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Not to belabor the nature vs. nuture, genetics vs. environment, there's something I read awhile back that I think could explain a lot of it. It's of course a simplistic overview, but it was Genetics loads the gun and environment pulls the trigger. Not necessarily true in all cases but it's my opinion that it's true in a majority of cases.
http://blog.pathway.com/genetics-loads-the-gun-and-environment-pulls-the-trigger-dr-francis-collins/
Hey Paulap, is there any reason to think JLM's mothers or fathers side would have known, lived near, been family friends of the Harris Teeter butcher who was identified as the Charlottesville rapist?
i don't think we're supposed to comment on things like that.
Hey Paulap, is there any reason to think JLM's mothers or fathers side would have known, lived near, been family friends of the Harris Teeter butcher who was identified as the Charlottesville rapist?
At the end of my last post above, I want to clarify that I would expect a decrease in the population of pyschopathic individuals due to the lack of opportunity to meet a partner with similar traits and that is able to compensate for subtle behaviors of the individual as well as their ability to support a family.
I also performed a Google search with the key words pychopath and autism and found this list of references of the subject.
https://www.google.com/search?q=psy...g.mozilla:en-US:unofficial&client=seamonkey-a
There are highly functional psychopaths and for that reason I wonder if their is any relation to the traits of autistic behaviors and their inheritance in indiviual occurrences and how those traits may be inherited to form a person with psychopathic behaviors.
There actually is a link....btw autism in psychopathy....as seen on functional MRI's both show differences in their responses to, and the parts of the brain that process emotions, reactions to people's faces over objects...stuff like that...what it boils down to is empathy. Essentially autistics lack expressive empathy but not internal empathy, or more global empathy....having a strong sense of right and wrong, and a strict moral compass, yet not know how to comfort a crying friend. Psychopaths actually lack both components of empathy...the ability to feel for others, and the ability to act with empathy (but they can fake it). This is very very over simplified....its more complex but in general....yes there are connection btw the two.
FWIW autism runs in my family, three of my cousins children, spanning both sides, have been diagnosed with autism and are in special programs. Both myself and a cousin have been diagnosed on the spectrum...albeit high functioning (actually other then a few very close people to me, I've neve disclosed that) and i see many autistic traits in my parents, grandparents, and other family members as well. Also one of the components of autism is "special interests" and being self learners....so when I want to know about something, I have a ferocious appetite for knowledge, and read everything! So I do have some idea what I'm talking about. There is also evidence of autism in the population throughout time...personally I think it has always been there, and I think its what gives of us some of the quirky, out of the box thinkers who have contributed great things....I think the rise in pervasive autism has more to do with an increase in toxic overload in the environment interacting with a brain that is neurobiological different then the neurotypical. I think the neuro atypical brain is more sensitive to these enviro toxins, and the rise we see in severe, debilitating autism is really what's on the rise...
JM, to me, seems to be the direct antithesis of a person even slightly on the Asperger's spectrum. Is there any syndrome associated with people who get too familiar, too fast and invade space and other boundaries? That' s where I'd place JM.
JM, to me, seems to be the direct antithesis of a person even slightly on the Asperger's spectrum. Is there any syndrome associated with people who get too familiar, too fast and invade space and other boundaries? That' s where I'd place JM.
I agree. I think it was just all an act to try to avoid police
JM, to me, seems to be the direct antithesis of a person even slightly on the Asperger's spectrum. Is there any syndrome associated with people who get too familiar, too fast and invade space and other boundaries? That' s where I'd place JM.
perhaps a friend who was smarter than him told him to go to the police station and ask for a lawyer and then leave...
that wouldn't mean he was really smart
The following eye witness description of JLM shows that he does have the ability to show compassion and remorse. This would seem to rule out psychopath or sociopath by superficial definition. http://wtvr.com/2014/09/30/jesse-matthew-temper/
"They tend to be compulsive, very fixated on sexual fantasy, dominating, controlling, and hurting," says Fracher. "Most typically we see an escalating amount of the violence they need until they tend to get caught."
Fracher says that of the couple of hundred rapists he sees a year, only two or three are serial rapists turned on by power and domination. "The good news is, they're really rare," says Fracher. "The bad news is, they're dangerous."
Stressing that he is not speaking about Washington, Fracher says that in general, serial rapists start having fantasies around adolescence. They could have a history of being abused either physically, sexually, or emotionally, and may have come from a "violent family parenting style." Cruelty to animals could be another indicator.
. . . .
"In the worst form, you've got a Ted Bundy," says Fracher about those who become serial killers because of "lust-murder"– a need for violence that turns into a need to kill.
"Most of these guys have enough conscience and control," notes Fracher, "that they don't get to that point."
Thanks thinkhard,
I went through my Google search listed originally posted and found an interesting article connecting autism and violent crime in some individuals. The behavior characteristics could easily be associated with JLM.
The article also highlights how forms of Autistic Spectrum Disorder can be misdiagnosed until violent crime is committed.
This would lead to suggest that the commuity or state of Virginia to consider its ranking nationally in violent crime and consider how they may detect these tendencies in childhood and educate the general public and law enforcement or correctional organizations in assessing and addressing AS to improve outcomes and reduce incidence of violent behavior.
Take a look at my original Google search link and learn more about this
Actually, ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder) is a complicated diagnosis, and in fact personal boundary/space issues are common in many. Just one quick link as a reference, although there is a lot of other stuff out there more in depth: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25100326 (also, Asperger's btw is on the highest functioning end of it- it's generally not considered it's own spectrum, although there are certainly differences from person to person)
I have a child "on the spectrum". B/c of my experience with this, I'm very hesitant to connect violent pathology to such a mental issue, as I am with other mental illnesses as well.. Mainly b/c not only historically have mental health issues been misunderstood and those who have them been unfairly abused (and as research has progressed, things have become more understood), but I think mental health issues still have a stigma attached to them. Correlating them- even if generally- to violent crime can be very dangerous and can perpetuate this. IMO.
Hope I'm not taken the wrong way- I'm not at all criticizing you jamicat, or any poster here, but just sharing my opinions on the topic. I definitely understand that there are often recurring psychological issues as violent crime offenders have been studied. And I get how it's interesting to try to find patterns (and there often are). I just value very much the professional opinions on these things as broad generalizations can often occur otherwise, and I personally leave that to them. IMO.