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Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:24:24 PM   
jlf1961


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According to an FBI profile:

quote:

The FBI gave the standard profile of a serial killer, He is a person with few friends. He became much more religious just before he started murdering people. After reading all the available studies I could find and studying all the articles in the newspapers for over 30 years, I find what is most outstanding is Serial killers were sexually inhibited by their strong religious upbringing.

Nearly all serial killers are very devout men who were raised by members of Pentecostal sects, fundamentalist Catholics or were 'hard-shell' Baptists and Methodists."

Studies after study show serial killers are a product of this environment, not genetics.

source


However there is a study that says there are other influences on the mind of a serial killer.

quote:

A startling amount of criminals on death row have been clinically diagnosed with brain disorders. A recent study has demonstrated that 20 out of 31 confessed killers are diagnosed as mentally ill. Out of that 20, 64% have frontal lobe abnormalities. (1) A thorough study of the profiles of many serial killers shows that many of them had suffered sever head injuries (to the frontal lobe) when they were children. To discover why damage to the frontal lobe could be a cause of serial killing, one must look at the function of the frontal lobe of the brain.

source


According to yet another study it is a combination of environment and a mental disorder. On a recent science channel study, one doctor studied the brains of serial killers and noticed they all had the same problems, however, he also noted that his brain scans had the same abnormality.

So, what kind of influences does religion have on the mind of a serial killer, or is it just a random statistic due to the fact that most americans are religious in some form or another?

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:25:41 PM   
Musicmystery


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quote:

what is most outstanding is Serial killers were sexually inhibited by their strong religious upbringing


So serial killers just need to get laid?

Can't they just buy hookers?

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:27:14 PM   
LadyHibiscus


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What was the original source for all this, Jeff? And did they make the very important distinction between a mass murderer, such as the latest one, and a serial killer, such as Ted Bundy?

Not all serial killers are American, and while most of them are male, not all of them are. Interestingly, most mass murderers seem to be male.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:36:34 PM   
vincentML


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quote:

Not all serial killers are American, and while most of them are male, not all of them are. Interestingly, most mass murderers seem to be male.


By far. It certainly points to a strong genetic component. A great number of people had similar nurture and did not become either serial killers or mass murderers, did they? The Y chromosome . . wtf?

< Message edited by vincentML -- 7/24/2012 1:37:11 PM >

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:37:10 PM   
PeonForHer


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quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyHibiscus
Not all serial killers are American


Source?

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:39:37 PM   
vincentML


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyHibiscus
Not all serial killers are American


Source?


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_serial_killers_by_country

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:44:14 PM   
Hillwilliam


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyHibiscus
Not all serial killers are American


Source?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_serial_killers_by_country

Here's you a coupla hundred non-American serial kilers.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:44:20 PM   
kalikshama


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While I'm searching for the story I heard recently on NPR about depression and spree shooters, here's Can Genes And Brain Abnormalities Create Killers?

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:51:06 PM   
jlf1961


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I was curious about the subject and did a search. There is not much on serial killers and religion other than the FBI profile.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 1:51:29 PM   
kalikshama


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What Makes A Shooter Snap?

...MARTIN: We want to try to begin to understand whatever we can understand at this early stage about what might motivate somebody to do something like this, so we've called upon two people who have thought a great deal about this from their respective vantage points.

Joining us, Dr. Carl Bell. He's the president and CEO of the Community Health Council in Chicago, Illinois. He's been a practicing psychiatrist for more than 30 years, but he's also an internationally recognized lecturer and author who's thought a lot about and given lots of presentations on mental wellness, violence prevention and the traumatic stress caused by violence.

Also with us is Dave Cullen. He is the author of "Columbine," a book about the 1999 mass killing at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado. Cullen was one of the first journalists to cover that story. He's also written an opinion piece for the New York Times this weekend about Friday's shooting titled "Don't Jump to Conclusions" about the killer.

...MARTIN: Dave Cullen, in your piece, "Don't Jump to Conclusions" about the killer, one of the things that you said very strongly in your piece is that, you know, we have a tendency to jump to certain misconceptions about the people who participate in these kinds of actions. What are some of those misconceptions that you see based on your experience with Columbine? And do you see that same thing playing out here?

CULLEN: Sure. Well, first of all, the public does have this sort of imaginary profile of these killers.

BELL: Mm-hmm.

CULLEN: That they're loners, outcasts, or someone sort of on the margins of society who doesn't fit in, introverts. And then a lot of people also assume either sort of one of two things. A lot of people assume the person must be crazy or insane or however we want to define that. And also the term psychopath is often bandied about.

BELL: Yep.

CULLEN: Or what Governor Hickenlooper said and, you know, I don't want to knock him much because I think he's been fantastic through all this. I think just yesterday he started to stray a little bit into - I was very queasy about his comments of saying that, you know, this killer was diabolical and demonic.

You know, we don't know that yet. And particularly if this person was somebody who was suffering from severe mental illness, was schizophrenic - I'm just saying that that's just a possibility, not a probability.

BELL: Mm-hmm.

CULLEN: But if he was and didn't know what he was doing then he definitely wasn't demonic. And even diabolical, we don't really know yet. There are different types. And there are sort of four main types of killers, which I can tick off and we can talk if you want.

But there's angry-depressives, the deeply mentally ill who are sort of out of touch with reality, whether that's schizophrenia or whatever. There's psychopaths in the clinical sense who have no empathy and know what they're doing and don't care. And then there's terrorists. And the largest group by far of the mass shooters are the depressives who are completely different than I think most people imagine a diabolical killer. They're not diabolical; they're deeply troubled and they're sort of at war at themselves and they're lashing out.

MARTIN: Hmm. Well, let me ask Dr. Bell about that and I'll just point out that Dave Cullen, in your piece you said that one of the shooters in Columbine, Eric Harris, fit the stereotype that many people have of mass killers. He had been keeping a journal. It was full of threats and hatred and anger. But Dylan Klebold, the other shooter, had talked about suicide consistently.

Really, he was depressed and for some reason that self-hatred reflected kind of reflected outward. Dr. Bell, I wanted to ask you to pick up the thread there. Talk about - particularly given the age group of the person we're talking about here.

BELL: That's absolutely correct. Then there are other categories. So you get these messianic people who kind of feel like they're on a mission from God, and they might be more manic as opposed to schizophrenic. But Cullen is absolutely correct because a lot of times what is played out are that these are suicides that are preceded by mass murders.

CULLEN: Mm-hmm.

BELL: And so there's a sense a lot of times suicidal people want to get even or they want recognition or they want people to understand how much they've suffered. And what better way of playing that out than killing a whole bunch of people before you kill yourself?

Now in this instance, we at least know that he did not do that, which is an interesting thing, especially around the notion of copycat suicides, which is a well-established scientific reality, that the more attention you give to these people who are the depressed types, the more you see copycat or contagion effects. So it's a very complex issue.

MARTIN: It is a complex issue and unfortunately we don't even begin to have the time to dig into it here, but Dr. Bell, I did want to ask you because you have thought about this and taught about this and researched this. You have some ideas about what it is that people can do, and what you think particularly people who are engaged with people this age could be doing better.

BELL: Oh, yeah. The research is extraordinarily clear. The more that we have social fabric around these folk - around everybody, actually - the more protective it is of them. The more we monitor folk who do things like this. Had this person been monitored, somebody would've said, hey, what are you doing with all that gasoline?

The more we can have people who are a bit quirky or strange or different be brought into the society and be tolerant and connected, so that the more tolerance we have of diversity is helpful. The more that we can have people express themselves verbally and have an output, a way to tell people, look, I'm feeling badly, the less people have to act out.

And the more they're connected and have a sense of safety, I think we prevent a lot of people from acting out on their deep, deep, dark emotions.

MARTIN: Dave Cullen, do you feel comfortable hazarding some thoughts about this, as well, based on your reporting about Columbine? I mean...

CULLEN: Sure.

MARTIN: ...you don't want to tip into, you know, stereotyping and profiling people based on the kinds of music that they listen to or what they wear, but what about real reporting? What would you suggest that institutions could be doing differently?

CULLEN: Well, I think that there's one huge thing we can do, which is [screen for] depression. Because regardless of what drove this person in Aurora - you know, we will find that out eventually - but to some degree, that's a little irrelevant, because we've already suffered that tragedy. We can't undo that one. It's too late.

What we can do is, you know, add him to the group. But what we want to do is look at all the mass killings and what are the most common causes there, what - you know, how we can prevent them. And the biggest thing that leaps out is that the majority are depressives.

BELL: Right.

CULLEN: And we're doing a really poor job in this country at identifying depression, especially during the teen years. And there have been a couple different reports by - the name is escaping me. I think it's the American Pediatric Association or some - a couple of different blue ribbon panels, forgive me - have made very similar recommendations that all adolescents should be screened. And it's very, very easy to do. In just a couple of minutes, the family doctor can do it, or counselors at school - but to identify these kids who are depressed. And they're easy to identify.

Kids will usually tell almost all adults that they are having a problem because they want to get help, except with one exception. They usually will hide it from their parents because they feel embarrassed or ashamed. They sort of want to protect their parents, and so they're not telling their parents. They're telling their parents they are OK, or they're clamming up and giving, you know, two word answers, like a teenager will.

But if you screen them by having another adult, in most cases, they will tell that adult and they can get help and, you know, depression is very treatable. This doesn't have to go on.

MARTIN: Dr. Bell, a final thought from you. We only have about 30 seconds. Do you agree with that, that intervening, particularly on depression, would go a very long way?

BELL: Yes. It's actually - the Institute of Medicine reducing suicide report and a recent prevention report. Also, that both Republicans and Democrats have suggested screening early for these psychiatric disorders, because the earlier you treat them, the less problems you have later in life.


< Message edited by kalikshama -- 7/24/2012 1:52:18 PM >


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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 2:08:25 PM   
Hillwilliam


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quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML


quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyHibiscus
Not all serial killers are American


Source?


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_serial_killers_by_country

Ya beat me to it vince.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 3:09:46 PM   
DaNewAgeViking


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery

quote:

what is most outstanding is Serial killers were sexually inhibited by their strong religious upbringing


So serial killers just need to get laid?

Can't they just buy hookers?

Hmmmm, I don't think there are that many hookers that will allow their Johns to beat them to death.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 3:30:35 PM   
LadyHibiscus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyHibiscus
Not all serial killers are American


Source?


EPIC!

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 3:57:31 PM   
Moonhead


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kalikshama

What Makes A Shooter Snap?

...MARTIN: We want to try to begin to understand whatever we can understand at this early stage about what might motivate somebody to do something like this, so we've called upon two people who have thought a great deal about this from their respective vantage points.

Joining us, Dr. Carl Bell. He's the president and CEO of the Community Health Council in Chicago, Illinois. He's been a practicing psychiatrist for more than 30 years, but he's also an internationally recognized lecturer and author who's thought a lot about and given lots of presentations on mental wellness, violence prevention and the traumatic stress caused by violence.

Also with us is Dave Cullen. He is the author of "Columbine," a book about the 1999 mass killing at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado. Cullen was one of the first journalists to cover that story. He's also written an opinion piece for the New York Times this weekend about Friday's shooting titled "Don't Jump to Conclusions" about the killer.

...MARTIN: Dave Cullen, in your piece, "Don't Jump to Conclusions" about the killer, one of the things that you said very strongly in your piece is that, you know, we have a tendency to jump to certain misconceptions about the people who participate in these kinds of actions. What are some of those misconceptions that you see based on your experience with Columbine? And do you see that same thing playing out here?

CULLEN: Sure. Well, first of all, the public does have this sort of imaginary profile of these killers.

BELL: Mm-hmm.

CULLEN: That they're loners, outcasts, or someone sort of on the margins of society who doesn't fit in, introverts. And then a lot of people also assume either sort of one of two things. A lot of people assume the person must be crazy or insane or however we want to define that. And also the term psychopath is often bandied about.

BELL: Yep.

CULLEN: Or what Governor Hickenlooper said and, you know, I don't want to knock him much because I think he's been fantastic through all this. I think just yesterday he started to stray a little bit into - I was very queasy about his comments of saying that, you know, this killer was diabolical and demonic.

You know, we don't know that yet. And particularly if this person was somebody who was suffering from severe mental illness, was schizophrenic - I'm just saying that that's just a possibility, not a probability.

BELL: Mm-hmm.

CULLEN: But if he was and didn't know what he was doing then he definitely wasn't demonic. And even diabolical, we don't really know yet. There are different types. And there are sort of four main types of killers, which I can tick off and we can talk if you want.

But there's angry-depressives, the deeply mentally ill who are sort of out of touch with reality, whether that's schizophrenia or whatever. There's psychopaths in the clinical sense who have no empathy and know what they're doing and don't care. And then there's terrorists. And the largest group by far of the mass shooters are the depressives who are completely different than I think most people imagine a diabolical killer. They're not diabolical; they're deeply troubled and they're sort of at war at themselves and they're lashing out.

MARTIN: Hmm. Well, let me ask Dr. Bell about that and I'll just point out that Dave Cullen, in your piece you said that one of the shooters in Columbine, Eric Harris, fit the stereotype that many people have of mass killers. He had been keeping a journal. It was full of threats and hatred and anger. But Dylan Klebold, the other shooter, had talked about suicide consistently.

Really, he was depressed and for some reason that self-hatred reflected kind of reflected outward. Dr. Bell, I wanted to ask you to pick up the thread there. Talk about - particularly given the age group of the person we're talking about here.

BELL: That's absolutely correct. Then there are other categories. So you get these messianic people who kind of feel like they're on a mission from God, and they might be more manic as opposed to schizophrenic. But Cullen is absolutely correct because a lot of times what is played out are that these are suicides that are preceded by mass murders.

CULLEN: Mm-hmm.

BELL: And so there's a sense a lot of times suicidal people want to get even or they want recognition or they want people to understand how much they've suffered. And what better way of playing that out than killing a whole bunch of people before you kill yourself?

Now in this instance, we at least know that he did not do that, which is an interesting thing, especially around the notion of copycat suicides, which is a well-established scientific reality, that the more attention you give to these people who are the depressed types, the more you see copycat or contagion effects. So it's a very complex issue.

MARTIN: It is a complex issue and unfortunately we don't even begin to have the time to dig into it here, but Dr. Bell, I did want to ask you because you have thought about this and taught about this and researched this. You have some ideas about what it is that people can do, and what you think particularly people who are engaged with people this age could be doing better.

BELL: Oh, yeah. The research is extraordinarily clear. The more that we have social fabric around these folk - around everybody, actually - the more protective it is of them. The more we monitor folk who do things like this. Had this person been monitored, somebody would've said, hey, what are you doing with all that gasoline?

The more we can have people who are a bit quirky or strange or different be brought into the society and be tolerant and connected, so that the more tolerance we have of diversity is helpful. The more that we can have people express themselves verbally and have an output, a way to tell people, look, I'm feeling badly, the less people have to act out.

And the more they're connected and have a sense of safety, I think we prevent a lot of people from acting out on their deep, deep, dark emotions.

MARTIN: Dave Cullen, do you feel comfortable hazarding some thoughts about this, as well, based on your reporting about Columbine? I mean...

CULLEN: Sure.

MARTIN: ...you don't want to tip into, you know, stereotyping and profiling people based on the kinds of music that they listen to or what they wear, but what about real reporting? What would you suggest that institutions could be doing differently?

CULLEN: Well, I think that there's one huge thing we can do, which is [screen for] depression. Because regardless of what drove this person in Aurora - you know, we will find that out eventually - but to some degree, that's a little irrelevant, because we've already suffered that tragedy. We can't undo that one. It's too late.

What we can do is, you know, add him to the group. But what we want to do is look at all the mass killings and what are the most common causes there, what - you know, how we can prevent them. And the biggest thing that leaps out is that the majority are depressives.

BELL: Right.

CULLEN: And we're doing a really poor job in this country at identifying depression, especially during the teen years. And there have been a couple different reports by - the name is escaping me. I think it's the American Pediatric Association or some - a couple of different blue ribbon panels, forgive me - have made very similar recommendations that all adolescents should be screened. And it's very, very easy to do. In just a couple of minutes, the family doctor can do it, or counselors at school - but to identify these kids who are depressed. And they're easy to identify.

Kids will usually tell almost all adults that they are having a problem because they want to get help, except with one exception. They usually will hide it from their parents because they feel embarrassed or ashamed. They sort of want to protect their parents, and so they're not telling their parents. They're telling their parents they are OK, or they're clamming up and giving, you know, two word answers, like a teenager will.

But if you screen them by having another adult, in most cases, they will tell that adult and they can get help and, you know, depression is very treatable. This doesn't have to go on.

MARTIN: Dr. Bell, a final thought from you. We only have about 30 seconds. Do you agree with that, that intervening, particularly on depression, would go a very long way?

BELL: Yes. It's actually - the Institute of Medicine reducing suicide report and a recent prevention report. Also, that both Republicans and Democrats have suggested screening early for these psychiatric disorders, because the earlier you treat them, the less problems you have later in life.


Serial killers and spree mass murderers are dissimilar problems, despite both killing a lot of people who never harmed them. Iirc, Brett Easton Ellis was worried that conflating the two syndromes in American psycho might offend people and possibly send somebody after him with a knife (obviously, he hadn't realised that he'd just published the most fawning snow job either group could ever hope for...)

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 5:57:01 PM   
kalikshama


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Ya, I realize they are different but have been thinking about spree killers.

Was American Psycho any good? Less than Zero was the worst book I ever bothered to finish.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 5:59:46 PM   
Moonhead


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American Psycho is a better novel. There's more humour in that one, rather than it reading like a hundred odd page whine, and the Walter Mitty thing between what the protagonist is imagining and what he's actually doing adds a nice fillip to that. You can get the gist of all that from the film, though, and you'll get through that a lot faster than reading the book...

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 6:10:10 PM   
dcnovice


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quote:

Less than Zero was the worst book I ever bothered to finish.

Thank you for saying that! I made it to within ten pages of the end, thought "I can't take another minute of these people," and hurled the book across the room.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 6:50:00 PM   
TheHeretic


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quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

By far. It certainly points to a strong genetic component. A great number of people had similar nurture and did not become either serial killers or mass murderers, did they? The Y chromosome . . wtf?



It's pretty simple. Somewhere along the line, everybody makes choices.

I don't feel like digging it back up again, but one article I saw in the last few days pointed out unemployment as a commonality in many spree killers/mass murderers.

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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 8:21:33 PM   
vincentML


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quote:

ORIGINAL: TheHeretic


quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

By far. It certainly points to a strong genetic component. A great number of people had similar nurture and did not become either serial killers or mass murderers, did they? The Y chromosome . . wtf?


It's pretty simple. Somewhere along the line, everybody makes choices.

I don't feel like digging it back up again, but one article I saw in the last few days pointed out unemployment as a commonality in many spree killers/mass murderers.


IDK, Rich. It all seems pretty complicated to me. Do you think the orange haired monster made rational choices unmotivated by emotions?


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RE: Religion and Serial Killers - 7/24/2012 8:40:35 PM   
Musicmystery


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OK. So they have guns, but still aren't happy. They need hookers and jobs.

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