some--one else--!!


When you talk to different management staff-- from thermotron-- roger cannady, david waterfield, even ron wiley-- or randy herdes-- mark lamers--Hil Sybesma





they all have justification as to why they chose to be liers slanders and protect the different thieves and embezzlers--

But it is in the long run -- a graphic example of "who their is such a "moral' decline in the cuntry and of course Holland Michigan- and the Dutch and christian


When most of us think of killers like Ted Bundy or John Wayne Gacy,

 we imagine people who feel compelled to harm other huma­n beings, who enjoy causing fear and who feel no remorse for their actions.


 And for the most part, these characterizations are entirely correct. Serial killers (and many other types of violent criminals) are typically considered to be psychopaths with aggressive and anti-social characteristics.


 But not all psychopaths are violent -- some are "merely" manipulative, dishonest and incapable of experiencing deep emotions, and they may blend in with society with relative ease.


A CEO who cheats his employees out of their pensions and then walks off without a tinge of regret may be a psychopath. Psychopaths, violent or non-violent, have no "moral compass," no conscience. They do not experience feelings of guilt for the crimes or betrayals they commit.


 A recent study of the brains of psychopaths, published in the British Journal of Psychiatry, may shed some light on what's going on -- or not going on -- in these people's heads.
For years, researchers and psychiatrists have understood that psychopaths respond differently to external stimuli, and they have theorized that this abnormal response is rooted in the brain.


The idea is that psychopaths process information differently than non-psychopaths, and numerous scientific studies using functional MRI (fMRI) to visualize brain activity have backed this up. In 2003, a study presented at a conference in Britain showed that when "normal" people lie, there is increased activity in the frontal lobe that suggests the experience of guilt and discomfort; but when psychopaths lie, there is no increased brain activity.


An earlier study found that when psychopaths viewed emotionally charged words like "rape" or "murder," the changes in their brain activity were completely different from the changes that occurred when non-psychopaths saw those words.


The increased brain activity in the psychopaths wasn't even in the limbic system, which is where language processing occurs.



In 2006, a group of London-based scientists published the results of a study that may offer additional information on the biological basis for psychopathy. It appears that psychopaths may experience the signs of fear in other people in a way that is not comparable to the way most of us experience it. In fact, they may not really experience it at all.
­


The study set out to test the idea that psychopaths don't experience empathy for other people's distress -- can't understand, sense or appropriately react to it -- because they don't grasp the signs of that distress. In particular, this study tested the responses of nine "normal" people and six criminal psychopaths to typical facial and vocal signs of fear and sadness.


All of the subjects were hooked up fMRI equipment that measured their neurological responses to the stimuli. In this context, "response" typically means increased bloodflow and/or increased firing of neurons, the carriers of brain signals.
The researchers showed both groups of subjects two different sets of images: one of joyful faces and neutral faces, and one of fearful faces and neutral faces. The neutral faces established a baseline for brain activity.
When the non-psychopathic subjects saw a happy face, the fusiform and extrastriate regions of the brain -- the areas primarily responsible for processing images of facial expressions -- showed increased activity compared to their response to a neutral face.


The psychopathic brains also showed increased activity in response to the happy faces, although less of an increase than in the non-psychopathic group.


 However, whereas the non-psychopathic subjects showed a similar increase in brain activity in response to the distressed faces, the psychopathic subjects did not.


In fact, when the psychopaths were shown sad or fearful faces, their brain scans actually showed less neural activity than when they were shown neutral faces.
The researchers concluded that in psychopaths, the neural pathways that are supposed to process signs of human distress are either non-functional or work completely differently than those pathways work in the general population.


This could explain, at least in part, why psychopaths do not identify with the emotional distress of their victims.


The findings of the study may be helpful in understanding how psychopathy works at the neurological level, but in a BBC News article, psychopathy researcher Dr. Nicola Gray of Cardiff University explains, "it is still a long way to finding out what to do about that."
For more information on psychopathy, abnormal psychiatry and related topics, check out the links on the following page.