Mutate wrote:
Do you think there is more chance for aspies, in their robotic, logical, unemotional way, to admire leaders who do evil as a means to their end. For instance I liked reading about Saddam Hussien and I know a few aspies who like Stalin. I also liked crime lords like Pablo Escobar who was very evil and had hundreds of cops killed but was still loved by many in South Americas who thought he improved things.
Well...as for murderous sociopaths....i'd say Ted Bundy "improved things" for many people when he worked at a suicide hotline. Stalin made the Soviet Union into a more or less modern industrialized society. Hitler got many Germans working again and made the "trains run on time". People often only judge leaders strictly in terms of the benefits (real or imagined) these leaders bestowed upon them. I can't say I admire "political monsters", but much like serial killers, I am fascinated by them.
This is simply because their actions are so alien to me. I truly don't understand how people can be so murderous and sadistic. I am fascinated by what makes such people "tick". If I was younger....I would go back to school and try to get a PhD in psychology with a concentration in forensic psychology.
For example....i've been fascinated by the recent suicide of "Craigslist" killer Philip Markoff. I find his case particularily fascinating because of what seems like a gross incongruity between his obvious academic/intellectual talents and his utterly idiotic crimes which many far less "intelligent" criminals would know they could never get away with. I have to wonder if Markoff wanted to be caught on some subconscious level or something.
Markoff's case reminds me of how Dennis Rader, the so-called "BTK" serial killer, got caught. He was communicating with the police and he asked them if it would possible to trace his information from a floppy disk he wanted to send them. Naturally....the police lied and told him that there was no way of knowing what computer the disk had been used on. He sent in the disk and later after his arrest, expressed disappointment in the officers who told him this. He actually seemed to believe he had developed a rapport with them and that he could trust their every word.
Last edited by Horus on 17 Aug 2010, 4:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.