1. the antisocial
personality has the
following attributes:
(1) he or she speaks only in very
broad generalities.
(2) such a person deals mainly in bad
news,
critical or hostile remarks,
invalidation and
general suppression.
(3) the antisocial
personality alters, to worsen
communication when he or she relays a
message or
news. Good
news is stopped and only bad
news, often
embellished, is passed along.
(4) a characteristic, and one of the sad things about an antisocial
personality, is that it does not respond to treatment or reform or
psychotherapy.
(5) surrounding such a
personality we find
cowed or
ill associates or friends who, when not driven actually
insane, are yet behaving in a
crippled manner in
life, failing, not succeeding.
(6) the antisocial
personality habitually selects the
wrong target.
(7) the
antisocial cannot finish a
cycle of
action.
(8) many
antisocial persons will freely confess to the most alarming
crimes when forced to do so, but will have no faintest sense of
responsibility for them.
(9) the antisocial
personality supports only destructive groups and rages against and attacks any constructive or
betterment group.
(10) this
type of
personality approves only of destructive actions and fights against constructive or helpful actions or activities.
(11) helping others is an activity which drives the antisocial
personality nearly
berserk. Activities, however, which
destroy in the name of
help are closely supported.
(12) the antisocial
personality has a bad sense of
property and conceives that the idea that anyone owns anything is a
pretense made up to fool people. Nothing is ever really owned.
(HCOB 27 Sept 66) 2. the
suppressive person. You, in speaking of it, actually marry up with
old technology because they have looked for this fellow called the
antisocial person for a long
time.
Freud used the
term.
Psychologists use the
term. They'
ve used the
term for a long
time. They know there is such a person called the antisocial
personality and this is the
personality for which they have been
groping. We're
calling it a
suppressive because it is more explicit.
(SH Spec 78, 6608C25)